Application for Canadian Citizenship – Adults (CIT 0002)
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Application for Canadian Citizenship – Adults [CIT 0002] (PDF, 2.1 MB)
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General application information
- You must answer all the questions on this form unless instructed otherwise
- Download and fill out the form on a computer.
- You also have the option to save your form and fill it out later.
- Read and follow the questions below to help you fill out the form.
- Question 1.
- From the list, select the language (English or French) in which you would like to receive your service.
- Question 2.
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Tell us if you have any special needs that require accommodation. If yes, select the appropriate accommodation you require in the drop down menu.
Some examples of specials needs are:
- wheelchair access
- sign language interpretation (for example, deaf individuals may have a sign language interpreter to help with the assessment of “listening and speaking” ability)
- personal assistance (for example, you will be accompanied by a care attendant, an interpreter, service animal, a sighted guide, etc.)
- materials in accessible formats (for example, the study guide is available in large print, audio or Braille versions).
If the special need is not listed, please explain in the space provided.
Personal information
- Question 3.
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Your Unique Client Identifier (UCI) as shown on your Record of Landing (IMM 1000), Confirmation of Permanent Residence (IMM 5292 or IMM 5688), or Last Permanent Residence Card (PR Card):
You can find your client ID number or UCI on your:
- Permanent Resident Card (PR Card)
- the number next to your photograph
- Confirmation of Permanent Residence (IMM 5292 or IMM 5688)
- the number at the top right corner of the document
- Record of Landing (IMM 1000)
- if there is no client ID number listed, provide the document number located at the bottom right corner that begins with a W followed by 9 digits (Example: W 012 345 678)
The UCI is an eight or ten-digit number
- Permanent Resident Card (PR Card)
- Question 4.
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Your full name as shown on your Record of Landing (IMM 1000), Confirmation of Permanent Residence (IMM 5292 or IMM 5688), or Last Permanent Residence Card (PR Card).
- Examples of documents are listed above in Question 3.
- If you do not have a given name, leave this field blank. Do not enter “*”, “Not applicable” or “NA”.
- If you changed your name since becoming a Permanent Resident, select “yes” from the drop down menu and provide the required documents listed in Appendixes A: Name Change
- Choose your gender (F-Female, M-Male or X-Another gender).
- Note: If the gender identifier chosen is F or M, it must match the sex that appears on the passport or travel document you provide with your application. If the gender identifier chosen is X, it should match an equivalent non-binary option
- If you have legally changed your gender designation you must submit additional documents. Consult the Appendix C: Request for a change of sex or gender identifier
- Indicate your height (how tall you are), either in centimetres or feet/inches
- Indicate your natural eye colour.
- Your date of birth as shown exactly on your Record of Landing (IMM 1000), Confirmation of Permanent Residence (IMM 5292 or IMM 5688), or Last Permanent Residence Card (PR Card).
- If your date of birth needs to be corrected, see Appendix B - Date of birth correction.
- If your entire date of birth is unknown, please use ‘*’ (star sign or asterisk) to fill in the spaces for the month or day, where applicable.
- Write your place of birth, including the city/town and country
- Note, if your city, town, or country or territory of birth is indicated in your passport or your travel document, please record it as it appears in the document
- Question 5.
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We need to know all of the names you have ever used in order to verify your identity. If you used any other names other than the one being requested in your grant of citizenship application, print them in the chart.
Note: this question is optional, only complete it if it applies to you.
- Examples: Name at time of birth, name before marriage, previous married names, married name, nick names or any other names you have used.
- If you do not have a given name, leave this field blank. Do not enter “*”, “Not applicable” or “NA”.
- You can add or remove rows as you need by pressing the plus sign (+) or minus sign (-) buttons.
- If you have legally changed your name, see Appendix A – Name change.
- Question 6.
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Choose your current marital status:
- Annulled Marriage - This is a marriage that is legally declared invalid. An annulment can also be a declaration by the Catholic Church that the marital union did not have a binding force.
- Common - Law - This means that you have lived continuously with your partner in a marital-type relationship for a minimum of one year.
- Divorced - This means that you are officially separated and have legally ended your marriage.
- Separated - This means that you are married, but are no longer living with your spouse.
