I don't know what bad info you have been reading, but it says quite plainly they want the date you legally became common-law, not the date you started living together. If you were living together as roommates that would be no different than living in separate places as friends. You'd still put the date you legally became common-law.NRSY said:Hello! I have run into another question
I have finished putting together our application.. just waiting on a document from korea and our translations to be finished!
I am a little bit concerned after reading a lot of posts in other threads on here about the "date entered into a common-law relationship"
on CIC it says "Enter the date (year, month, day) you were married or you entered into your current common-law relationship.
Note: This is the date your status officially changed from being single to common-law, not the date you started living together."
So I put on our documents that the date we entered into our common-law relationship as the day it turned into 1 year of living together for example: if we started living together November 1st, 2014.. I would have put November 1st,2015 as the day entered into your common-law relationship on the forms
However, I read a lot of posts in a different thread how the date entered into common-law relationship should be the date that you moved in (which in the case of my example above would have been November 1st, 2014)
They said that the wording is weird because if you were room mates then fell in love and started dating like 6 months later then the day entered into common-law would be different as the day you moved in...
Im not sure I believe this...
What have others used who have been successful as their dates? date moved in or date after living together for 1 year ?
Thanks !
Just dont want to send off these documents next week and have made a big mistake!
I think I actually might know the thread you read that roommate situation on (if you saw it here), and if you read down farther you will see that the OP of that thread was incorrect.
Anyways, the truly important thing is to prove you've lived together as common-law for a year. I'm sure they get applications with mistakes all the time, but the proof is what's going to affect you.