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Krishna008

Star Member
Jun 11, 2018
104
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Hello...

Sorry for the long post.

I ordered GCMS notes and within two days, my status updated to In person Interview.

In my GCMS notes it said:
Outcome of Review:
Comments: Physical presence concerns - multiple day and over night trips to USA not declared.
Outcome of review: ON HOLD.
Next processing stage
File to: Grant interview ready in person

I have, maybe 7 or 8 overnight trips and about 25 days trips to US within 5 years. I am hundred percent sure, I declared them all correctly while applying for citizenship in 2025, based on my records what I have. In fact, I declared the same in 2024 as well when applying for PR extension. I did not face any issues at that time. I applied for travel history after getting this GCMS notes. I will have to look which ones are discrepant.

I am really worried about the interview. Did anyone face similar issues? What did you do? What happened during the interview? How were you able to show that the dates you provided on the citizenship application are correct if the dates in the CBSA travel history are discrepant? Whenever I made a day trip or overnight trip, I had taken and saved receipts for example gas stations or restaurants etc. But I will have to check and find them out where they are. But will they be sufficient?

Please help me with any real experiences if anyone had gone through similar. Greatly appreciate the help.

Thank you.
 
So this is several years ago now, but my husband got RQ for missing a single same day trip in his application. When he got RQ, they didn't ask for any evidence of his time outside of Canada. What they wanted was evidence to prove he was in Canada on the days he was claiming he was in Canada.
 
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So this is several years ago now, but my husband got RQ for missing a single same day trip in his application. When he got RQ, they didn't ask for any evidence of his time outside of Canada. What they wanted was evidence to prove he was in Canada on the days he was claiming he was in Canada.
Thank you for the reply. What did you provide? And what happened after that?
 
I have, maybe 7 or 8 overnight trips and about 25 days trips to US within 5 years. I am hundred percent sure, I declared them all correctly while applying for citizenship in 2025, based on my records what I have. In fact, I declared the same in 2024 as well when applying for PR extension. I did not face any issues at that time. I applied for travel history after getting this GCMS notes. I will have to look which ones are discrepant.
The PR extension history is irrelevant in one important sense, that the citizenship law's requirements are very specific: you MUST have the minimum number of days or the grant request shall be denied. (Read 'shall' in law to mean absolute requirement, or at least, if they're aware of discrepancies, they need to be convinced these are errors in the records, not actual shortfalls).

The residency obligation is less specific and absolute - leniency is allowed. While not an exact analogy, think of them as very different standards of proof: residency obligation ~ balance of probabilities, if they think it looks like you're living in Canada / probably have enough days, good enough to proceed. Standard is higher for citizenship.
I am really worried about the interview. Did anyone face similar issues? What did you do? What happened during the interview? How were you able to show that the dates you provided on the citizenship application are correct if the dates in the CBSA travel history are discrepant? Whenever I made a day trip or overnight trip, I had taken and saved receipts for example gas stations or restaurants etc. But I will have to check and find them out where they are. But will they be sufficient?
I would suggest a few things:
-order your CBSA entry and exit records (ASAP!) and see what they have, compare to your own records.
-what you're looking for are missing entries/exits (probably missing entries) that mean you could have been away much longer, and therefore could - hypothetically - trip your days-in-Canada below the 1095.
-Obviously depends how many days above 1095 you had, i.e. if you had much of a buffer.

Hopefully that will lead you to the dates you need to 'shore up' as having been in Canada.

I guess cell phone records are an option, if you have can get some that show in detail roaming/not roaming.

[Side note, it's why having receipts of the days before and after departing/arriving from in Canada are most important. Day of an entry/exit is fine too, but obviously for same-day trips, you'd need some evidence for AFTER the return to Canada. This is a pain - less convenient than passport stamps, anyway - but not many good alternatives.]

My spouse had an interview that touched on this - although the gcms notes didn't have it as on hold, just an interview. We sent info that showed passport stamps demonstrating when the entrances and exits from Canada occurred before the interview to cover the missing arrival. In the end, the interviewer seemed mostly to want to confirm actual residence in Canada (spouse travels a lot for work).