- Married - This means that you and your spouse have had a ceremony that legally binds you to each other. Your marriage must be legally recognized in the country where it was performed and in Canada.
- Single - This means that you have never been married and are not in a common-law relationship.
- Widowed - This means that your spouse has died and that you have not re-married or entered into a common-law relationship.
Contact information
- Question 7.
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Home Address in Canada
- Apartment (Apt.) or Unit, if it applies to you
- Street Number (No.)
- Street Name. Do not abbreviate words (Street, Avenue, Boulevard, Drive etc.) except for directions (NW, SE, W, etc.)
- City or Town
- Country or territory
- Province or State
- Postal Code
- District, if it applies to you.
- All correspondence will go to this address unless you give us your e-mail address.
- Indicating an e-mail address will authorize all correspondence, including file and personal information, to be sent to the e-mail address you specify
- If you wish to authorize the release of information from your application to a representative, you must indicate their e-mail and mailing address and complete the Use of a Representative form (IMM 5476) (opens in new tab)
Note: Canada Post’s Mail Forwarding Service does not forward parcels and a citizenship application package is considered a parcel. If we need to return your application package to you because it is incomplete, the package will be returned to us instead of being forwarded to the address you have indicated with Canada Post. If your application package is returned to us by Canada Post, it will not be processed.
Mailing address
Select “yes” from the drop down menu to tell us if the address you live at is the same as your mailing address. If “No”, type the following information:
- P.O. box, if it applies to you
- Apartment (Apt.) or Unit, if it applies to you
- Street Number (No.)
- Street Name. Do not abbreviate words (Street, Avenue, Boulevard, Drive etc.) except for directions (NW, SE, W, etc.)
- City or Town
- Country or territory
- Province or State
- Postal Code
- District, if it applies to you.
Phone number(s)
Check the correct box to tell us if your other telephone number is from Canada, the United States or Other (any other country).
Choose the type of telephone:
- Residence (home)
- Cellular (cell or mobile)
- Business (work)
Type your telephone number including the country code, area or regional codes, etc.
If you have an extension number, write it after your phone number under “Ext.”
Note: Providing an alternative phone number is optional.
Email Address
If you have one, type your e-mail address using a format similar to the following: name@provider.net
Note: Make sure you check your email regularly. Any emails sent to you by IRCC will end in:
- “@cic.gc.ca”
- “@canada.ca” or
- “@international.gc.ca”.
Please add these to your “safe senders” list in your email program and check the junk mail folder in case important emails get filtered. If we find that your email address does not work or no longer exists, we will communicate with you by mail. By giving us your e-mail address, you are hereby authorizing us to send your correspondence, including file and personal information electronically to this address
- Question 8.
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Tell us if someone helped you complete your application package.
If you are appointing an individual, firm or organization as your representative, you must complete the Use of a Representative Form (IMM 5476) (opens in new tab) and include it when you send us your application. Once you appoint a representative, all correspondence from us about your application will be sent to the representative and not to you.
Eligibility
- Question 9.
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Physical Presence and the five (5) year eligibility period
The eligibility period is five (5) years before the date you sign your application. The minimum amount of time you need to be physically present in Canada is 1095 days within the five years immediately before applying.
We encourage applicants to apply with more than the minimum requirement of 1095 days of physical presence, to account for any miscalculations of absences, or any other aspect that could lower the physical presence total below 1095 days.
You must complete and submit the printout of your Online Physical Presence Calculation. If you have not already completed this step please do so by visiting the Online Physical Presence Calculator.
Note: We strongly encourage you to use the online calculator as it is the most accurate way to check your eligibility. If you are unable to use the Online Physical Presence Calculator, you may complete the How to Calculate Physical Presence (CIT 0407) (opens in new tab) .
You don’t have to sign or date your physical presence calculation (your printout of the Online Physical Presence Calculator or form CIT 0407).
You may be able to use some of your time spent in Canada as an authorized temporary resident or protected person towards your physical presence calculation. Each day spent physically in Canada as a temporary resident or protected person before becoming a permanent resident within the last five (5) years, will count as one half day, with a maximum of 365 days towards your physical presence.
