Canadian Citizenship Application: Complete Form, Fees & Process Guide
Complete Canadian citizenship application guide: CIT 0002E form, $530 fee, photo specs, supporting documents, MyCIC tracking and 24-month process.

Applying for Canadian citizenship is one of those projects that looks intimidating until you actually open the form. The paperwork has a logic to it. The fees are fixed. The wait is long but predictable. Once you see the moving parts laid out, the only real work is collecting your documents and double-checking every box.
This guide walks you through the current process end to end. You'll learn what goes in the CIT 0002E form, how much the application costs in 2026, the photo and document rules that derail submissions, and how to track your file through MyCIC after you send it in. We'll also cover what happens between the Acknowledgement of Receipt and your oath ceremony, which is the longest stretch and the one most applicants worry about.
Most people who apply already meet the residency, language, and tax requirements. If you're still confirming those, read the citizenship eligibility overview first, then come back here. This page assumes you're ready to file and just need the application mechanics sorted out.
A quick note on scope. Everything below applies to standard adult applications and to children applying alongside a parent. Special cases — military families, Canadians born abroad reclaiming citizenship, stateless applicants, and humanitarian fee waivers — follow slightly different rules and aren't covered here. If any of those describe your situation, treat this page as background reading and confirm specifics with IRCC directly.
Canadian Citizenship Application at a Glance
The form everyone needs is CIT 0002E, the Application for Canadian Citizenship for adults (18 and older). It's downloadable as a PDF from the IRCC website and you fill it in directly on screen before printing or uploading. Minors use CIT 0003, and the rules around minor applications are different enough that we cover them separately below.
Take your time on the first read. CIT 0002E asks for thirteen sections of information, and a single wrong field — say, listing the wrong PR landing date or forgetting a country visited within the eligibility period — is the most common reason files come back unprocessed. IRCC won't write to you and ask. They'll return the entire package, refund nothing, and you start over.
The form itself is free. What you pay are the two government fees attached to it, plus whatever you spend on photos and document copies. Compare the official numbers in our citizenship application fee breakdown if the totals below don't match what you've seen elsewhere — sometimes older blog posts cite outdated figures.
Read the form once cover to cover before you fill anything in. Then come back and complete it in one or two sittings rather than scattering the work across weeks. Continuity matters because the answers in Section A inform Section B, which informs Section C, and so on. Filling in fragments over a long stretch is how applicants end up with inconsistent dates and mismatched name spellings across the same document.

Form: CIT 0002E (adults), CIT 0003 (minors). Adult fee: $530 processing + $100 Right of Citizenship = $630 total. Minor fee: $100 processing only (no ROCF for under-18s). Processing time: roughly 24 months from receipt to oath. Submission: online via the IRCC portal (preferred) or paper by mail. Tracking: MyCIC account once IRCC issues your Acknowledgement of Receipt (AOR), usually within 4–8 weeks of submission.
CIT 0002E is thirteen sections deep. None of them are tricky on their own. The trap is the interaction between sections — your travel history has to match your residency calculator output, which has to match the dates on your PR card, which has to match the language proof you submit. Inconsistencies trigger requests for additional documents that add four to eight months to your timeline.
Section A asks for personal information, including every previous name you've ever used legally. If you changed your name on marriage, divorce, or for any other reason, list it. Section B covers your language abilities and how you're proving them — usually a CELPIP, IELTS General, or TEF/TCF result, or a transcript from a Canadian high school or post-secondary program taught in English or French.
Section C is the residency calculator. You must have been physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days within the five years immediately before signing the application. IRCC's online physical presence calculator generates a printable summary you attach to the form — use it. Hand-counted days are a guaranteed return-to-sender.
Sections D through G handle your tax filing history, prohibitions (criminal record, security concerns), declarations, and any need for an interpreter at the test or oath. Sections H, I, and J cover the photo, signature block, and a list of supporting documents you're enclosing. The signature page is the easiest place to make a mistake — sign within the box, in black ink, and don't date it earlier than the day you submit.
