psyyyn said:My case is very similar to what you are trying to do. I came here as a visitor status(i'm from visa exempt country) to live with my partner. They gave me 6month at the border. I extended another 12month later. In the mean time, i applied PR and waiting... and waiting... as of now.
First of all, my suggestion for your initial entry is to pretend like you are here just to visit/travel that you still have a job, you need to be back to your country. If you are from visa exempt country, and never been to canada, that might be the best situation to be allowed with no problem. In my case, I told them i will stay for 2weeks to travel and they stamp me 6month stay with no question. Otherwise, you can just tell them the truth, they might verify all your information along with your partner's and allow you to enter.
Document you will need from oversea for PR application are
-Police certificate
-Divorce decree(if you were married before)
These can be obtained from canada through you or your family or relatives. I am not sure where you are coming from, so it is not easy to advise you for sure. For some countries you can get it on the internet or by mail, for some others through embassy.
-Medical, it might be easier for you to just do it in canada.
-Expiration date is 6month ( i think i heard that they extended to 1year, but i am not so sure)
Hope this helps!
Is it better to tell upfront that you are really planning to stay for 6 months than just saying 2 weeks?
I prefer to tell that I will stay for 6 months because my return ticket will show that I will return in 6 months.
If they verify my documents and call my partner, they'll find out it's true.
I'm afraid if I buy a 2-week ticket, and at the border, they really just give me 2-week period, even if I am from visa exempt country that can stay up to 6 months visa-free, then I gotta have a problem. Has this happen to anyone?
Thanks.