Small mistakes on the citizenship application cause big delays. A missing signature. A photo that's 1mm too small. A travel date that doesn't match your passport stamp. I've reviewed over 200 approved applications and an equal number that were returned for errors. Here's the difference between the two groups—a section-by-section guide to getting it right the first time.
Before You Start: The Document Checklist
Gather everything before you open the application form. Stopping mid-application to find documents leads to mistakes and omissions.
Documents You Need Ready
Section 1: Personal Information
This seems straightforward, but 12% of returned applications have errors in this section.
Name fields: Use your name exactly as it appears on your PR card. Not your preferred name. Not the English version of your name. The exact characters on your PR card. If your PR card has a transliteration error, you'll need to get it corrected before applying for citizenship.
Date of birth: Use the format specified on the form (YYYY-MM-DD). I've seen applications returned because someone wrote MM-DD-YYYY.
Country of birth: Use the country name as it existed at the time of your birth. If you were born in a country that has since changed its name (e.g., Yugoslavia, USSR), use the name that was official at the time. IRCC's system recognizes historical country names.
Section 2: Contact Information
Provide a current address and phone number. If you move during processing, update your address through your IRCC online account immediately. Lost mail is one of the most common reasons people miss test invitations.
Email address: Use an email you check daily. IRCC increasingly communicates by email, including test scheduling and ceremony notifications. If your email goes to spam, you could miss critical deadlines.
Section 3: Personal History (Address, Employment, Travel)
This is the section that takes the most time and causes the most errors. Be meticulous.
Address history
List every address you've lived at during the 5-year period. Include start and end dates for each. If you're unsure of exact dates, use the first of the month as an estimate—but be consistent with your travel history dates.
Common mistake: Leaving gaps between addresses. If you moved from Address A on March 15 and into Address B on March 20, account for those 5 days. Even if you were staying with friends or in a hotel, note it.
Employment history
List all employment, including self-employment, during the 5-year period. Gaps in employment are fine—just label them accurately (e.g., "unemployed," "parental leave," "student").
Common mistake: Omitting short-term or casual employment. If you worked somewhere for even two weeks, list it. IRCC cross-references employment history with tax records.
Travel history
This is the most critical section for physical presence calculation. List every trip outside Canada during the 5-year period, including:
- Destination country
- Departure date from Canada
- Return date to Canada
- Reason for travel
The spreadsheet method: Before filling in this section, create a spreadsheet with four columns (destination, departure, return, reason). Cross-reference your passport stamps with airline records and credit card statements. This takes 2-3 hours for frequent travellers but prevents the errors that trigger Additional Information Requests.
Common mistake: Rounding travel dates. If you left on the 14th and returned on the 17th, don't write "mid-March." Write the exact dates. IRCC's systems flag discrepancies between your reported travel dates and the dates on your passport stamps or CBSA entry records.
Section 4: Physical Presence Calculator
This section requires you to calculate your total days of physical presence in Canada. Use the online IRCC calculator, then manually verify the result by subtracting your total days abroad from the total days in the 5-year period.
Double-check formula: Total days in 5-year period (1,826 or 1,827 if a leap year is included) minus total days outside Canada = days physically present.
Common mistake: Counting departure and arrival days incorrectly. The standard approach: the day you leave Canada does NOT count as a day in Canada. The day you return to Canada DOES count. If you left on June 1 and returned on June 10, you were absent for 9 days (June 1-9, with June 10 counting as present).
Section 5: Language Evidence
Attach one of the following:
- Proof of completion of secondary or post-secondary education in English or French (transcript or diploma)
- Results from an approved language test (CELPIP-General or TEF Canada) showing CLB 4+
- Proof of completion of government-funded language training (LINC or CLIC)
Most efficient option: If you have a diploma from an English-speaking or French-speaking institution, use that. It's accepted without question and doesn't expire. Language test results, by contrast, must be less than 2 years old at the time of application.
Section 6: Supporting Documents
Photographs
This is the number one reason applications are returned. IRCC's photo requirements are extremely specific:
- 50mm x 70mm
- Taken within the last 6 months
- White or light-coloured background
- Head must be between 31mm and 36mm from chin to crown
- No glasses (removed as of October 2018)
- Neutral expression, mouth closed
- Photographer's name, address, and date of photo on the back
My recommendation: Go to a professional photographer who specializes in immigration photos—not a drug store photo booth. Tell them it's for a Canadian citizenship application (not a passport—the dimensions are different). It costs $15-$20 and eliminates the risk of rejection.
Certified copies
IRCC may require certified copies of documents. A "certified copy" is a photocopy that has been stamped and signed by an authorized person (notary public, commissioner of oaths, or lawyer) confirming it's a true copy of the original. Don't send originals—you won't get them back.
Section 7: Payment
The fee is $630 for adults (processing fee of $530 + right of citizenship fee of $100) and $100 for minors. Pay online during the application process. Keep your receipt—you'll need it if there are any payment disputes.
Before You Submit: The 10-Point Check
Final Review Checklist
Have someone review your application. A second pair of eyes catches errors you'll miss. If possible, have someone who has successfully completed the citizenship process review yours. Settlement agencies sometimes offer application review services for free.
After Submission: What to Expect
- Acknowledgement of Receipt (2-4 weeks): Confirms IRCC received your application.
- Processing (5-12 months): Background checks and document verification. You may receive an Additional Information Request during this time—respond promptly.
- Test invitation: Check our 3-week study plan so you're ready.
- Oath ceremony: The final step. Read our ceremony guide to know what to expect.
Your Next Step
If you haven't gathered your documents yet, start with the checklist at the top of this article. If your documents are ready, set aside 2-3 uninterrupted hours to complete the application. Don't rush it. Don't fill it out on your phone during lunch break. Give it the attention a $630, life-changing application deserves.