I am going to go into some detail here because many, many PRs tend to overestimate the relevance of meeting the PR Residency Obligation during the first five years.
Having more than 730 days credit during the first five years does NOT COMPLETE a PR's Residency Obligation. A PR's RO is NEVER complete for as long as he or she is a PR.
For example, 730 days presence during the first five years has NO MORE significance than having one day's presence prior to the third year anniversary of the day of landing.
And the day after the fifth year anniversary, and every day after that, how many days the PR was present in Canada during the first five years is NOT relevant. What is relevant, what counts, is how many days the PR has been present during the previous five years AS OF that day, for each and every day going forward.
SHORT ANSWERS COMPARED: Most get this when, as many forum participants tend to describe it, it is said that as of the fifth year anniversary the PR RO is a "rolling" calculation.
So the typical short answer to PR RO queries is that "
the RO is a 'rolling' calculation requiring the PR be present in Canada at least 730 days within the preceding five years."
However, more than a few PRs tend to underestimate the practical impact of this. So, as I am wont to do, I offer the
LONG EXPLANATION.
This is largely in the nature of a CAUTION. Just peruse the scores and scores of posts in topics about Secondary Review and PR card processing timelines and you will see a steady stream of complaints, and more than a little gnashing of teeth, in the many, many tales of woe related to those PRs who were
cutting-it-close when they applied for a new PRC . . . some are indeed rather sad tales, such as the PR practically stuck in Canada when a parent is suddenly seriously ill or suddenly dies, for example, her PRC application stuck in SR and given the fact of
cutting-it-close the PR is afraid to travel abroad and depend on getting a PR Travel Document in order to return to Canada (some visa offices tend to be more strict, sometimes severely so, in determining whether to grant a PR TD, and in some visa offices in particular the timeline for obtaining a PR TD can be a big issue).
Reaching the threshold of 730 days presence in Canada as of the end of the first five years is NOT magical. That day is just like any other day when it comes to calculating compliance with the RO.
So the actuall worry is the i am boxing myself in for two years and wont be able to leave canada till August 2020 arrives (thats when my days will be complete) for PR renewal.
To be clear: PR does NOT get renewed. There is NO renewal of PR status.
For clarity:
YOU WILL NOT BE ABLE TO LEAVE CANADA FOR ANY MORE TIME AFTER AUGUST 2020 THAN YOU CAN IN THE MEANTIME UNTIL, AT THE VERY SOONEST, DECEMBER 26, 2020.
Compliance with the PR Residency Obligation can never said to be "complete." Each day is a different calculation. To be in compliance with the PR RO the PR must have been present in Canada:
-- at least 730 days within the previous five years,
-- OR, until the fifth year anniversary of the date of landing, NOT been absent for more than 1095 days since the date of landing
If you arrive in November, TECHNICALLY (potentially subject to providing proof of days present, if requested) you will be in compliance with around a month margin. If you stay without leaving, that will continue to be how much margin you have UNTIL DECEMBER 26. 2020.
REMEMBER: As of 17 August 2020 there is a completely NEW five year period of time for calculating your compliance with the PR RO. And that applies to the next day and every day after that unless and until you become a Canadian citizen.
FOR EXAMPLE: If you leave Canada (say you leave August 29, 2020) and then return to Canada October 1, 2020. Your compliance with the PR RO will be based on the number of days you have been in Canada between October 1, 2015 and October 1, 2020. The days you were in Canada in August and September 2015
WILL NOT COUNT.
EXAMPLE BASED ON APPLICATION TO RENEW PR Card:
Typically a PR can make an application to renew a PRC when the PR's current PRC will expire in less than six months (sometimes, including currently, technically IRCC will allow PRs to apply even sooner as posted on their website; currently up to nine months before the card expires as of the last time I looked). Common usage, and IRCC usage as well, often refers to the "renewal" of the PR card. Substantively this is actually the issuance of a NEW or replacement PR card. Nothing is "renewed" as such.
