Hello,I am in a similar situation to the original poster, here are my details:
- British Citizen.
- Permanent Resident (PR) of Canada since 19 Dec 2017.
- Initial PR Card not yet arrived.
- Short trip to the US scheduled.
- In possession of signed CoPR and valid visa-exempt passport.
My question; would an eTA applied for before you were granted Permanent Resident status still work? When I check the status of my previously approved eTA it still says it is valid until 2022.
If it is still valid then surely I would be able to board my flight to Canada as long as I don't mention I am a PR? And upon landing in Canada CBAS will easily verify my status.
My understanding is that eTA is null and void when you are PR. If you apply for one after becoming PR it will be immediately rejected.
In your case you already have one.
It's risky if you take the chance of flying to US. Not sure if they check the status of your eTA at check in or just confirm with you that you have one. From other posts I have followed, the airline can manually check your eTA status so if it returns a result that tells them your ETA is not valid you'll not be allowed to board.
CIC fine airlines for letting passengers travel without valid PR card so it really depends on the airline staff you get on the day.
Options:
1. Fly to US and come back to Canada via land border (fly to Buffalo and cross into Ontario at Niagra Falls) using your CoPR, totally permitted albeit add to travel time
2. Risk flying back on the flight to Canada but potential to not be allowed to board the plane.
3. Wait for card to arrive. You've waited 52 days for your PR card at this point. I would recommend waiting for the card to arrive as it will likely arrive in the next 10days and avoid the potential refusal to board the inbound Canadian flight. CIC state 61 days for and processing and this has been the time for past 6 months. My card arrived on day 59 so they are pretty accurate with the timing.
FYI the processing centre for the cards in in Surrey, Nova Scotia and they are sent via regular mail.
Good luck!