Get Canadian Citizenship: Full Requirements Guide 2026
How to get Canadian citizenship in 2026 — eligibility, residency requirements, the test, fees, and timeline. Start your practice test today.
How to Get Canadian Citizenship
Getting Canadian citizenship is a multi-step process that starts long before you ever fill out an application. You need to meet physical presence requirements, file paperwork with Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), pass a knowledge test, and take an oath. Each step has its own rules, timelines, and common pitfalls — and understanding all of them before you start saves you time and reduces the risk of a refused application.
This guide walks you through every stage, from checking your eligibility to taking the oath of citizenship.
Eligibility: Do You Qualify?
Before you can apply, you need to check off several eligibility boxes. Miss any of them and your application will be returned or refused.
Permanent resident status: You must be a permanent resident of Canada. Applying as a temporary resident — on a work permit or study permit — doesn't count. You need your PR status confirmed before the clock starts on your residency count.
Physical presence: You need to have been physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days (three years) within the five years before your application date. Days spent in Canada as a temporary resident or protected person before you got your PR also count — but only at half value, up to a maximum of 365 days.
Counting presence sounds straightforward, but it trips up a lot of applicants. Every day outside Canada — even a quick weekend trip — reduces your count. IRCC cross-references travel history with border entry records, so accuracy matters. Keep a travel log.
Tax filing: You must have filed taxes in Canada for at least three of the five years before your application (if required under the Income Tax Act). If you weren't required to file because your income was below the threshold, that's fine — but document it.
Language: You need to demonstrate adequate knowledge of English or French if you're between 18 and 54 years old. Evidence includes completing secondary or post-secondary education in English or French, or submitting approved language test results.
Knowledge of Canada: Applicants aged 18 to 54 must pass a citizenship knowledge test about Canadian history, values, rights, responsibilities, and government. (More on that below.)
No prohibitions: You can't apply if you're serving a sentence, have been convicted of certain offences, or are under a removal order.
Step 1: Gather Your Documents
IRCC has a detailed document checklist depending on your situation — whether you're applying for yourself only, including minor children, or have special circumstances like military service or Crown employment abroad.
Core documents for most adult applicants include: a copy of your permanent resident card, passport photos, proof of physical presence (travel history printout or passport copies showing entry/exit stamps), language evidence, and tax filing confirmation.
IRCC recommends using their online tool to generate a personalized checklist. Use it — don't wing this step. Missing documents are the most common reason for processing delays.
Step 2: Submit Your Application
Applications are submitted online through IRCC's portal. Paper applications are still accepted in limited circumstances, but online is faster and easier to track.
The adult citizenship application fee is $630 CAD as of 2025, which covers the processing fee and the right of citizenship fee. For minors under 18, the fee is $100 CAD (right of citizenship fee only — no processing fee).
After submission, you'll get an acknowledgment of receipt. At that point, your application is in the queue. Processing times vary significantly — check IRCC's website for current estimates, as they fluctuate based on application volumes.
Step 3: The Citizenship Knowledge Test
Most applicants between 18 and 54 are required to take a citizenship knowledge test. You'll be notified when it's time — don't schedule it yourself. IRCC sends an invitation when your application reaches that stage.
The test covers the content in Discover Canada: The Rights and Responsibilities of Citizenship, which is the official study guide. Topics include Canadian history, government and democracy, the justice system, rights and responsibilities, and Canadian symbols and geography.
The test is 30 multiple-choice questions and takes about 45 minutes. You need to score at least 15 out of 20 on the 20 scored questions to pass. If you fail the first time, you can rewrite it. A second failure typically triggers an interview with a citizenship officer instead.
You can use the canadian citizenship practice materials to prepare — working through practice tests systematically is the most effective way to build confidence before the real exam.
Step 4: Attend Your Hearing (If Required)
Not everyone gets called for a hearing, but some applicants do — especially if IRCC has questions about presence calculations, language ability, or application details. If you're called, bring all your original documents. Answer questions clearly and honestly.
If your citizenship test is also done as part of a hearing (rather than a written test), be ready to speak to the officer about Canadian history and government from memory.
Step 5: The Oath of Citizenship
Passing the test — or your hearing — means you get invited to a citizenship ceremony. This is where you take the Oath of Citizenship and officially become a Canadian citizen.
Ceremonies are typically held in person at a courthouse or government building, though virtual ceremonies have also become more common. You'll receive your certificate of Canadian citizenship at the ceremony.
After the ceremony, you can apply for a Canadian passport — which is typically the next step for most new citizens.
