Dhindsa-Law-icon-iLAW-OFFICE

Canadian Citizenship — What You Need to Know

What Is Canadian Citizenship?

Canadian citizenship is the legal status granted to individuals who are born in Canada, born to Canadian parents abroad, or who obtain citizenship through naturalization after holding permanent resident status. Canadian citizens have the right to vote, hold a Canadian passport, run for political office, and cannot be deported from Canada except in cases of fraud.

What Are the Requirements for Canadian Citizenship?

Canadian citizenship requirements include holding permanent resident status, being physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days over the past 5 years, filing Canadian income tax returns for 3 years, demonstrating English or French language proficiency, and passing a citizenship knowledge test. Applicants must also have no criminal prohibitions under the Citizenship Act.

How Long Does It Take to Get Canadian Citizenship?

Canadian citizenship applications typically take 12 to 18 months to be processed by IRCC after submission. Processing times vary based on application completeness, IRCC backlogs, and whether additional documents are requested. Incomplete applications or criminal history reviews can extend timelines. A citizenship lawyer in Calgary helps reduce delays by submitting complete applications.

Can Canadian Citizenship Be Refused?

Canadian citizenship can be refused if an applicant does not meet residency requirements, fails the citizenship test, has a criminal prohibition, or provides inconsistent information. IRCC may also refuse applications where it suspects misrepresentation. Refused applicants have 30 days to file a judicial review application with the Federal Court of Canada through a licensed lawyer.

Can You Apply for Citizenship with a Criminal Record?

A criminal record can delay or block Canadian citizenship. Convictions for indictable offences within the past 4 years, pending charges, or active sentences create prohibitions under the Citizenship Act. A citizenship lawyer in Calgary at Centobin Law Office assesses how specific convictions in Alberta courts affect eligibility and advises on record suspensions or timing strategies.

How to Become a Canadian Citizen

Canadian citizenship can be acquired through three pathways recognized under the Citizenship Act. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary advises clients on which pathway applies to their situation and on the documentation IRCC requires for each.

Citizenship by Naturalization

Citizenship by naturalization is the most common pathway for permanent residents in Calgary. Applicants must meet residency, tax filing, language, and knowledge requirements before submitting an application to IRCC. Most applicants underestimate how closely IRCC scrutinizes travel records when verifying physical presence — even short trips outside Canada must be accounted for with exact dates. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office reviews your entire residency history and prepares supporting evidence to demonstrate compliance with every requirement.

Citizenship by Birth in Canada

A person born on Canadian soil after February 14, 1977, is automatically a Canadian citizen under the Citizenship Act. The primary exception applies to children born to foreign diplomats accredited to Canada. If you were born in Canada and need a citizenship certificate as proof of status, Centobin Law Office assists with citizenship certificate applications.

Citizenship by Descent

Canadian citizenship by descent applies to individuals born outside Canada to at least one Canadian parent. Recent amendments to the Citizenship Act have expanded eligibility for some individuals who previously did not qualify. IRCC applies the first-generation limit strictly, but there are exceptions that many applicants are unaware of. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office evaluates whether you meet the requirements for citizenship by descent, including exceptions to the first-generation limit, and prepares the appropriate application to IRCC.

Canadian Citizenship Requirements

IRCC sets Canadian citizenship requirements and applies to all permanent residents applying through naturalization. A citizenship lawyer in Calgary at Centobin Law Office assesses each requirement against your personal circumstances before you submit your application.

