Marrying a Canadian citizen doesn't automatically give you Canadian citizenship. Canada's immigration system doesn't work that way โ and understanding exactly how it does work will save you from frustration, delays, and expensive mistakes.
The process for obtaining Canadian citizenship after marriage involves two major stages: first gaining permanent residency (PR) through spousal sponsorship, then applying for citizenship after meeting the residency requirements. This guide walks through both stages clearly, including current timelines, common pitfalls, and what the path actually looks like from beginning to end.
The first step is permanent residency through the spousal sponsorship program under the Family Class immigration category. This involves two things happening simultaneously: your Canadian spouse sponsors you, and you apply as the sponsored person.
A Canadian citizen or permanent resident who is 18 or older can sponsor a spouse, common-law partner (12+ months cohabitation), or conjugal partner (12+ months committed relationship where living together wasn't possible). Marriage is the most straightforward status โ you'll need to provide a valid marriage certificate from a recognized jurisdiction.
Where you're located at the time of application determines which stream you use.
In Canada (Inland Sponsorship): You're already living in Canada (on a valid temporary status like a visitor visa or work permit). You and your sponsor apply together and can request an Open Work Permit while waiting โ letting you work legally during the processing period. Inland processing currently takes 8โ18 months.
Outside Canada (Outland Sponsorship): The sponsored partner lives outside Canada and the application is processed at an overseas visa office. This can sometimes be faster than inland processing, though timelines vary by country. Upon approval, you receive a permanent resident visa and must land in Canada before it expires.
Both the sponsor and the sponsored person must meet specific requirements.
IRCC (Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada) takes relationship genuineness seriously. Officers look for objective evidence that your marriage or partnership is bona fide โ not entered into primarily for immigration purposes.
Strong evidence includes: photographs together over time (particularly at key life events), communication records (messages, emails, call logs), travel records showing visits, joint financial accounts or shared bills, evidence of meeting each other's families and friends, wedding invitations and attendance records, and statutory declarations from people who know you as a couple.
If you have a significant age gap, a short courtship before marriage, or a relationship that developed primarily online without substantial in-person history, your application may be subject to additional scrutiny. This doesn't mean you'll be denied โ it means you need to be especially thorough in your documentation.
An interview may be required for inland applications specifically. Both partners should be prepared to answer detailed questions about their daily life together, each other's family members, how they met, and relationship milestones.
Processing times for spousal sponsorship change and are published on IRCC's website. As of 2025โ2026:
These are estimates โ individual cases can take shorter or longer depending on application completeness, additional documentation requests, security screening, and medical processing times.
Government fees (as of 2025) total approximately $1,365 CAD per application, split between sponsorship fees and PR application fees. Additional fees may apply for biometrics, medical examinations, police certificates, and IRCC's right of permanent residence fee ($515 CAD) due at landing.
Once you have permanent residency, you're on the path to citizenship โ but you're not there yet. Canadian citizenship requirements include a physical presence requirement that must be met after becoming a PR.
To apply for citizenship, you must have been physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days (3 years) out of the 5 years immediately before your application. Days spent in Canada as a temporary resident (before getting PR) can count as half-days, up to a maximum of 365 days toward the 1,095 total.
This matters practically: if you spend significant time abroad after getting PR, the clock runs more slowly. Some people find their citizenship timeline extended by work travel, caring for family abroad, or simply splitting time between countries. Track your days carefully โ IRCC may request your travel history.
The citizenship application process itself takes approximately 12โ24 months after filing, including the knowledge test and a citizenship ceremony. For a detailed breakdown of the citizenship application process, see the complete step-by-step guide.
The spousal sponsorship and citizenship pathway involves a lot of paperwork and strict rules. These are the errors that most commonly slow things down or trigger serious problems.
Missing documents, inconsistencies between what's stated on forms and what's in supporting documentation, and failing to include required items are the most common reasons for application returns and delays. Read the application guide published by IRCC carefully and use a checklist before submitting.
Many PR holders applying for citizenship are surprised to find they haven't accumulated enough days. If you travel frequently for work or spend extended time outside Canada, keep a detailed record of every departure and return date. IRCC can cross-reference against passport entry stamps and CBSA records.
Even a minor criminal record โ particularly convictions for offences that would be indictable in Canada โ can create admissibility problems. This includes DUI convictions from the US, which are treated as serious criminality under Canadian immigration law. Address any potential criminal inadmissibility issues with an immigration lawyer before applying.
Immigration consultants (Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultants โ RCICs) and immigration lawyers can help navigate the application process. If your case is straightforward, many people successfully self-represent. If there are complicating factors โ prior refusals, criminal history, complex relationship history, previous immigration violations โ professional help is worth the cost.
After your physical presence requirement is met and your citizenship application is accepted, you'll be scheduled for the citizenship knowledge test (if you're between 18โ54 years old). The test covers Canadian history, geography, rights and responsibilities, government system, and values.
The test is 20 multiple-choice questions and requires a passing score of 15/20 (75%). Most people find it manageable with a few hours of study using the official IRCC study guide "Discover Canada." Taking practice tests in the weeks before your scheduled test date is a straightforward way to verify you're ready. For the citizenship application timeline and what to expect at each stage, including test scheduling, see the application guide.