Temporary resident status includes lawful authorization to enter or remain in Canada as a:
- visitor,
- student,
- worker or,
- temporary resident permit holder
Note: If you were issued work or study permits while your refugee claim and/or Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) was being assessed, these documents did not grant you temporary resident status. You can’t claim temporary resident time for those periods.
A protected person is someone who:
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was found to be in need of protection or a convention refugee by the Immigration and Refugee Board
or
- received a positive decision on a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.
If you are claiming time as a Protected Person, the only time allowed is the time from when you received a positive Protected Person decision on your refugee claim or PRRA application until the day before you became a Permanent Resident.
- Enter the “To” date from your physical presence calculator. This date is the last day in your eligibility period which is found on the physical presence summary or printout.
- There are very rare situations that will allow you to count time outside of Canada towards your physical presence calculation. If you resided outside of Canada because either:
- you; and/or
- your Canadian citizen or permanent resident spouse or common law partner; or
- your permanent resident parent
were employed outside Canada (not as a locally engaged person) in or with:
- the Canadian Armed Forces
- the federal public administration
- the public service of a province or territory
Select yes, complete the Residence Outside Canada (CIT 0177) (opens in new tab) and submit any supporting documents requested in that form with your application.
If you have no time to count, select no and continue to the next question without filling out the form CIT0177.
- Question 10.
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Address History
Write all your addresses inside and outside of Canada during your 5-year eligibility period, including the postal codes, starting with your current home address. If you were residing, working or studying outside Canada, you must list all of your foreign addresses, including the country postal or mailing codes. Press the plus (+) button if you need more space. You don’t need to include addresses of family, friends, hotels or resorts where you stayed while on vacation.
Provide information that covers the 5-year eligibility period. Do not leave any gaps during this period and do not leave this section blank. If you do, your application will be returned to you as incomplete.
Note: Your current address history row 1 will auto-populate from your contact information. If you change your address in row 1, it will change your contact information. Additionally, if you lived at your current address for more than 5 years, then you only need to update the date in row 1 that was auto-populated from your connection information.
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Police certificate(s)
You need to provide a police certificate from each country, other than Canada, if you were there
- in the past 4 years
- for 183 days or more in a row
- since the age of 18
Indicate in the chart the name of each country and provide a police certificate.
You don’t need to provide a police certificate if
- you were in your country of origin immediately prior to becoming a permanent resident and landing in Canada, and
- this time falls within the past 4 years
If you can’t get a police certificate, tell us why in the explanation box.
To be valid, the police certificate must be either issued
- after the last time you were in that country, or
- no more than 6 months before the date you sign your citizenship application
We may request a police certificate at any point during processing, even if you submitted a valid certificate with your application.
Find out how to get a police certificate
See the following examples to help you answer this question.
Example 1
You lived in France for one year (365 days) before you became a permanent resident 3 years ago. You did not travel to France after you became a permanent resident. You would answer “Yes” to the question and you would need to provide a police certificate from France if you did not provide one with your immigration application. If you provided a police certificate from France with your immigration application, tell us this in the box provided at Question 10b.
Example 2
You became a permanent resident 3 years and 9 months ago. In the past 4 years, you lived in Brazil for 3 months (90 days) before you became a permanent resident and you returned to Brazil to visit family for 4 months (120 days) after you became a permanent resident. You would answer “No” to the question and you would not need to provide a police certificate from Brazil because you did not spend 183 days or more in a row in Brazil.
Example 3
In the past 4 years, you took 10 trips to the United States of America (USA). Each trip lasted 3 weeks, for a total of 210 days. You would answer “No” to the question and you would not need to provide a police certificate from the USA because you did not spend 183 days or more in a row in the USA.
Example 4
In the past 4 years, you travelled to Singapore four times for work. The first trip was for 30 days; the second trip was for 200 days; the third trip was for 60 days; and the fourth trip was for 120 days. While in Singapore, you took a trip to Malaysia (10 days) and Thailand (10 days). You would answer “Yes” to the question and you would need to provide a police certificate from Singapore because your second trip was more than 183 days in a row. You would not need to provide police certificates from Malaysia or Thailand.
