If one leaves the country after getting citizenship without getting a passport how would one re enter Canada?
Use your current passport from your country of origin and your PR card. If those are not valid, then apply for a Canadian passport first before you leave the country. You can apply for a passport 48 hours after your oath and you can have it expedited and pick it up at a passport office 24 ours after. You have to pay extra of course.success2016 said:If one leaves the country after getting citizenship without getting a passport how would one re enter Canada?
PR card is taken away at the citizenship oath ceremony.joseph18 said:Use your current passport from your country of origin and your PR card. If those are not valid, then apply for a Canadian passport first before you leave the country. You can apply for a passport 48 hours after your oath and you can have it expedited and pick it up at a passport office 24 ours after. You have to pay extra of course.
If you are from a visa-exempt country, then you can enter with your other passport and any proof of Canadian citizenship (though the last part is probably not strictly necessary). However, apart from Americans and a few other limited exceptions, starting soon visa-exempt nationals will need an eTA to fly into Canada. At that point, because Canadian citizens are ineligible for an eTA, the only option for a dual Canadian/foreign citizen to enter Canada without a Canadian passport will be via a land border crossing with the U.S.success2016 said:If one leaves the country after getting citizenship without getting a passport how would one re enter Canada?
You can apply for a passport in the foreign country you're in. If you want fast service you may have to travel to an embassy or consulate. Look at the embassy's website to get an idea of processing times.success2016 said:Am I able to get a travel document in this case from the country I will be in? Or apply for the passport from the country I'm in?
And even if it wasn't for some reason, using it to enter the country when you are no longer a PR would be misrepresenting yourself to CBSA and potential for a rough day at customs.scylla said:PR card is taken away at the citizenship oath ceremony.
Once again, PR card is taken away at the oath ceremony.frege said:I don't think so. If he says, "I've become a citizen, but here is my old PR card," that's not misrepresentation. It could be used for identification purposes.
its very simple just contact to Canadian embassy and explain your situation and they will issue you emergency travel documents.scylla said:Once again, PR card is taken away at the oath ceremony.
Short answer:success2016 said:If one leaves the country after getting citizenship without getting a passport how would one re enter Canada?
What he said. While Scylla is right--in almost all circumstances the PR card is surrendered at the oath ceremony--there may be circumstances in which a person maintains their card after the oath, such as if they lose it before the oath and then find it later after becoming a citizen. In such cases, follow Dpenabill's advice....dpenabill said:Possession of any PR card after becoming a citizen:
It is illegal to have unauthorized possession of a PR card. No matter how inadvertently one came to be in possession of the card.
This is not something to mess around with. Destroy any PR card not otherwise already surrendered to IRCC.
OK, if someone somehow ends up still in possession of a PR card after the oath ceremony, there will be a temptation to keep it as memorabilia, a keepsake. If succumbing to this temptation, keep the PR card in a safe location and never present it to authorities.
While perhaps the risk of serious consequences for being in illegal possession of a PR card (remember, the card is the property of the Canadian government) are low, there is no upside to taking the risk. Do not attempt to use the card for anything, not identification, not anything. Best to not attempt carrying the card across international borders.