To qualify for Canadian citizenship, you must:

  1. Hold permanent resident status in Canada with no unfulfilled conditions attached to your PR status.
  2. Meet the physical presence requirement — you must have been physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days (3 years) within the 5 years immediately before signing your application. Time spent in Canada as an authorized temporary resident or protected person before becoming a PR counts as half-days, up to a maximum of 365 days.
  3. File Canadian income taxes for at least 3 taxation years within the 5 years before applying, if required under the Income Tax Act.
  4. Demonstrate language proficiency in English or French at a Canadian Language Benchmarks (CLB) level 4 or higher, if you are between 18 and 54 years of age. Accepted proof includes results from IELTS, CELPIP, or TEF Canada.
  5. Pass the Canadian citizenship knowledge test, which covers the rights, responsibilities, and privileges of citizenship, as well as Canadian history, geography, government, and laws. The test applies to applicants aged 18 to 54.
  6.   Have no criminal prohibitions — applicants with certain criminal convictions, pending charges, or who are serving sentences may be ineligible. Time served under a conditional sentence, probation, or parole may not count toward residency calculations.
  7. Not be under a removal order or the subject of an active immigration investigation or proceeding.
  8. Demonstrate intent to reside in Canada once citizenship is granted.
Canadian Citizenship Lawyer in Calgary

Most citizenship delays that Centobin Law handles in Calgary originate from residency miscalculations or incomplete tax filings — issues that are preventable with proper legal review before submission. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary calculates your physical presence days, reviews your tax filing history, and identifies potential red flags before your application reaches an IRCC officer.

Canadian Citizenship Application Process

Canadian Citizenship Lawyer in Calgary

The Canadian citizenship application process involves multiple stages, and errors at any point can cause delays or refusals. A citizenship lawyer in Calgary at Centobin Law Office manages every step from eligibility assessment through to your oath ceremony.

Step 1 — Eligibility Assessment

A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office reviews your immigration history, residency records, tax filings, and any criminal or immigration concerns. This assessment determines whether you meet all IRCC requirements before preparing your application. In cases where eligibility is borderline, the assessment identifies whether to apply now or wait until a stronger case can be made.

Step 2 — Document Collection and Preparation

Your citizenship lawyer gathers all required supporting documents, including travel records, passport copies, tax notices of assessment, language test results, and identity documents. Every document is reviewed for accuracy and completeness. IRCC often requests additional documents when an applicant’s travel history is complex or when gaps appear between passport stamps and declared absences — a citizenship lawyer anticipates these requests and addresses them proactively.

Step 3 — Physical Presence Calculation

Residency calculation errors are among the most common causes of citizenship application delays. Applicants commonly underestimate the precision IRCC expects — every entry and exit date must be accounted for, and discrepancies between passport stamps and IRCC portal records raise red flags. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary uses your passport stamps, travel records, and IRCC portal data to calculate your exact physical presence days and ensure you meet the 1,095-day threshold.

Step 4 — Application Submission

Once all documents are verified, your completed citizenship application is submitted to IRCC. A citizenship lawyer ensures the application package is organized in the format IRCC officers expect, reducing the likelihood of requests for additional information. Applications that arrive complete and well-organized move through processing faster than those that require follow-up.

Step 5 — Citizenship Test and Interview Preparation

If you are between 18 and 54, you will be required to take a citizenship knowledge test. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office provides guidance on the test format, the study materials in Discover Canada, and what to expect if IRCC requests an interview. Most applicants who prepare using the official study guide and focus on Canadian history, government structure, and civic rights pass on their first attempt.

Step 6 — Oath of Citizenship Ceremony

After your application is approved and you pass your test, you will attend a citizenship ceremony where you take the Oath of Citizenship. This ceremony may be held in Calgary or another location in Alberta. Once you take the oath, you are officially a Canadian citizen.

How a Criminal Record Affects Canadian Citizenship

A criminal record is one of the most common barriers to Canadian citizenship. IRCC reviews every applicant’s criminal history during the citizenship process, and certain convictions or pending charges can delay or block an application entirely.

Under the Citizenship Act, you may be ineligible for citizenship if you have been convicted of an indictable offence within the past 4 years, are currently charged with an indictable offence, or are serving a sentence (including probation, parole, or a conditional sentence). Summary conviction offences and hybrid offences may also affect eligibility depending on the circumstances. Many applicants are surprised to learn that even a conditional discharge in Alberta Provincial Court can trigger IRCC scrutiny during citizenship processing.