Section D, the tax piece, catches more applicants than people expect. You need to have filed Canadian tax returns for at least three of the five years preceding your application. Note the word: filed. Whether you owed money or got a refund is irrelevant. What matters is that you submitted returns, which CRA can confirm with Notices of Assessment. Order those NoAs from CRA before you start filling in the form — they take a few days to arrive and you'll want them ready when you reach Section J's supporting document list.
Section E, prohibitions, asks whether you've had any criminal charges, convictions, or removal orders during the relevant period. Be honest. IRCC runs background checks regardless, and discrepancies between your declaration and their records turn into refusals or, worse, misrepresentation findings that bar you from reapplying for years. If you have something in your past, declare it cleanly and let the officer assess it under existing rules — most minor matters don't block citizenship.
CIT 0002E Sections That Trip Applicants Up
Full legal name history, date of birth, citizenship(s), and PR card details.
- ▸Include every previous legal name — maiden, married, court-ordered changes
- ▸Match dates exactly to your PR card and passport
- ▸Use the address where IRCC should mail documents (not a P.O. box)
The 1,095-days-in-5-years residency calculation.
- ▸Run IRCC's physical presence calculator, then print and attach the result
- ▸Days as a temporary resident (before PR) count half, up to 365
- ▸Travel out of Canada for even a weekend counts — log every trip
Three years of filed Canadian tax returns within the five-year window.
- ▸You must have filed (not necessarily owed) for at least 3 of the last 5 years
- ▸CRA Notice of Assessment is the simplest proof — order copies in advance
- ▸Non-residents who didn't need to file should mark accordingly with explanation
Two identical citizenship photos taken within 12 months of signing.
- ▸50mm wide x 70mm tall, with face measuring 31–36mm crown to chin
- ▸Plain white or light background, neutral expression, no smile
- ▸Photographer must stamp the back with date, studio name, and address
The fee structure is straightforward but easy to underpay. Adults owe two fees: the $530 processing fee and the $100 Right of Citizenship Fee (ROCF). The processing fee is non-refundable the moment IRCC opens your envelope. The ROCF is refundable if your application is refused or withdrawn before you take the oath.
Minors (under 18) pay only the $100 processing fee — no ROCF applies until they reach adulthood. Stateless applicants and certain humanitarian cases qualify for fee waivers, but those are exceptions documented elsewhere in IRCC guides. Payment is made online through the IRCC fee payment portal; you'll receive a receipt PDF that goes into your application package as proof.
Skip the temptation to pay one fee and not the other. IRCC will return the application as incomplete. Same with paying the wrong amount because you saw an old figure online — always cross-check on IRCC's current fee list before submitting. Our citizenship cost guide tracks any fee changes announced for the year.
Payment itself is straightforward. The fee portal accepts credit cards, debit cards, and certain prepaid cards. You don't need a Canadian bank account or Canadian-issued card — international cards work, though you may see a small foreign-transaction fee from your card issuer. After payment, download the PDF receipt immediately. That receipt is one of the documents you'll upload (online) or print and attach (paper) to your application package.
Keep the receipt even after you submit. If anything in your file is questioned later, the receipt is your proof of payment date and amount. If IRCC refunds the ROCF — for instance if your application is refused — they'll cross-reference that original receipt before issuing the credit back to your card.

Submission: Online vs. Paper
The IRCC online portal opened to citizenship applications for adults in late 2023 and now handles the majority of submissions. You create a GCKey or Sign-In Partner login, upload each form section as a PDF, attach photos and supporting documents, and pay the fees in one workflow. Confirmation is immediate — you'll see a submission number on screen and receive an email within minutes.
The portal has built-in checks that flag missing fields before you submit, which catches the most common errors. Processing times are slightly faster than paper because there's no mailroom step. You can also message IRCC through the portal once your file is in the queue.
Supporting documents prove the claims you make on the form. Send copies, not originals — IRCC keeps everything you submit, and you don't want your only PR card sitting in a Nova Scotia mailroom. Photocopies must be clear, complete (both sides if double-sided), and notarised only where the form specifically requires it.