Example 5
In the past 4 years, you took 1 trip to Europe where you visited Portugal (5 days), Spain (7 days), France (10 days), Belgium (3 days), Netherlands (3 days), Germany (21 days), Switzerland (7 days) and Italy (21 days). You took a second trip to Europe where you visited Ireland (14 days), Scotland (14 days) and England (21 days). You went to Germany for a business trip that lasted 60 days. The total time you were outside of Canada was 186 days but you were not in a single country for 183 days or more in a row. You would answer “No” to the question and you would not need to provide police certificates from any of the countries.
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- Question 11.
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Tell us what you have been doing during the five (5) year eligibility period. You must list all your work and study history including English/French language training inside or outside Canada for the five (5) year eligibility period. Press the (+) plus button if you need more space.
- If you were not working because you were studying, unemployed, retired, a caregiver, homemaker or volunteering for any part of this time, provide that information, including the location.
- If you were self-employed, you must provide details of your self-employment.
- If you have multiple occupations/activities that are continuing to the present, type “present” instead of putting a date in the “To” field.
You must provide information that covers the five (5) year eligibility period, being sure to account for each month.
Do not leave any gaps during this period and do not leave this section blank. If you do, your application will be returned to you.
- Question 12.
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To determine if you were required, under the Income Tax Act, to file income taxes, please refer to the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) information on Newcomers to Canada (immigrants).
- If you have one, provide the 9-digit number for your
- social insurance number (SIN)
- temporary tax number (TTN), and/or
- individual tax number (ITN)
- In the chart, tell us about your income tax filing for the last 5 years.
- Under the Required to file column
- check “Yes” if you needed to file a tax return that year
- check “No” if you didn’t need to file a tax return that year
- Under the Taxes filed column
- check “Yes” if you filed a tax return that year
- check “No” if you didn’t file a tax return that year
- Under the Required to file column
Note: The tax years are auto generated once you enter your eligibility period in question 9. Additionally, you need to complete this chart in full even if you didn’t live in Canada for part of your 5 year eligibility period.
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Check “Yes” to authorize the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) to provide details of your tax filing information (including income, benefit and residence information) to IRCC.
By checking “Yes” you’re also authorizing us to collect your tax filing information from the CRA to help
- determine if you meet the income tax and physical presence requirements for citizenship
- examine your tax information in activities to support quality assurance and integrity in the citizenship program
Subsection 8(1) of the Privacy Act and paragraph 241(5)(b) of the Income Tax Act allows the CRA to provide personal information to IRCC, with the consent of the relevant individuals. This consent is required under paragraph 2(1)(e) of the Citizenship Regulations, No. 2.
- If you have one, provide the 9-digit number for your
- Question 13.
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Tell us if you have had immigration, permanent resident status and/or citizenship in any other country outside of Canada (e.g. your country of birth)
- Check either yes or no.
- If you check yes, complete the chart.
- Tell us which countries you have held status in, and exactly what status you held or currently hold (student, employment/worker, refugee/protected person, permanent resident or citizen).
- Provide the date you obtained each status(YYYY-MM-DD)
- Include the end date if no longer valid, if applicable (YYYY-MM-DD). Leave blank if you currently hold this status
- Question 14.
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Tell us if you have held passports or travel documents during your five (5) year eligibility period.
- Check either yes or no.
- If you check yes, complete the chart
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- Type your valid passport or travel document number exactly as shown on the document. Make sure there is no space between each number or letter.
- Select the name of the country or territory that issued your passport or travel document (issuing authority)
- Provide the place (city or town) the document was issued
- Include the date the document was issued
- State the expiry date of the document. Leave blank if there is no expiry date.
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- If you do not have a passport or travel document that was/is valid during your five (5) year eligibility period, tell us why in the explanation box.
- Question 15.
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Language requirement
All applicants 18-54 years of age must submit proof that demonstrates adequate knowledge of English or French (even if your first language is English or French). If you are younger than 18 or 55 and older, you are not required to provide language evidence
If you are 18-54 years of age and unable to demonstrate that you have the necessary English or French language ability due to compassionate grounds, this requirement may be waived. You must submit supporting evidence with your application, including a Waiver Request Form (Request for Exemption from Citizenship Language and Knowledge Requirements) [CIT 0116] (opens in new tab) . See Step 3 in the instruction guide.
