The difference between newcomers who find their footing fast and those who struggle for months is rarely intelligence or effort — it’s information, in the right order, at the right time. Your first 72 hours set the sequence for everything that follows.

Why the order matters

Almost everything in Canada is a chain. Your SIN unlocks legal work and a bank account. Your bank account unlocks a credit card. Your credit card, used carefully, unlocks an apartment and eventually a car loan. Skip a link and you wait weeks.

The first-72-hours checklist

  • Apply for your SIN at Service Canada — often same-day in person.
  • Open a newcomer bank account. The Big Five banks have no-fee newcomer packages; bring your SIN, passport, and proof of address (a signed lease or even a settlement-agency letter often works).
  • Get a prepaid SIM — no credit check, available at the airport and any carrier kiosk.
  • Apply for your provincial health card the day you arrive. In some provinces a waiting period starts from your registration date, so registering early shortens it.
  • Find a settlement agency. Their services are free and government-funded — they’ll help with the rest. Find one near you.

What nobody tells you

Keep digital copies of every key document (passport, PR/COPR, SIN letter, credentials) in one secure place — you’ll be asked for them constantly. And don’t sign a long lease or buy a car in week one; you don’t know the city yet, and rushing is how newcomers lose deposits.

Get the full picture. This is one chapter of your first year. The complete guide — in order, with 13 fillable worksheets — is in Your First Year in Canada. And grab the free First-30-Days Checklist + resource hub.

General information, not legal, financial, or immigration advice. Programs and amounts change — verify with official sources before deciding. Current as of 2026.

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