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osamaobz

Hero Member
Mar 26, 2012
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I departed Canada on June 29, 2022 as per my boarding pass and arrived in India on July 1, 2022. Since June 30 was a travel day, I entered my Canada address up to June 30, 2022 and my Indian address starting July 1, 2022 to avoid a one-day gap in the form. Is that Okay? or shall I explain the gap? please help me

From = 01 November, 2020
To = 30 June, 2022
Country or territory = Canada

From = 2022 July 01
To= 2023 June 07
Country or territory = India
 
I departed Canada on June 29, 2022 as per my boarding pass and arrived in India on July 1, 2022. Since June 30 was a travel day, I entered my Canada address up to June 30, 2022 and my Indian address starting July 1, 2022 to avoid a one-day gap in the form. Is that Okay? or shall I explain the gap? please help me
From = 2022 July 01
To= 2023 June 07
Country or territory = India
From = 01 November, 2020
To = 30 June, 2022
Country or territory = Canada
Any day you were physically in Canada is the day you departed/left. They do not care where hyou were in between. In your case above: June 29 was in Canada. Other days - you weren't.
 
Any day you were physically in Canada is the day you departed/left. They do not care where hyou were in between. In your case above: June 29 was in Canada. Other days - you weren't.
Thank you but in my passport, the stamp of arrival is 01 July, 2022. What shall I do then?
 
Thank you but in my passport, the stamp of arrival is 01 July, 2022. What shall I do then?
I repeat: they do not care about your arrival elsewhere. You're only showing the dates you departed Canada/arrived in Canada and where you've travelled to - NOT your arrival date elsewhere.

If that's not clear, suggest you hire a lawyer.
 
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Are you speaking here about your address history? That question asks for days, not only months and years? If so, it's fine if you're a day or 2 off compared to reality to adjust to the system limitation, IRCC doesn't care really, as long as your physical presence history is precise.
 
Are you speaking here about your address history? That question asks for days, not only months and years? If so, it's fine if you're a day or 2 off compared to reality to adjust to the system limitation, IRCC doesn't care really, as long as your physical presence history is precise.
Hello Seym, I am asking about the residence and tax section in citizenship application. Actually there is a 1 day gap which I was in transit during that time, I still don't understand, which date shall I put for India. 01 July 2022 or 30 June 2022, because officially on stamp, I had 01 july 2022 on my passport and 30 June was a transit and timezone difference. can you please help me?

From = 01 November, 2020
To = 29 June, 2022
Country or territory = Canada
30 June = Transit.
From = 2022 July 01
To= 2023 June 07
Country or territory = India
 
It doesn't matter which country "takes" that day of transit. Pick Canada or India for that and move on.
 
I departed Canada on June 29, 2022 as per my boarding pass and arrived in India on July 1, 2022. Since June 30 was a travel day, I entered my Canada address up to June 30, 2022 and my Indian address starting July 1, 2022 to avoid a one-day gap in the form. Is that Okay? or shall I explain the gap? please help me

From = 01 November, 2020
To = 30 June, 2022
Country or territory = Canada

From = 2022 July 01
To= 2023 June 07
Country or territory = India


Generally a person's residential address continues until they establish a different address. There are exceptions, of course, including situations in which the person definitively no longer maintains their previous address and they do not establish a new residence.

So unless the transient period of time was significantly lengthy, no problem reporting the previous address as continuing to the date you establish a new address in India. Even if it took a couple weeks or more to establish yourself in a new address. That is, OK to report the previous address as continuing up to the day before you report your new address.

Appears @armoured overlooked the subject line (title) for the thread and was addressing the question as if it was about travel history. Totally disagree, nonetheless, that professional assistance is needed regarding this.
 
I departed Canada on June 29, 2022 as per my boarding pass and arrived in India on July 1, 2022. Since June 30 was a travel day, I entered my Canada address up to June 30, 2022 and my Indian address starting July 1, 2022 to avoid a one-day gap in the form. Is that Okay? or shall I explain the gap? please help me

From = 01 November, 2020
To = 30 June, 2022
Country or territory = Canada

From = 2022 July 01
To= 2023 June 07
Country or territory = India
It would be 01 Nov, 2020 to 29 June, 2022. Whatever date you depart Canada that’s the date you should use