I'm a US citizen, moved to Canada on student visa in 2005.
I gained residency through CEC in Feb 2012.
I started working in Seattle, WA in 2014, splitting my time between my Seattle apartment and a Vancouver apartment I shared with Canadian citizen girlfriend, then wife (we married in Canada in 2016). I spent most weekends (Fri-Mon) in Vancouver, which meant I met the residency obligation by physical presence test when I renewed my PR card in 2017. That application took some time given the somewhat odd case (the attached sheet of my travel outside Canada was over 100 lines long) but was ultimately approved and I received a new PR card in 2017.
My Canadian wife and I moved to the USA full time around the same time I applied for my card in 2017. Now it's time to renew again. To meet my residency obligation, it would have to be via living with my Canadian citizen spouse as I've only made occasional visits to family and friends in Canada and for sure don't have anywhere close to 730 days in Canada in the last five years. But given the citizen spouse rule, I believe I've still met my residency obligation. And this was confirmed to me by a CBSA border agent when renewing my Nexus card in 2019.
Here's the problem: I don't have a residential address in Canada, which the PR Card renewal form asks for. The IRCC website explains that if your card expires while one is outside Canada, one should simply enter Canada on a PRTD and apply for a new card once back in Canada. PRTDs are only for commercial travel though - my wife and I always just cross the land border from WA to BC in our own private vehicle. And in any event, we're never in Canada long enough to wait the 80+ days of processing for a new card anyway.
So, I understand that just having an expired PR card doesn't mean I've lost my residency. But I also don't know how to apply for a card without a permanent Canadian residential address. I don't want to lie obviously, nor do I feel I'm doing anything against the letter of the law, given the citizen spouse exception. It just seems there is no obvious accommodation for someone in my situation. I'm imagining it will be best for me to explain and discuss with a CBSA agent the next time I cross (which will likely be with an expired PR card at a land border) to get some "official" advice, but figured I'd ask here too since I imagine this can't be that uncommon of a scenario... right?
I gained residency through CEC in Feb 2012.
I started working in Seattle, WA in 2014, splitting my time between my Seattle apartment and a Vancouver apartment I shared with Canadian citizen girlfriend, then wife (we married in Canada in 2016). I spent most weekends (Fri-Mon) in Vancouver, which meant I met the residency obligation by physical presence test when I renewed my PR card in 2017. That application took some time given the somewhat odd case (the attached sheet of my travel outside Canada was over 100 lines long) but was ultimately approved and I received a new PR card in 2017.
My Canadian wife and I moved to the USA full time around the same time I applied for my card in 2017. Now it's time to renew again. To meet my residency obligation, it would have to be via living with my Canadian citizen spouse as I've only made occasional visits to family and friends in Canada and for sure don't have anywhere close to 730 days in Canada in the last five years. But given the citizen spouse rule, I believe I've still met my residency obligation. And this was confirmed to me by a CBSA border agent when renewing my Nexus card in 2019.
Here's the problem: I don't have a residential address in Canada, which the PR Card renewal form asks for. The IRCC website explains that if your card expires while one is outside Canada, one should simply enter Canada on a PRTD and apply for a new card once back in Canada. PRTDs are only for commercial travel though - my wife and I always just cross the land border from WA to BC in our own private vehicle. And in any event, we're never in Canada long enough to wait the 80+ days of processing for a new card anyway.
So, I understand that just having an expired PR card doesn't mean I've lost my residency. But I also don't know how to apply for a card without a permanent Canadian residential address. I don't want to lie obviously, nor do I feel I'm doing anything against the letter of the law, given the citizen spouse exception. It just seems there is no obvious accommodation for someone in my situation. I'm imagining it will be best for me to explain and discuss with a CBSA agent the next time I cross (which will likely be with an expired PR card at a land border) to get some "official" advice, but figured I'd ask here too since I imagine this can't be that uncommon of a scenario... right?