kaiss3r said:
Can you please explain more what you mean by this "But remember it's the rolling 5 years, not 5 year slots".
So the way I understand it now is that:
- My PR is valid for 5yrs and after I have to renew it.
- Within that 5 yrs time, I am / I should at least spent 2 years of time "physically present" here in Canada.
- If I didn't meet that "2 years physically present" within 5 years of my PR, my PR might get lose.
Please tell me if i understand it wrong..
A rolling period means it is 5 years from the day you are considering.
Sometimes a diagram is easier to show multiple rolling five year periods. Say you became a PR on Jan 1, 2015:
|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|
2015 '16 '17 '18 '19 '20 '21 '22 '23 '24 '25
----------------------------- <- First 5 year period
----------------------------- <- Illustrative subsequent rolling 5 year period
-----------------------------
------------------------------
-----------------------------
-----------------------------
-----------------------------
If you want to know if you meet the requirements to be a PR on a given day, count back 5 years from that day and make sure you've been in Canada 2 out of those 5 years.
If you haven't been a PR yet for 5 years, count the number of days you've been in Canada so far since becoming a PR and add the number of days left in your 5 year period that you could possibly be in Canada. Make sure that you could be in Canada 2 years in the first 5 year period (the sum of number of days you have been + number of days you could be in Canada must be at least 2 years the first 5 year period).
If you meet one of the exceptions about (spouse of Canadian abroad, etc) then make sure you are accompanying that person for 2 years in 5, etc.