Six documents come up almost universally. Your PR card (front and back) confirms your status. Two pieces of government-issued identification — usually a driver's licence and a passport — establish your identity. Your language proof goes in next, whether that's a test result or an academic transcript. Tax filing proof (CRA Notice of Assessment for 3 of the last 5 years) demonstrates compliance. Two citizenship photos meeting the strict specs. And finally your fee receipt from the online payment portal.
Travel history support — passport stamps, boarding passes, entry/exit logs from CBSA — isn't always required but speeds up processing if there's any ambiguity in your physical presence calculation. If you've held multiple passports during the five-year window, include copies of all of them. Missing pages or unclear stamps are a common trigger for IRCC requesting additional evidence.
If you completed school in Canada, a certified copy of your transcript or diploma can stand in for a language test result, provided the program was taught in English or French. The transcript should clearly identify the language of instruction. International applicants without a Canadian academic record almost always go the test route — CELPIP General is the most common option, with results typically returned within 1–2 weeks of test day.
Don't bundle documents with bulky binders, plastic sleeves, or unusual paper. IRCC's intake teams scan everything and irregular packaging slows them down. Plain paper, single-sided where possible, paperclipped or stapled in section order — that's the format processing centres prefer for paper submissions. Online uploads should be clean PDFs, one document per file, named clearly (e.g., pr-card.pdf, noa-2023.pdf).
Use a photographer who specifically advertises Canadian citizenship photos — not passport photos, not visa photos. The dimensions and framing are different. Photo size is 50mm wide by 70mm tall, with the face measuring 31–36mm from crown to chin. Background must be plain white or very light grey. No smiling, no head tilt, no glasses, no head covering unless for religious reasons. The studio must stamp the back of one photo with the date taken, studio name, and address — IRCC will reject unstamped photos even if all other specs are met.
Once IRCC has your application, the clock starts. The current average processing time is roughly 24 months from receipt to oath ceremony, though individual files range from 14 to 36 months depending on complexity, location, and IRCC's workload at the time. Our processing time tracker is updated monthly with IRCC's published averages.
Within four to eight weeks of submission you'll receive your Acknowledgement of Receipt. AOR is the email or portal notification that confirms your file has been opened, assigned a UCI (unique client identifier), and queued for review. Save the AOR — it's the document you'll cite if you ever need to contact IRCC about your file.
Between AOR and your citizenship test invitation, the file goes through document verification, residency confirmation, and background checks. There's nothing for you to do during this stretch unless IRCC requests additional information. Don't keep calling — it doesn't speed anything up, and the call centre agents can only read what's in your file, not change priorities.
Your test invitation arrives roughly 12–18 months after AOR. You'll have 30 days to take the citizenship test (online from home or in person at an IRCC office), and after passing, another 2–4 months until your oath ceremony invitation lands.
The citizenship test itself is 20 multiple-choice questions drawn from the Discover Canada study guide. You need 15 correct (75 percent) to pass. Most applicants pass on the first attempt after a few weekends of study — the questions cover Canadian history, government, rights and responsibilities, geography, and symbols. If you fail, you get one retest opportunity. Practice using our Canadian citizenship quizzes to build familiarity with the question style.
Document re-verification can happen at any point during processing. If IRCC requests an updated document — say, a renewed PR card if yours expires during the wait — respond through your MyCIC portal within the deadline they specify. Missing a deadline doesn't automatically refuse your application, but it adds months to your timeline as your file drops in priority while officers wait for the requested item.

Application Checklist Before You Submit
- ✓CIT 0002E form completed in full, every section, signed in black ink
- ✓Physical presence calculator printout attached (Section C support)
- ✓Two citizenship photos with photographer stamp on the back of one
- ✓Copy of PR card — both front and back, all four corners visible
- ✓Two pieces of government-issued ID (driver's licence + passport is standard)
- ✓Language proof: CELPIP/IELTS/TEF result OR Canadian school transcript
- ✓CRA Notice of Assessment for 3 of the last 5 tax years
- ✓Fee receipt: $530 processing + $100 ROCF = $630 (adults)
- ✓Copies of all passports held during the five-year residency window
- ✓Updated mailing address and email — IRCC contacts you through both
MyCIC is the online account you use to track your file post-submission. If you applied through the portal, your MyCIC account already exists and the link to your application appears in your dashboard. If you applied by paper, you'll create a MyCIC account using the UCI from your AOR letter and link it to your application manually.