Processing Times: What to Expect
IRCC's processing time for adult citizenship applications has ranged from 12 to 24+ months in recent years, depending on application volumes and complexity. Complex applications — those involving extended periods outside Canada, criminal record checks, or military service — tend to take longer.
You can check application status through the IRCC portal. If there's been no movement for an extended period and you're past the published processing time, you can use IRCC's web form to inquire.
Common Reasons for Delays or Refusals
The most frequent issues that slow down or sink citizenship applications:
- Undercounted physical presence — especially from years with lots of travel
- Missing or incomplete tax compliance documentation
- Language evidence that doesn't meet IRCC's standards
- Unresolved criminal record issues or unclear admissibility
- Outdated or incorrect personal information compared to prior applications
If your application is refused, you'll receive a notice explaining why. You have the option to appeal to the Federal Court, though that process is expensive and time-consuming. It's far better to get the application right the first time.
Citizenship by Descent
If one of your parents was a Canadian citizen at the time of your birth, you may already be a Canadian citizen — even if you were born outside Canada. This is canadian citizenship by descent, and it doesn't require you to meet the physical presence requirement that applies to permanent residents applying for naturalization.
However, citizenship by descent only passes down one generation. If your grandparent was Canadian but your parent wasn't born in Canada or wasn't a citizen at the time of your birth, you don't automatically qualify. The rules are specific — check the IRCC website if you think you might qualify this way.
The Citizenship Test: How to Prepare
Most people who fail the citizenship test do so because they underestimated it. The questions aren't all easy. Canadian history includes dates, names, and events that aren't part of everyday knowledge — especially for newcomers who weren't educated in Canada.
Start with Discover Canada. Read it thoroughly, not just skim it. Then test yourself. Practice questions help you identify gaps before the real test. Focus on areas like the Confederation, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, how Parliament works, and the meaning of Canadian symbols.
The citizenship test practice resources let you work through questions in the same format as the real exam. Timed practice sessions help you build speed so the 45-minute window doesn't feel rushed.
Citizenship vs. Permanent Residency: Key Differences
Permanent residents have most of the same rights as citizens in daily life — they can live, work, and study anywhere in Canada. But citizenship opens doors that PR status doesn't:
- Canadian passport (one of the most powerful travel documents in the world)
- Right to vote in federal, provincial, and territorial elections
- Right to hold certain government jobs and positions that require citizenship
- Protection from deportation — citizens can't be removed from Canada
- Ability to pass citizenship to children born abroad (first generation)
There's also an emotional and symbolic dimension that matters to many new Canadians — citizenship represents full belonging. It's why so many people pursue it even when they could continue as permanent residents indefinitely.
What About Children?
Minor children can be included in a parent's application. If you're applying as an adult and your children are under 18, they can become citizens at the same time. The rules are slightly different for minors — they don't need to meet the language or knowledge test requirements.
Children born outside Canada to a Canadian citizen parent (first generation) are typically citizens by birth and don't need to apply — they just need to register or obtain proof of citizenship.
Dual Citizenship
Canada allows dual citizenship. You don't have to give up your original nationality when you become a Canadian citizen. However, whether you can hold dual nationality also depends on your country of origin's laws — some countries don't allow it or require you to renounce other citizenships. Check your home country's rules before applying.
After the Ceremony: Next Steps
Once you receive your citizenship certificate, you can apply for a Canadian passport through Passport Canada. You'll also want to update your Social Insurance Number record and any provincial health card to reflect your new citizenship status.
If you plan to travel internationally soon after receiving citizenship, start your passport application immediately — passport processing can take several weeks during busy periods.
Tips for a Successful Application
Start your travel log early — don't try to reconstruct years of travel history from memory when you're ready to apply. A simple spreadsheet with entry and exit dates, destinations, and purposes is enough. Cross-check it against passport stamps and credit card statements for accuracy.
File your taxes every year, even if you're not required to. It simplifies the compliance piece of your application and avoids any questions about years where IRCC expects a return but doesn't see one on record.
Don't rush your application if you're close to the 1,095-day threshold. It's worth waiting an extra month and having a clear, comfortable buffer over the minimum than submitting with borderline presence and risking a refusal.
If your situation is complicated — extended absences, criminal history, prior refused applications, or uncertainty about residency status — consider consulting an authorized immigration consultant or immigration lawyer before you apply. The cost of professional advice is far less than a refused application and the time lost.
Most importantly: prepare seriously for the knowledge test. It's the one part of the process entirely within your control. Use the official study guide, work through practice questions, and test yourself until you're consistently scoring well above the passing threshold. Walking into that test prepared makes a real difference — both in your score and your confidence.
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.