I largely agree with the observations posted by
@armoured.
Some Further Observations Re Calculating RO Compliance:
Actually someone else (well, some software)
will do the arithmetic. Just do a partial draft (only a small part) of the PR card application (IMM 5444):
-- check "I am in Canada"
-- in Question 1.1 check "Renew my present PR card"
-- in Question 1.4 enter the date of landing, which is the date the PR became a PR
-- in Question 5.1 check "Yes" (as in "yes" the PR has travelled or lived outside of Canada in the past five years)
-- fill in the "To date" in Question 5.5 for the "Period to be assessed," entering the date the application will be made as the "To" date; the form will auto complete the "From" date, which will be either
-- -- the date five years previous to the "To" date (date application is made), or
-- -- the date of landing (if that was less than five years prior to the date the application is to be made, based on what the PR entered in Question 1.4)
-- accurately fill in the relevant travel history information in the Question 5.5 chart, listing all dates of exiting Canada and entering Canada including hypothetical future dates (such as, based on your information, a date of entry 2025-05-30)
Then the interactive PDF form will do the arithmetic. It will display a calculation of the total time spent outside Canada. If that is less than 1095 days, the PR is complying with the RO.
For a PR who landed October 7, 2020 and has just one absence from Canada July 24, 2022 to May 30, 2025, the form will calculate the PR was outside Canada a total of 1040 days, thus in RO compliance.
(By the way, if they stayed in Canada from October 7, 2020 until July 24, 2022, nearly two years, that's a stay longer than most would call a "
soft" landing; but as
@armoured noted, for IRCC purposes this characterization, description, or label, "
soft landing," is not recognized or relevant other than the date of landing is the date the former Foreign National became a Canadian (a Canadian PR)).
Best Laid Plans . . . a Caution, an obvious caution but one demanding a reminder . . . lots of reasons why the poem by Robert Burns and the title of a book by John Steinbeck get quoted so often . . .
even the best, most carefully made plans often go awry. This forum is rife with anecdotal reporting from PRs who planned to return to Canada in time to stay in compliance with the RO but for this or that reason were unable to return to Canada by then. While it continues to appear that border officials are quite lenient toward returning PRs with valid PR cards arriving here within the first five years after landing, and particularly if they are not falling short of meeting the RO by much, we really do not know what the odds are other than to know that to be in breach is to be at risk of losing PR status. It appears your parents have less than a two month buffer.
The latter warrants another caution: assuming your parents do return to Canada by next May, limiting their absence since landing to 1040 days, in order to STAY in compliance with the RO they will not be able to leave Canada for more than 55 days for the next TWO years. Remember, as of the fifth year anniversary the RO requires a PR to be IN Canada at least two years total (that is 730 days) within the preceding five years. (Thus, for example, when they are issued a new PR card that does NOT start the five year period anew.)