A citizenship lawyer in Calgary at Centobin Law Office assesses the impact of your criminal history on your citizenship application and advises on the steps required to address these issues before filing.

What Centobin Law Office can do:

  • Review whether your criminal record creates a prohibition under the Citizenship Act
  • Calculate how conviction dates, sentencing, and completion of sentences affect your eligibility timeline
  • Advise on record suspension (pardon) applications that may remove the prohibition
  • Coordinate between your criminal law matter and your citizenship application to protect both outcomes
  • Identify whether pending charges or immigration-related offences create additional risks

Because Centobin Law Office practises both criminal defence and immigration law in Calgary, our lawyers understand how a conviction, withdrawal, discharge, or acquittal in Alberta Provincial Court or the Court of King’s Bench affects your citizenship eligibility. IRCC does not always interpret Alberta court outcomes as applicants expect — a withdrawal is treated differently from a discharge, and an absolute discharge differs from a conditional discharge in terms of citizenship prohibitions.

For more details on how a criminal record impacts immigration and other aspects of life in Canada, see our guide to criminal record consequences in Canada

Criminal Record Affects Canadian Citizenship

Permanent Residency vs Canadian Citizenship — What’s the Difference?

Canadian Citizenship

Permanent residency and Canadian citizenship provide different rights, obligations, and levels of security under Canadian law. A citizenship lawyer in Calgary at Centobin Law Office advises permanent residents on when citizenship provides meaningful additional protection — and when timing your application matters.

FeaturePermanent ResidentCanadian Citizen
Right to live and work in Canada✅ Yes✅ Yes
Right to vote❌ No✅ Yes
Eligible for a Canadian passport❌ No✅ Yes
Can run for political office❌ No✅ Yes
Protection from deportation❌ Can be removed✅ Cannot be deported (except for fraud)
Residency obligation730 days per 5-year periodNo obligation after citizenship
Access to government positions❌ Restricted✅ Full access
Can sponsor family members✅ Yes (limited)✅ Yes (broader)

 

The most significant practical difference is permanence. Permanent residency can be revoked — Canadian citizenship cannot, except where it was obtained through fraud or misrepresentation. For permanent residents in Calgary with criminal history concerns, complex travel patterns, or family members abroad, citizenship provides a level of security that PR status does not.

What Are Your Chances of Getting Canadian Citizenship?

Canadian citizenship approval rates are generally high for applicants who meet all eligibility requirements and submit complete applications. However, IRCC applies each requirement strictly, and applications with even minor issues can be delayed, flagged for additional review, or refused.

Factors That Strengthen Your Application

Applications that proceed smoothly through IRCC processing share common characteristics: clean travel records with no unexplained gaps, consistent tax filing history, language test scores well above the minimum CLB 4 threshold, and a complete document package that matches IRCC’s checklist exactly. Applicants who have lived continuously in Calgary or Alberta without extended international travel typically have the most straightforward residency calculations.

Factors That Trigger IRCC Scrutiny

IRCC officers apply additional scrutiny when an application shows frequent international travel near the residency threshold, gaps between passport stamps and declared absences, a criminal record or pending charges, prior immigration violations, or inconsistencies between the application and IRCC’s own records. Applications where the physical presence calculation is borderline — close to exactly 1,095 days with no margin — are more likely to receive a request for additional documentation.

Common Mistakes That Lead to Refusal

Most citizenship refusals that Centobin Law handles in Calgary fall into predictable categories: miscalculations of residency days, missing tax filings for one or more required years, failure to disclose a criminal charge or conviction, and submission of outdated or incomplete identity documents. Each of these issues is preventable with proper legal review before submission.

A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary evaluates your specific circumstances, identifies risk factors, and advises on whether to apply now or take corrective steps first — such as filing missing tax returns or waiting for a criminal prohibition period to expire.