Canadian Language Benchmark/Niveaux de compétence linguistique canadiens level 4 is considered “Basic Proficiency” and means an individual can:
- take part in short, everyday conversations about common topics
- understand simple instructions, questions and directions
- use basic grammar, including simple structures and tenses and show that you know enough common words and phrases to answer questions and express yourself
If you do not have proof of language proficiency or the language level needed, you can take a government-funded language program to help you improve your language skills to get a certificate at a level of CLB/NCLC 4.
Examples of the types of language evidence that can be submitted include:
- You attended or are currently attending a secondary or post-secondary education program in English or French, either in Canada or abroad, including:
- A degree, diploma, certificate or official transcripts from a secondary or post-secondary education program showing you studied in English or French, in Canada or abroad.
- If the original document is in a different language, include:
- a letter from the school showing that the language of instruction was in English or French along with (including an official translation of the original document, if needed)
- the address and contact information (phone number) of the education institution
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Results from a third-party language test
note: If you completed the test in the past for immigration or citizenship purposes, we will accept the previous results even if it has expired.
For citizenship, you need a test result equivalent to a minimum of CLB level 4. Please refer to the Language test equivalency charts web page for the language tests below:
- Canadian English Language Proficiency Index Program General Test (CELPIP-G) or the CELPIP-General LS (listening and speaking).
- International English Language Testing System (IELTS), General Training.
- Test d’Évaluation de Français (TEF), Test d’Évaluation du Français adapté au Québec (TEFAQ) or TEF pour la naturalisation.
- Test de connaissance du français (TCF) - Canada (en français)
- We will accept the following proof if you have submitted them in the past for immigration purposes to Quebec (note: these tests align with the échelle québécoise and not officially with CLB/NCLC 4):
- Diplôme approfondi de langue française (DALF) – All test results
- Diplôme d’études en langue française (DELF) – Level B1 or higher
- Test de connaissance du français(TCF) – Niveau B1 or higher
- Test de connaissance du français pour le Québec (TCFQ) – Niveau B1 or higher
- You took a government-funded language training program and have achieved Canadian Language Benchmark/Niveaux de compétence linguistique canadiens (CLB/NCLC) level 4 or higher in speaking and listening skills, including:
- Language Instruction for Newcomers to Canada or Cours de Langue pour Immigrants au Canada (LINC or CLIC):
- If you completed the LINC or CLIC course on or after November 1st, 2012:
- A copy of the certificate.
- If you completed the LINC or CLIC course at CLB 4/NCLC 4 or higher from January 1st 2008 to October 31st, 2012:
- A copy of the certificate.
- If you do not have a copy of your certificate, check the box in question 15a and we will validate your certificate in the system.
- If you completed the LINC or CLIC course on or after November 1st, 2012:
- You completed a provincial language training program in:
Manitoba
- A copy of the Manitoba Canadian Language Benchmark Report or an Adult English as an Additional Language (EAL) student progress report from Manitoba Government.
- Speaking and listening skills are at CLB/NCLC level 4 or higher.
Quebec
- Bulletins by the Ministère de l’Immigration, de la Francisation et de l’Intégration (MIFI), Ministère de l’Immigration, de la Diversité et de l’Inclusion (MIDI) (old department name), or the Ministère de l’Immigration et Communautés Culturelles (old department name):
- Assessments issued between June 1st, 2011 and October 16, 2012, must indicate interaction orale is level 4 or higher (Échelle Québécoise); or
- Assessments issued after October 16, 2012, must indicate interaction orale or compréhension orale (listening) and production orale (speaking) is level 4 or higher (Échelle Québécoise).
- The Ministère de l’Éducation, de l’Enseignement supérieur (MEES) is issuing a Relevé des apprentissages for adults taking French training as per the “Francisation à l’éducation des adultes”. You need level 4 or higher of l’échelle québécoise in speaking and listening.
British Columbia (BC)
- Certificates issued on or after November 1st, 2012 automatically show a CLB 4 level or higher, even if not stated on the certificate.
- British Columbia’s English Language Services for Adults (ELSA) training in 2010 or after, submit an ELSA report card or an ELSA certificate issued on or before August 31, 2014, confirming language level CLB 4 or higher in listening and speaking.
- British Columbia’s English Language Services for Adults (ELSA) training in 2008 or 2009, submit an ELSA certificate showing language level CLB 4 or higher in listening and speaking.
