jomz said:
Rob, please correct me if I'm wrong, but I think that an issue may arise with CIC if:
sponsor and applicant became common law in tax year 2012
sponsor filed 2012 taxes in 2013 and stated "single" as marital status in the year 2012
sponsor called CRA in 2013 and stated marital status changed in 2013
Right, it would be a big red flag to the VO if an applicant became common-law sometime in 2012... but the Option C printout stated taxes were done in 2012 as single.
As was also mentioned, simply adding your new spouse to CRA is good proof to include. You can do this online with the CRA "my account" feature, and then just print out the page that states marital status.
SenioritaBella, I have debated adding my spouse to my benefits, but as he is not a resident I cannot add him because he is not covered under provincial health care. I made the call to Manulife but they said my life event change will only be permitted once my husbands is a resident of Canada. I was able to make him beneficiary on my life insurance though.
My company does our benefits through Sunlife. It's funny that when we became officially common-law, I had no idea about the rule that your spouse MUST be receiving OHIP coverage, in order to be added onto benefits. But when I went to my HR department to add her, they just made me fill in her basic info and that was it. Neither my HR department nor Sunlife ever asked once what her immigrant status was, or if she had OHIP. So we used benefits for her for almost a full year! I didn't find out until after she had already gotten PR that technically she wasn't eligible at the time. Lucky for us they never noticed.