You may have noticed, my participation in this forum is generally not about short and easy answers. There are others here who cover those. I tend to explore the more nuanced issues, which from my perspective demand more nuanced responses. That takes time and a concerted effort, usually more lengthy observations than the typcial discussion here.
The short and easy answer to your question is yes, it is OK to send additional, non-requested documents with the citizenship application.
Should you? however, is a more nuanced question.
Addressing the more nuanced questions, when should an applicant include more, and what additional documents should be sent, and in what circumstances should an applicant not do this, and what additional documents should not be sent, tends to get a lot more complicated.
Frankly, I doubt sending additional documents to "further prove physical presence" will help much. But a few additional documents probably, emphasis on probably, should not hurt either.
elie72 said:
Is it ok to send additional nonrequested documents with my citizenship application to further prove physical presence, like rental agreeements or health report? Does this help ?
elie72 said:
Hi dpenabill,
You have mentioned in your reply that you have sent along with your application some additional documents. Is it ok to send some additional documents which are not requested , in order to add proof to our physical presence?
Thanks for your answer.
Generally best approach is to follow the instructions, and thus to include what the instructions say to include, no more.
As I acknowledged, or perhaps one might say confessed, I did not follow the instructions and I included CRA Notices of Assessment with my application.
Including extra documents is not prohibited.
Whether to include additional documents with the application, or not, is a personal decision. Will they help? Is there a chance they could invite more questions than they resolve? What sort of impression does it make to include more than what is requested?
Frankly, despite what I did, my inclination is against including additional documents. Again, including extra documents is not prohibited and it is not like including extra documents will, itself, trigger elevated scrutiny or problems, let alone risk a negative outcome. If the information in the application raises a question, and there are a few, specific documents which will in effect answer that question, it probably does not hurt to include those, and perhaps they will help.
To be clear, however, some applicants have included what amounts to the same thing as responding to full blown RQ (CIT 0171) and still been issued RQ, and still compelled to respond to the RQ despite the fact they had already, essentially, provided all the documents and information requested in RQ. So, including extra documents will not necessarily preclude further inquiry, investigation, or requests for additional information and documentation.
My experience:
I offer the following
NOT as a model to follow (it absolutely is not), nor as representative of what one should expect to happen (how things go for one individual usually depends on a wide, wide range of factors, and it is foolish to think what happened for one person will be the same for another, no matter how similar their situations are). I offer it as an example of the thought-process involved in making a decision like this.
Caveat: for the vast majority of applicants, this would be grossly overthinking things. Really. The vast majority of applicants do not need to include anything extra with the application. Thus, for the vast majority of applicants, including anything extra only increases the risk that a bureaucrat at IRCC will see something odd in that. Best to stay in the routine track.
I applied in the summer of 2013, in the wake of the huge 2012 wave of pre-test RQ, at a time when the prospect of pre-test RQ was very, very high for anyone self-employed. I was self-employed. At the time, CIC had recently started asking for CRA Notices of Assessment as part of the application to renew PR cards. In the application part for work-history I described my employment accurately but without using the terms "self-employed," and included my CRA Notices of Assessment thinking that including these should not appear odd, given that they were then being requested for PR card applications, and that they would reflect actual employment in Canada (yeah, while I do not make a real lot, I make enough to pay a good deal in taxes). I reasoned that the number of additional documents (four years NoAs) I was submitting was small in number, would not be a distraction, would not be confusing, and would verify four plus years of employment in Canada (my application, obviously, was under the 3/4 rule). And there was no information in those documents which was likely to raise questions when compared to the rest of the information that was part of my application.
Thus, I reasoned there was minimal risk involved by including the CRA Notices of Assessment, and a small chance they might help in the triage screening stage. So I included these. Note: we see rather few pre-test RQs reported these days. It is not even clear that IRCC is conducting this stage of screening now.
Nonetheless, my guess is that for me the inclusion of the CRA Notices of Assessment did not hurt but, also, they did not help or had very little impact. I was, after all, obviously living in Canada and had been for more than four years prior to applying (I waited to apply for well more than a year beyond the date I met the minimum residency requirement).
Overall: OK to include extra documents, but usually I would not expect there to be any advantage in doing so.