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Does time in Canada as a visitor apply towards residency?

Ingramsgranny

Newbie
Jul 22, 2009
2
0
I moved to Canada in Sept. 2005, living there as a visitor until I was granted PR status the end of March 2006. Because of family obligations I was forced to return to the US in June of 2007 and remian there for now. I'm wondering how many more months I would need to spend in Canada now to maintain my PR status? Would they count the seven months I spent there initially, before I got PR status, towards my residency requirement?
 

GK

Hero Member
Dec 18, 2007
289
1
Category........
Visa Office......
Detroit
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
01-06-2008
Passport Req..
20-07-2008
VISA ISSUED...
01-08-2008
LANDED..........
01-10-2008
No, I don't think they will count the days before PR was issued.
 

abhi_hola

Star Member
Nov 16, 2008
115
0
For citizenship purpose each day you spend in Canada before getting a PR status is counted as a half-day; you have total of 3X365 days to attain in a span of 4 years to apply for citizenship;
so if you have stayed as a non-PR visa holder from Jul-01-2007 to Jun-29-2009, & became a PR on Jun-30-2009, you would be able to apply for citizenship on Jun-29-2011.
thnx
 

Leon

VIP Member
Jun 13, 2008
21,950
1,318
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
To keep your PR status:

If you became a PR less than 5 years ago, you need to spend 730 days in Canada (= 24 months = 2 years) in your first 5 years as a PR. You count from the day you landed as a PR. That means you can be outside Canada for up to 1095 days (36 months = 3 years) in your first 5 years. If you left in June 2007, you will have to return to Canada no later than June 2010 to complete your first 5 years as a PR.

After you are a PR for 5 years, you always have to meet this same residency requirement counting 5 years backwards.
 

Ingramsgranny

Newbie
Jul 22, 2009
2
0
If all these answers are correct then isn't it ironic that Canada would allow half of that time as a visitor to apply towards citizenship but none towards the residency requirement for PR? Oh well.
 

Leon

VIP Member
Jun 13, 2008
21,950
1,318
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
Since the residency requirement for PR is for any 5 year period, time spent before getting PR is irrelevant just like once you are PR for more than 5 years, where you were 5 years and 1 day ago is irrelevant.

The residency requirements in Canada are actually not strict at all. Many countries cancel your PR if you are gone more than 6 months or more than a year.