Note: certificates were not automatically issued and contact the ELSA program directly to get a copy. We will not make the request for you.
Ontario
Ontario Provincial Language Training Certificates from December 2013 or later showing a level CLB/NCLC 4 or higher, in speaking and listening, including:
- English as a Second Language (ESL)/Anglais Langue Seconde (ALS)
- French as a Second Language (FSL)/Français Langue Seconde (FLS); or
- Citizenship and Language Training (CL)/Instruction civique et enseignement de la langue (ICEL)
Saskatchewan
A copy of your Statement of Student Language Proficiency from the Saskatchewan Ministry of Education. You get one as a student of the English as an Additional Language (EAL) program. It’s based on the Common Framework of Reference (CFR) scale in listening and in speaking:
- All schools in Saskatchewan from Kindergarten to grade 12 (K-12) are able to issue the certificate for English as an Additional Language.
- Level B1 is equal or higher to CLB 4.
Nova Scotia
A copy of the Proficiency in English Nova Scotia (PENS) learner certificate. It must show that your speaking and listening skills are CLB level 4 or higher.
If you have this certificate,
- select “Other” in question 15a of the application form
- type “Proficiency in English Nova Scotia (PENS) learner certificate” in the text box
- A copy of the Manitoba Canadian Language Benchmark Report or an Adult English as an Additional Language (EAL) student progress report from Manitoba Government.
Knowledge Requirement
- If you are 18 to 54 years old, you must demonstrate that you have an adequate knowledge of Canada and the responsibilities and privileges of citizenship. You will be scheduled to take a citizenship knowledge test after we receive your application.
- If you can’t demonstrate you meet the knowledge requirement due to compassionate grounds, submit supporting evidence with your application. Provide a completed Waiver Request Form (Request for Exemption from Citizenship Language and Knowledge Requirements) [CIT 0116] (opens in new tab) .
- If you are requesting a waiver due to a medical condition, we recommend you also provide a Medical Opinion Form for Citizenship Waivers [CIT 0547] (opens in new tab) , filled out by a medical professional licensed to practice in Canada.
- You should also provide any additional documentation that we should consider with your waiver request.
Compassionate grounds include medical and non-medical factors. Examples include (but are not limited to) evidence of
- a severe medical condition that has lasted (or is expected to last) for at least 1 year, including
- serious illness
- physical or developmental disability
- mental impairment
- trauma due to
- war
- torture
- living in a refugee camp
- other similar circumstances
- low levels of education or literacy in the first language (mother tongue)
- other circumstances that may justify a waiver.
- Requesting a waiver does not guarantee it will be approved. Waiver requests are assessed on a case-by-case basis.
- If you are requesting a waiver of language and knowledge requirements, you only need to provide one Waiver Request Form (Request for Exemption from Citizenship Language and Knowledge Requirements) [CIT 0116] (opens in new tab) . If you are also providing a Medical Opinion Form for Citizenship Waivers [CIT 0547] (opens in new tab) , only one is required to request multiple waivers.
Format: Clear and legible photocopy. Must be in English or French. An official translation must be provided if the document is not in English or French.
- Question 16.
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To make sure you aren’t prohibited from becoming a Canadian citizen, answer questions 1 to 9 by checking “Yes” or “No.”
To be eligible to become a Canadian citizen, you must not be prohibited under the Citizenship Act. You can’t become a citizen if any of the situations listed in Question 16 apply to you
- at the time you submit your citizenship application, or
- while your application is being processed
Check the boxes in 16a to confirm that you have read and understood the situations that prevent you from becoming a Canadian citizen.
- If you checked “Yes” to any of the situations, provide details in the explanation box 16b.
- If the situation doesn’t apply to you, check the “No” box after the statement.
- If you’re not sure whether the situations apply to you, you may contact your lawyer or arresting police officer.
- We’ll review your application on a case-by-case basis.
- We can take away (revoke) your citizenship if we find out that you
- don’t tell us the situations that apply to you, and
- still proceed to take the oath of citizenship
- We’ll also check your records with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.
