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alcor

Newbie
Nov 16, 2008
2
0
Hi

I can't find the answer to this anywhere...

If a visa-exempt foreign national (Commonwealth citizen) enters Canada as a visitor and is given a passport stamp that's valid for, say, three months, can he/she then leave and re-enter Canada during that three-month period without needing to get another passport stamp?

For example, say he enters Canada and is given a stamp that's valid for three months, then after one month in Canada decides to visit friends in Peru for a week, with the intention of returning to Canada immediately afterwards...

When returning from Peru, would the original three-month passport stamp still be valid (hence behaving like a multiple-entry visa), or would it now be invalid, meaning that he would now need to request more time to visit Canada from a Canadian immigration officer?

In other words, would Canadian immigration stamp his passport when he left for Peru, effectively cancelling the original three-month validity period?

Thanks
 
Hi

alcor said:
Hi

I can't find the answer to this anywhere...

If a visa-exempt foreign national (Commonwealth citizen) enters Canada as a visitor and is given a passport stamp that's valid for, say, three months, can he/she then leave and re-enter Canada during that three-month period without needing to get another passport stamp?

For example, say he enters Canada and is given a stamp that's valid for three months, then after one month in Canada decides to visit friends in Peru for a week, with the intention of returning to Canada immediately afterwards...

When returning from Peru, would the original three-month passport stamp still be valid (hence behaving like a multiple-entry visa), or would it now be invalid, meaning that he would now need to request more time to visit Canada from a Canadian immigration officer?

In other words, would Canadian immigration stamp his passport when he left for Peru, effectively cancelling the original three-month validity period?

Thanks

Soon as you leave (as a visitor) that ends your admission. Canada doesn't stamp passports on exit. When you return, you are applying for a new admission as a visitor.

PMM
 
PMM is right. passport holders of Visa Exempt countries are exempted from visa. Each time you enter cannada your passport will be stamped and it will be new visit. I have myself travelled between UK,USA ,Canada and Mexico several times. Each time I crossed between UK,USA & Canada immigration officers affixed a new stamp.
 
If visiting for a maximum 6 months(visa exempt) does leaving the country for even a short period qualify a visa exempt visitor to re enter for another extended period ie. up to 6 months?
 
Americans are visa exempt when comming to Canada up to six months right? When their passport is stamped as they enter Canada, is there an expiry date on that stamp??? I had never noticed...
 
PMM said:
Soon as you leave (as a visitor) that ends your admission. Canada doesn't stamp passports on exit. When you return, you are applying for a new admission as a visitor.

PMM

Since Canada does not stamp passports on exit, how can they determine how long someone has been in country. I live in Washington state (U.S. Citizen) less than ten miles from the Blaine/White Rock crossing. Let's say I enter BC (via auto) to have dinner in Vancouver, or spend a weekend skiing, then drive back home to U.S. Seven or 8 months later I want to again spend a day in Canada. How do they know whether I was there for a day, a weekend, or a full six months?
 
They share info with the US border control.
 
Leon said:
They share info with the US border control.

I understand ... the problem is that each time I've re-entered the U.S. in the past (by auto or ferry) U.S. customs has NEVER stamped my passport, since I'm a U.S. citizen. I'm just trying to avoid a potential situation in the future (particulary during the 2010 Olympic games) where I might be refused entry because I've got stamps in passport more than 6-months old.