Your first year is about survival; your second is about building. Part of that is understanding the road to citizenship — and the residency rules that protect your status along the way.

Keep your PR status safe

Permanent residents must meet a residency obligation — generally being physically present in Canada at least 730 days within every 5-year period. Track your days outside Canada so a long trip never jeopardizes your status.

The citizenship timeline

To apply for citizenship you generally need 1,095 days of physical presence in Canada within the 5 years before you apply, plus filed taxes and language requirements. Apply through IRCC.

The citizenship test

The test covers Canadian history, geography, rights, and responsibilities — all from the free official study guide, Discover Canada. Citizenship brings a passport, the right to vote, and security that can’t be taken away. Dual citizenship is permitted by Canada — becoming Canadian doesn’t require giving up your original nationality (check your home country’s rules).

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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