To make sure you’re not prohibited under the Citizenship Act, you may need to
- provide fingerprints and/or court documents
- attend an in-person interview
Citizenship Certificate Type
- Question 17
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If your application is approved you will be issued a citizenship certificate as proof of citizenship. Citizenship certificates come in either paper or electronic (printable PDF) format. Citizens can have only one type of certificate but are allowed to print a copy of their electronic certificate.
Check the box next to the type of citizenship certificate that you would like to receive, either paper or electronic citizenship certificate.
Unless you have requested a paper certificate, you must provide an email address in the application form to receive your e-certificate.
- Question 18
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Select “yes” if you authorize IRCC to provide your personal information to your federal Member of Parliament (MP)
Select either “Yes” or “No” from the menu to indicate whether you authorize IRCC to provide your name, residential address and preferred official language to your federal Member of Parliament (MP) so that they can send you a letter of congratulations if you become a Canadian citizen. No other information will be forwarded.
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Elections Canada
Check either “Yes” or “No” to indicate whether or not you authorize IRCC to provide the following information to Elections Canada to be added to the National Register of Electors (the Register):
- your name
- your residential and mailing address
- your gender
- your Unique Client Identifier (UCI)
- your date of birth, and
- the date your citizenship was granted
When you become a Canadian citizen and are 18 years of age or older, you have the right to vote in federal elections and referendums. Elections Canada maintains the Register and uses it during a federal election or a referendum to produce voter’s lists and to communicate with eligible voters.
The Canada Elections Act also allows Elections Canada to provide voter information to provincial and territorial election agencies for uses permitted under their respective legislations and to provide voter information (name, address, and gender only) to members of Parliament, registered political parties and candidates at election time. The UCI and the date your citizenship was granted will only be used by Elections Canada for administrative purposes, and will not be shared by Elections Canada except as required by law.
If you check “Yes”, IRCC will provide your name, residential and mailing address, gender, date of birth, UCI and the date your citizenship was granted to Elections Canada in order to add you to the Register, but only after you become a Canadian citizen. If you check No, IRCC will not provide your information to Elections Canada. You will still have the right to vote in federal elections and referendums, but you will have to take the necessary steps to be added to the list.
More information about the Register and its uses is available on their website. You can also call Elections Canada at 1-800-463-6868.
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Chief Electoral officer of Québec, if you live in Québec
If you are 18 years or older and reside in Québec, indicate whether you authorize IRCC to provide to the Chief Electoral Officer of Québec the following information so that your name can be added to the Permanent List of Electors (voters) if you became a Canadian citizen:
- your name
- your residential address, and the date when you started to reside at that address
- your gender
- your date of birth
- your Unique Client Identifier (UCI), and
- the date you were granted citizenship
Your application for citizenship will in no way be affected by your answer to this question.
The Election Act allows the Chief Electoral Officer of Québec to:
- provide voter information to provincial political parties and members of the National Assembly as well as municipal and school boards to compile and update lists of electors (voters) lists for municipal and school elections, and
- notify the elector in writing that their name has been entered on the permanent list of electors, requesting that the elector correct or complete the information which concerns them, where required.
The Chief Electoral Officer of Québec receives the UCI for administrative purposes only, while the date your citizenship was granted allows them to validate that you qualify as an elector based on the electoral laws it administers. This information is subject to no other use or communication.
If you do not provide authorization, you will still be able to vote, but you will have to visit the revision office and present two supporting documents to register. Once your name is registered on the list of electors you will be able to vote in a provincial, municipal or school election.
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Signature and validation code
- Question 19
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- Type the city where you are applying from
- Type the date you will sign the application. The date you sign the application must be the same date as the application date used in the Online Physical Presence Calculator.
- Print and provide a handwritten signature.
Note: Your application will be returned to you if it is:
- not signed and dated
- dated more than 90 days before we receive it
- post-dated (dated into the future)
Make sure that the date of signature on the application and the application date on the physical presence calculator printout are the same.
You must be eligible to apply for Canadian citizenship the day before you sign the application form.
Once the application is completed, click on the “Validate” button located at the top or bottom of the form. This will generate a barcode page – see image below. If this application form is completed on a computer and printed, you must place the barcode page on the top of your application (or if applying as a group, each individual application package).
- If a barcode does not appear, find out why and how to fix the issue.
Note: This barcode page will not appear if you fill out your application by hand.
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