Give me another +1 for adding that it was irrelevant to OP.Canvan003 said:+1 for you for making me realise that my case was not the worst one.
You have to do some leg work and contact the relevant rental company. You may find each has its own rules for what they want from the renter. Typically a Canadian DL is enough since the car rental agency isn't focused on your immigration status. They are not CBP/CBSA etc - they just want the cars of the lot since that's generating cash flow. If they have a concern about the vehicle they just block of a 'substantial' amount on your credit card and if that's not enough well insurance will take care of it. Go with a major rental set up say the airport not a small mom and pop franchise. The Majors see one way rentals daily. You may even get an ON plated rental to take back that had been previously driven to the US as a one way from ON.Sydkadra said:Dear Leon, Scylla, Msafiri and other experts
In continuation of the above questions, my question is
1. Whether a non-Visa exempt Passport Holder Canadian PR who holds valid Ontario Driver's License can hire rent a car in US and drive without the need of International Driver's Permit, if IDP is must where it can be obtained as they are traveling from the home country to US and then US to Canada in the rental car.
2. What documents in US required by Car Rentals to issue a Car to Canadian PR holding Valid DL? Whether they want to see the Citizenship Proof or want to see the PR Card and what if the PR Cards are expired.
Please provide the answer in details
Thanks
I will add to the rental car, the one-way rental is not unusual at ALL. It will be more expensive because they have to cover costs in case they have to pay an employee to travel to bring the car back to the USA. They also only allow it on their smaller vehicles because are rented much more frequently than larger vehicles, so the likelihood of the car ending up on another one-way rental back into the USA is much higher, so they don't have to pay an employee bring it back.Sydkadra said:Dear Msafiri
Thank you very much for replying in details to all the questions and it will be helpful for the family to be fully prepared in line with your answers it is really appreciated. Another question is that they said they contacted AVIS on phone to check whether they can rent a one way rental to Canada, they replied it is possible but for the compact saloon cars only but not for SUV. My question is whether there is any restriction or it will be difficult for the rental company to bring back the SUV than the Saloon Car back to US.
Whether we can get
1- Any Canadian Private SUV vehicle operated by private person who can provide the transport services at Buffalo for drop off at For Eerie for a price and whether it will be objected by CBSA.
2- Is it easy to get rental of all kinds of vehicles for one way travel as you said it is more common practice there and most of the big rental companies are aware of such requirements by the PR.
Thank you and for all who will provide their own personal experiences.
Regards
SydKadra
I will let others answer your question, the meaning of the text in a link you posted is not sufficiently clear to me, so I may misunderstand it.Sydkadra said:Dear Msafiri, Leon, Scylla all other experts.
In continuation with the above thread, what difference will be there for PR who travels after March 2016 by commercial transport and those with Private Vehicles and cross the US/Canada Border which is applicable to Visa-Exempt and Non-Visa-Exempt PRs. It seems that other documents which will be valid for travel between US/Canada Land Borders are the Nexus Cards/Valid PR Cards and Canadian Passport. Why question is whether the COPR or the Immigration Landing Paper will no longer be a valid document entering Canada in Private Vehicles ( own or rental). I appreciate if the experts clarify in detail about the changes which will come into effect in March 2016 as per the CIC , the link is given
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?q=064&t=10
Thank you for your reply
As far as I can see, the only change that is happening on March 16th is eTA:Sydkadra said:Dear Msafiri, Leon, Scylla all other experts.
In continuation with the above thread, what difference will be there for PR who travels after March 2016 by commercial transport and those with Private Vehicles and cross the US/Canada Border which is applicable to Visa-Exempt and Non-Visa-Exempt PRs. It seems that other documents which will be valid for travel between US/Canada Land Borders are the Nexus Cards/Valid PR Cards and Canadian Passport. Why question is whether the COPR or the Immigration Landing Paper will no longer be a valid document entering Canada in Private Vehicles ( own or rental). I appreciate if the experts clarify in detail about the changes which will come into effect in March 2016 as per the CIC , the link is given
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?q=064&t=10
Thank you for your reply
Looking at what immigration is writing about eTA and the purpose of eTA, it seems that the main purspose is a universal pre-screening of visa exempt individuals and not to catch visa exempt PR's who don't meet the RO and are trying to sneak back in.Canada has introduced a new entry requirement, known as an eTA, for visa-exempt foreign nationals travelling to Canada by air. Exceptions include U.S. citizens and travellers with a valid visa. Entry requirements for other methods of travel (land, sea) have not changed.
It is not really about punishing PR's who leave. No country I know of gives you PR status for life if you choose not to live there. Or maybe you know of one?david1697 said:Reduce the quote,temporarily zero it down it necessary, bring a good vibe to a job market and then punish those Canadian PR's who still don't want to live in Canada.
Leon, the question I ask is: why Canadian PR's in such large numbers try to avoid staying in Canada?Leon said:It is not really about punishing PR's who leave. No country I know of gives you PR status for life if you choose not to live there. Or maybe you know of one?
The US does not have concrete residency requirements for their PR's, however, one of the criteria for losing US PR would be "if you move to another country, intending to live there permanently" or "Fail to file income tax returns while living outside of the United States for any period", as seen here: http://www.uscis.gov/green-card/after-green-card-granted/maintaining-permanent-residence
In many other countries, you lose your PR status if you leave for more than 6 months so Canada is actually being quite generous to allow people to keep their PR for only living in Canada 2 / 5 years.
keesio, let me also ask you the question I hope you or someone else will answer here.keesio said:david1967 - there are two separate issues here. The first is Canada's PR RO. The second is the struggles of new immigrants to find gainful employment and deciding to go elsewhere to get it. The latter is not a reason to eliminate the former. It is totally fine for someone to decide that Canada is a disappointment and they rather go elsewhere. But those same people can't expect to hang on to their PR. I mean why do they want to be a PR if Canada is not for them and they don't want to be there? Well for some, the answer is to become a citizen so they can access the US job market much easier with a TN visa. If that is the case, then it is the old classic "use Canada as a stepping stone to the US" scenario that has been going on forever and frowned upon by CIC and most Canadians in general.