THE RESOURCE HUB
Every resource, in the order you'll need them.
Each resource below is its own page. Some material is free. The rest unlocks with the Hub — a one-time $39 purchase.
WEEKS TO MONTHS
Planning your application.
Finding records and organizing them into the line of descent Canada's IRCC needs to see.
Requesting records
Where to request birth, marriage, and baptism records in Canada and the US — plus the research tools for filling in gaps with uncertified records.
- Provincial archives across Canada
- County and state-level US records
- FamilySearch, Ancestry, Newspapers.com
- Certified vs. uncertified records
- Color copy rules
Line of descent
Organizing your records for your Canadian citizenship by descent application, even when your line goes back many generations or names change along the way.
- Picking a Gen 0 from multiple
- When names change
- Applications longer than the form allows
- Including a visual line of discent
DAYS TO WEEKS
Assembling your packet.
Filling out the form, preparing your documents, and getting the whole thing in the mail. The work breaks into three pieces: the form itself, the rules that govern what goes in the envelope, and the send-off.
PART ONE
Preparing your documents.
The form, the cover letters, and the photos that go with them.
The application form
Which CIT 0001 form to use, the sections descent applicants find hardest, and the mistakes that get applications returned.
- Direct link to the official CIT 0001
- Multi-generational famil lines
- The CIT0014 checklist
Templates
Downloadable cover letters and summary templates in the format that works.
- Individual cover letter
- Family filing cover letter
- Line of Descent summary
- Generational Evidence Summary
- Appendix C
Photos
Understanding IRCC's photo requirements and where to find photographers who know them.
- Finding a photographer
- The three measurements that matter
- Six common mistakes
- Photo FAQs
PART TWO
Getting the details right.
The rules that govern what IRCC will and won't accept inside your packet. Most applications that get returned fail on one of these.
Translations
Every document not in English or French needs translation — and the translator can't be family.
- What needs translating
- Who can translate (and who can't)
- Canadian certified vs sworn affidavit
- Common mistakes
Applying for a minor
The form gets filled out in the child's voice. One supporting form parents often fill out by mistake.
- Asnswer as the child
- Why a parent isn't a representative
- When IMM 5476 is required
- Common minor questions
The two-ID rule
Two pieces of government-issued ID, one with a photo. The list is more flexible than most people expect.
- What counts and what doesn't
- The four IRCC requirements
- When you don't have two IDs
- Writing the explanation letter
PART THREE
Paying and sending it off.
The fee, the receipt, and the mail.
Application fee
Paying the IRCC fee online and including the printed receipt in the right place in your packet.
- Application fee
- How to pay from the US
- Paying once for a family filing
- The option for applicants without internet
Mailing
USPS vs. couriers, discount options, and choosing the right envelope for a packet this important.
- Two addresses — regular mail vs. courier
- IRCC's envelope-only rule
- Getting expedited processing noticed
- A discount shipping recommendation
ANYTIME DURING THE PROCESS
Answers to specific questions.
158 questions I wish someone had answered before I filed — organized into five categories so you can jump straight to what you need.
Understanding the law
What Bill C-3 changed, and what you can do with Canadian citizenship once you have it.
17 questions →Determining eligibility
The most common scenarios, edge cases, and how to count generations in your line of descent.
34 questions →Planning your application
Organizing a family filing, finding records, and figuring out which documents you'll need.
32 questions →Submitting your application
Preparing documents, filling out CIT 0001, photos, payment, and mailing.
21 questions →After you apply
Tracking, dual citizenship, taxes, traveling to Canada, and what to do once the certificate arrives.
37 questions →ONE-TIME PURCHASE
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