The portal shows three things that matter: current status (in process, decision made, ready for ceremony, etc.), recent activity (when IRCC last touched your file), and messages (any requests for information, test invitations, ceremony invitations). Check it once a week — that's frequent enough to catch action items, infrequent enough to avoid driving yourself crazy.
IRCC communicates through three channels: the MyCIC portal (most secure and primary), email (notifications that something has changed in your portal), and Canada Post (for ceremonial documents like the oath invitation and citizenship certificate). They don't call applicants unannounced, and they don't text. If you receive a phone call or text claiming to be from IRCC, it's a scam.
If you genuinely need to reach IRCC, the IRCC Client Support Centre phone line handles general questions but cannot give status updates beyond what you already see in MyCIC. For file-specific issues, use the IRCC Webform — that's the only channel that routes to a human who can read your case notes. Expect a reply within 30 days; complex inquiries take longer.
Canadian Citizenship Application Pros and Cons
- +Application form is free — you only pay government fees, not a lawyer (unless you choose to)
- +Online portal catches most form errors before submission, cutting return-to-sender rates
- +MyCIC tracking gives you visibility into every step from AOR to oath
- +Family applications can be bundled, simplifying tracking and ceremony scheduling
- +Right of Citizenship Fee is refundable if the application is refused or withdrawn
- −Processing takes around 24 months on average — no expedited option for most applicants
- −Photo specs are unique to Canadian citizenship and frequently get rejected if done at the wrong studio
- −Document inconsistencies between sections trigger requests that add 4–8 months
- −Paper applications still face an extra 4–6 weeks of mailroom intake versus online
- −Once submitted, you cannot leave Canada for extended periods without notifying IRCC
The oath ceremony is the last step and the only one with any pageantry. After passing the citizenship test, your file moves to ceremony scheduling, which typically takes another two to four months. Most ceremonies in 2026 are virtual via Zoom — easy to attend, easy to fit into a work day — but you can request an in-person ceremony if there's one scheduled near you.
During the ceremony, a citizenship judge or official presides, you take the citizenship oath in English or French, sign the official record, and receive your citizenship certificate. The whole event takes about 60–90 minutes including remarks and music. You're officially Canadian the moment you complete the oath.
Your citizenship certificate is the document that replaces your PR card as proof of status. Order a Canadian passport as soon as you have the certificate — it's the most useful document you'll receive and the one that proves your citizenship at borders.
One detail worth flagging: the oath ceremony invitation arrives by Canada Post, not by email. If you've moved since submission and haven't updated your address through MyCIC, the invitation can be lost. Confirm your mailing address in the portal at the 18-month mark just to be safe. Missing your scheduled ceremony isn't fatal — IRCC will reschedule — but it adds weeks to the final step.
Three pitfalls account for most application delays. First, residency calculation errors — applicants who guess at travel dates instead of using the official calculator routinely end up short of 1,095 days when IRCC recalculates. Second, language proof problems — submitting a test result older than two years, or a transcript that doesn't clearly show language of instruction, lands you in a request-for-information queue. Third, tax filing gaps — assuming you don't need to file because you didn't owe money, when in fact filing was still required.
Address changes during processing are common and not a problem if you report them immediately. Update your address through the IRCC online address change form or via your MyCIC portal. Don't rely on Canada Post mail forwarding alone — important IRCC mail can be returned to sender if the address on your file is out of date.
If you need to leave Canada for a long trip during processing — three months or more — let IRCC know through your portal. Extended absences after submission can technically affect your file, particularly if you're scheduled for a test or ceremony you'd miss. Document everything and keep travel proof.
One last thing: don't expect a friendly progress narrative from IRCC. Your file will sit at the same status for months at a time. That's normal. Officers move through queues in batches and your case can go from in process to decision made in a single day after looking unchanged for half a year. The lack of movement isn't a sign that something's wrong — it's just how government processing volumes flow. Trust the system, check the portal weekly, and respond promptly when something does happen.
Canadian Citizenship Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.