So despite what I said about the standard of proof, it may still come down to convincing officer / they may just be clarifying the date discrepancy that the original review found.
 
Thank you very much for the detailed reply. Yes, it makes sense about PR extension vs Cotizenship application.

I had about 10-11 days buffer beyond 1095 days.

Yes, I ordered CBSA travel records. I sm not sure how long they will take to provide them. Good suggestion about phone records - I am with Freedom in Canada and with Google FI on US, I will check with them if they can provide me with roaming records(not positive though). I have receipts for over night trips (by overnight, I meant I traveled back and forth between US-Canada-US within few hours but the buffer days I had should be good for them I think, even if in case). Once I receive travel history, I will check for the missing entries and will try as much evidence as I can to ensure I am in Canada on those days. That is what I am planning.

My wife lives in the US. I am out of Canada two weeks after applying for Citizenship and yet to return to Canada. Do you think that will have any negative affect during the interview? In fact, most of the day trips and over night trips are when my wife visited me in Canada, we had to stay at the border on US side for her work restrictions so traveled into Canada for few hours over night.

Thank you once again for your time in replying and also for your great suggestions
 
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Yes, I ordered CBSA travel records. I sm not sure how long they will take to provide them. Good suggestion about phone records - I am with Freedom in Canada and with Google FI on US, I will check with them if they can provide me with roaming records(not positive though). I have receipts for over night trips (by overnight, I meant I traveled back and forth between US-Canada-US within few hours but the buffer days I had should be good for them I think, even if in case). Once I receive travel history, I will check for the missing entries and will try as much evidence as I can to ensure I am in Canada on those days. That is what I am planning.
That's not a lot of buffer for the amount of travel you've done, so looks like that's it. As I mentioned, our case seemed to go fine once the officer was convinced of the background and that spouse's residence was in fact in Canada and only trips outside. (My /speculation/ is that they're not trying to be jerks about this and that comfort that the applicant was probably in compliance and definitely would be a few months later can play positively. Not that they're not following the requirements of the law - but being realistic when applicants clearly are residing in Canada most of the time.)
My wife lives in the US. I am out of Canada two weeks after applying for Citizenship and yet to return to Canada. Do you think that will have any negative affect during the interview? In fact, most of the day trips and over night trips are when my wife visited me in Canada, we had to stay at the border on US side for her work restrictions so traveled into Canada for few hours over night.
Your timeline here is not clear. If you mean that you applied, stayed in Canada for two weeks, and then effectively left (and assuming that was months ago), while it doesn't formally change anything, you might benefit less from the benefit of the doubt. IDK.
 
That's not a lot of buffer for the amount of travel you've done, so looks like that's it. As I mentioned, our case seemed to go fine once the officer was convinced of the background and that spouse's residence was in fact in Canada and only trips outside. (My /speculation/ is that they're not trying to be jerks about this and that comfort that the applicant was probably in compliance and definitely would be a few months later can play positively. Not that they're not following the requirements of the law - but being realistic when applicants clearly are residing in Canada most of the time.)

Your timeline here is not clear. If you mean that you applied, stayed in Canada for two weeks, and then effectively left (and assuming that was months ago), while it doesn't formally change anything, you might benefit less from the benefit of the doubt. IDK.
Thank you. Yes, I applied in Sep 2025 and had to leave in Oct 2025. I am in Canada from Feb 2022 to Oct 2025.
 
Thank you. Yes, I applied in Sep 2025 and had to leave in Oct 2025. I am in Canada from Feb 2022 to Oct 2025.
That's relevant information you left out.

It doesn't formally affect the day count. But as noted, benefit of the doubt is not in your favour.
 
That's relevant information you left out.

It doesn't formally affect the day count. But as noted, benefit of the doubt is not in your favour.
I had posted all this information in one of my other questions. But since this is GCMS related query, I just asked about that in my initial post.
Is there anything that I can do? I am tensed now.