jmomcc said:
Thanks, man. I'll try to confirm for sure if I can do it through London, but if I can I will go that route.
You can 100% based on your citizenship. In fact people often try to submit apps based on where they are currently a resident, and CIC sends it to the office based on citizenship anyways.
Apply to London. There is no doubt you are allowed to.
In terms of proving co-habitation, we don't have any shared accounts or policies. Would it be worth it to do at this point? We can easily get a letter from the landlord, i'd guess (i don't see any reason she wouldn't do it) and it will be pretty easy to get testimony letters. Is it better if these are from Canadians also?
Sure get some shared accounts now if it's easy. Will just add to the proof.
Letters don't need to be from Canadians, but if they are in Korean will need to be officially translated.
We share the same address on our Alien Registration Cards and have done since last March. Does that qualify as proof? She has also recieved official mail from govt to this address but she does get most mail to her school.
Yes mail addressed to each of you, delivered to same address, is great proof.
And yes include the addresses shown on registration cards. Even better if anything has a date on it that goes back to around the time you first moved in together.
We have also travelled extensively together and I've visited her family and vica versa. Does that help with the co-habitation claim? I really wish we had just put her name on the lease. We were dealing with an old korean travel agent who thought it was crazy I would even ask. I should have insisted.
Definitely yes. Show photos of travels, and old airline tickets, flight email confirmations or itineraries. Each of your families should write a testimony letter that mentions you lived with them as a couple while staying at their homes, and they are fully aware of you living together in Korea.
I'm not sure if she's considered a resident of Canada or not. She's been in Korea for over 2 years. We will have to look into that.
Has she been filing Canadian income tax every year, and paying a portion of her earnings in Korea to the CRA?
To become a non-resident to be excluded from Canada taxes you have to go through various steps to declare non-residency. If she can't remember, she probably didn't do it. Unless she has an accountant back in Canada that is doing everything for her.
Either way, still get her to change her status with CRA online account to common-law.
edit - we also have bank records where she sends me half the amount of our rent every month - is that proof?
Definitely yes. Again show it dated going back as far as you can.