mknavin said:
As mentioned in the link.........
"Bring as much money as you can to make moving and finding a home in Canada easier. Note, however, that Canadian customs regulations require you to declare if you are bringing more than C$10,000 into Canada. If you do not tell them, you may be fined or put in prison. These funds could be in the form of:
1. cash
2. documents that show property or capital payable to you (such as stocks, bonds, debentures, treasury bills, etc.) or
3. documents that guarantee payment of a set amount of money, which are payable to you (such as bankers' drafts, cheques, travellers' cheques
or money orders)"
As of my opinion you just need to show the source of the money.. no matter how much you carry.
OR i have a question
## can we open a bank account in Canada from India (kotak Mahindra bank allows us to open a bank account in any Scotia Bank branches of Canada). And show the bank statement of Scotia Bank......
I can answer the later part of your comment. I spoke to the Scotia Bank rep in Mumbai. There is a lady assigned for such cases where the applicant has got PR visa and wants to open an account in Canada. Yes, it is possible. The bank has several branches (in Delhi, etc) and if you call them up she can give you information on how to do this.
Excerpts from call with the bank:
1. Yes, a canadian account can be opened from India.
2. They need PR stamped passport in original - so it can only be done on receiving COPR/Stamped PP.
3. One (and yes only one) wire transfer is allowed to the account that you opened (account will be in a physical branch at Canada - city of your choice - like Toronto).
4. You can pay by check in INR and the amount will get converted in CAD as per the conversion rate of the bank.
5. Rich guys, hold on ... there is an upper limit to this SINGLE transfer of funds - only upto CAD 50,000 allowed.
6. The account can be opened in the name of principal applicant only (this she said but I am doubful).
7. If paying by check (or cheque - as spelled in India), you need to use YOUR OWN bank account.
Hope this helps,.