When You Should Hire a Citizenship Lawyer in Calgary

Citizenship Lawyer in Calgary

Not every citizenship application requires a lawyer, but certain situations carry enough risk that professional legal guidance is essential. A citizenship lawyer in Calgary at Centobin Law Office is particularly valuable when your case involves any of the following:

You should hire a citizenship lawyer if you have:

  • A criminal record, pending charges, or a prior conviction in Alberta or elsewhere in Canada
  • A previous citizenship or immigration application that was refused
  • Complex travel history with frequent or extended trips outside Canada
  • Borderline physical presence calculations close to the 1,095-day threshold
  • Gaps in your tax filing history or uncertainty about whether you meet the income tax requirement
  • A removal order, immigration investigation, or prior deportation from any country
  • Concerns about misrepresentation — whether unintentional errors in a previous application could affect your citizenship case
  • Family members included in your application who have their own eligibility complications

For applicants in Calgary with straightforward residency, clean criminal records, and complete documentation, a citizenship lawyer still provides value by reviewing the application for accuracy, ensuring the physical presence calculation is correct, and preventing avoidable errors that cause delays.

A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary provides a clear assessment during your initial consultation of whether your case requires full legal representation or a lighter-touch review.

Citizenship Appeals and Refusals

A Canadian citizenship application can be refused for several reasons, including residency shortfalls, incomplete documentation, misrepresentation concerns, or criminal inadmissibility. A citizenship appeal lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary reviews your refusal letter, identifies the legal basis for the decision, and develops a strategy to challenge it.

Common Reasons for Citizenship Refusal

IRCC may refuse a citizenship application when the applicant does not meet the physical presence requirement, fails the citizenship test, provides inconsistent information, or has a criminal prohibition. In some cases, refusals result from IRCC officer errors in calculating residency or misinterpreting supporting documents. Centobin Law has reviewed refusal letters where IRCC miscounted travel days or failed to credit half-day calculations for time spent as a temporary resident. These errors are correctable through judicial review.

Federal Court Judicial Review

If your citizenship application is refused, you have 30 days from the date of the decision to file an application for leave and judicial review at the Federal Court of Canada. Only a licensed lawyer — not an immigration consultant — can represent you in Federal Court. A citizenship appeal lawyer at Centobin Law Office prepares your application for judicial review, drafts supporting legal arguments, and represents you throughout the Federal Court process.

Humanitarian and Compassionate Grounds

In certain cases where strict eligibility requirements are not met, a citizenship lawyer may present arguments based on humanitarian and compassionate grounds — including strong family ties in Canada, length of residence, community ties, and hardship if citizenship is denied. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary evaluates whether humanitarian arguments strengthen your case.

Citizenship Appeals and Refusals

Facing a Citizenship Refusal? Act Before the 30-Day Deadline Expires.

Federal Court judicial review deadlines are strict. A citizenship appeal lawyer in Calgary at Centobin Law Office can assess your refusal and advise on your options.

Why Choose a Citizenship Lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary

Criminal and Immigration Law Under One Roof

Centobin Law Office practises both criminal defence and immigration law in Calgary — a combination most firms cannot offer. When a criminal charge or conviction threatens your eligibility for citizenship, our lawyers coordinate your defence and immigration strategy, protecting both outcomes simultaneously.

Calgary Courts and IRCC Knowledge

A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office understands how Alberta Provincial Court and Court of King’s Bench proceedings affect IRCC assessments. We know how local sentencing patterns, Crown prosecution practices, and Alberta-specific procedural timelines interact with federal citizenship requirements.

Federal Court Representation

Only a licensed lawyer can represent you before the Federal Court of Canada on a citizenship judicial review. Centobin Law Office handles citizenship appeals from initial assessment through to Federal Court hearings, providing representation that immigration consultants are not authorized to offer.

Transparent Fees and Direct Communication

A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary provides clear fee structures during your initial consultation. You communicate directly with your lawyer — not through intermediaries — and receive updates at every stage of your citizenship application or appeal.