When there is an application for renewal, for a new PR card to replace one that is soon expiring, IRCC MUST make a determination regarding compliance with the PR RO.
Assuming you come and stay as planned,
until December 26, 2020 the PR RO compliance calculation for you will be EXACTLY the same no matter which day you make the PRC application. It will be exactly the same calculation if you make the PRC application June 17, 2020, or July 17, 2020, or August 17, 2020, or October 12, 2020 or November 23, 2020. You will have EXACTLY the same number of days credit toward PR RO compliance on every one of those days, and all the days in-between . . . right up to December 26, 2020. Assuming you STAY in Canada with NO trips abroad (well, you could make day-trips or even one-night trips to the U.S. without affecting the calculation).
The fact you have been in Canada 730 days, or 769 days, as of August 16, 2020 does NOT mean anything more than the fact that the number of days you have been in Canada to date plus the number of days left until August 16, 2020 add up to 730 or 769. And as of August 17, 2020 the fact you were present in Canada at least 730 days in your first five years will NOT be relevant. What will matter as of August 17, 2020, will be how many days you have been in Canada in the five years preceding that day. So, again, if you apply for a new PRC on, say, September 1, 2020, NONE of the days you were present here in August 2015 will count. What will count is how many days you have been in Canada between September 1, 2015 and September 1, 2020.
IMPACT OF
CUTTING-IT-CLOSE: Again, for you, assuming NO travel abroad after arriving in November, the PR RO calculation will remain EXACTLY the same UNTIL DECEMBER 26, 2020. That is, you will NOT be adding a single day more to the days credit you get toward compliance with the PR RO, until you are present in Canada on and after December 26, 2020. Since you are already
cutting-it-close, (and at best will continue to be
cutting-it-close well into 2021) there is a substantial risk an application for a renewed or new PRC will be subject to non-routine processing. No way around this now. You have already been absent for nearly three years.
In such a scenario there is, for example, the risk the PR will be required to pick up the newly issued PR card in person (rather than the PRC being mailed to the PR), or in some cases the PR may be required to attend an interview and answer questions about presence in Canada. The inquiry in these scenarios can be, and typically will be, about BOTH compliance as of the date the application was made AND compliance as of the date of the counter-interview (see ENF 27, which I recently linked in topic about SR, which includes a screening checklist for counter-referrals) or the date of the interview.
In your situation, for example, if you apply for a new PRC, say July 7, 2020 or September 7, 2020, assuming you have not traveled outside Canada in the meantime, you will be in RO compliance as of the date you applied for the PRC (which is an eligibility requirement to be issued a new PRC), but given
cutting-it-close you may need to pick up the card in person (which involves a "counter interview") or attend a formal RO compliance interview. If you have not traveled outside Canada at all, NO PROBLEM at the interview. If, however, in the meantime you have traveled outside Canada for, say, more than the number of days between when you arrive in November and December 25, you will NOT be in compliance as of the day of the interview AND at risk for being issued a 44(1) Report and Departure Order.
And apart from that, assume you stay in Canada until August 16, 2020, until September 1, 2020 even, and then travel abroad. If you are abroad more than the number of days between when you arrive in November and December 25 (plus the number of additional days after August 16, 2020 you stay, before actually leaving), you will be in breach of the PR RO and at risk for being reported when you return to Canada.
Even if you are issued a new PR card in 2020, if you leave Canada in 2020 before the date in November you arrive this year, and are then abroad past December 25 that year, you will likewise be in breach of the PR RO and, even with an almost brand new PR card in hand, at risk of being reported and losing PR upon your return to Canada.
Again, this site is rife with tales of woe told by many who failed to grasp the "rolling" nature of the PR RO. I have gone into this detail in the hopes that those for whom keeping PR status is a priority they can better grasp this and better navigate their travel choices to avoid not only the risk of losing status outright but also potentially difficult struggles to keep PR status if and when IRCC apprehends a breach.