Canadian Citizenship Processing Times

Canadian Citizenship Processing Times

Canadian citizenship processing times depend on the type of application and current IRCC backlogs. A citizenship lawyer in Calgary at Centobin Law Office provides realistic timeline estimates during your initial consultation based on the most recent IRCC processing data.

Application TypeEstimated Processing Time
Grant of citizenship (naturalization)12–18 months
Proof of citizenship (born in Canada)5–12 months
Citizenship by descent5–12 months
Citizenship appeal (Federal Court)6–12 months

Processing times are approximate and subject to change based on IRCC processing volumes. Incomplete applications or requests for additional documents from IRCC can extend these timelines significantly — in some cases, adding 6 months or more. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office submits complete, well-organized applications to minimize the risk of processing delays.

Key Takeaways — Canadian Citizenship in Calgary

Physical presence requirement: 1,095 days (3 years) in Canada within the 5 years before your application

  • Criminal record impact: Indictable offence convictions within 4 years, pending charges, or active sentences can block citizenship
  • Refusals can be appealed: You have 30 days to file for judicial review at the Federal Court of Canada — only a lawyer can represent you
  • Three pathways exist: Naturalization, birth in Canada, or descent from a Canadian parent
  • Most delays are preventable: Residency miscalculations, missing tax filings, and incomplete documents are the top causes
  • Processing time: 12–18 months for standard naturalization applications.
  • Centobin’s advantage: Criminal defence and immigration law under one roof — essential when criminal history affects citizenship eligibility
Canadian Citizenship in Calgary

Frequently Asked Questions About Canadian Citizenship

To qualify for Canadian citizenship through naturalization, you must have been physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days (3 years) within the 5 years immediately before signing your application. A citizenship lawyer in Calgary at Centobin Law Office calculates your exact physical presence days using travel records, passport stamps, and IRCC portal data to confirm you meet this Alberta and Canada-wide requirement.

If IRCC refuses your Canadian citizenship application, you have 30 days to file for judicial review at the Federal Court of Canada. Only a licensed lawyer — not an immigration consultant — can represent you in Federal Court. A citizenship appeal lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary reviews your refusal, identifies legal errors, and prepares your Federal Court application within the strict deadline.

Permanent residency allows you to live, work, and study in Canada, but it can be revoked for criminal convictions, misrepresentation, or extended absences from Canada. Canadian citizenship provides permanent protection from removal (except in cases of fraud), the right to vote, eligibility for a Canadian passport, and the ability to run for political office. Permanent residents in Calgary who meet the eligibility requirements can apply for citizenship through naturalization with the help of a citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office.

You cannot apply for Canadian citizenship directly from a work permit. You must first obtain permanent resident status before you are eligible to apply for citizenship. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary can advise on the pathway from temporary residency to permanent residency to citizenship and help you plan each stage of your immigration journey in Alberta.

A criminal record can delay or prevent Canadian citizenship. If you have been convicted of an indictable offence within the past 4 years, are currently facing charges, or are serving a sentence including probation, a prohibition period may apply under the Citizenship Act. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary assesses how your specific criminal history in Alberta courts affects your eligibility and advises on steps to address the issue.

Applicants between 18 and 54 years of age must pass a citizenship knowledge test covering Canadian history, geography, government, rights, and responsibilities. The test is based on the official study guide, Discover Canada, and is offered in English or French. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office in Calgary provides guidance on test preparation and what to expect on test day.

The cost of a citizenship lawyer in Calgary depends on the complexity of your case — a straightforward application costs less than a citizenship appeal at the Federal Court. A citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office provides a clear fee structure during your initial consultation with no hidden costs. Contact our Calgary office for a quote specific to your situation.

Ready to Apply for Canadian Citizenship?

Whether you are a permanent resident in Calgary preparing your first citizenship application or you need help appealing a refusal, a citizenship lawyer at Centobin Law Office is ready to help. Schedule your free consultation today.
Book a Free Consultation
testimonials

Hear from Our Satisfied Clients

envelopephonecrossmenuchevron-down linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram