Canada's legislative agenda on immigration continues to undergo a tectonic shift under the Conservatives. The implementation of the latest reforms to the Citizenship Act completes a process which began last year and will substantially restrict access to Canadian citizenship. In addition, since January 2015, adult applicants must pay a higher processing fee (raised 430% since 2014) of $530 plus an additional fee of $100 for a right-of-citizenship, if granted.

It is expected the new rules and the much higher costs will result in a substantial reduction in the numbers of applications each year to less than half of Canada's annual immigration levels. Historically, about 75% of Canada's annual intake of immigrants would apply for citizenship.

Below is a comparative analysis of the requirements to apply for citizenship.

Citizenship Act Comparisons Former New
Residency Requirements Permanent Resident

3 out of 4 years

(1,095/1460 days) immediately prior to filing application
Permanent Resident

4 out of 6 years

(1,460/2190 days) immediately prior to filing application
Language Requirements Adults aged 18–54 must meet language requirements and pass knowledge test Applicants aged 14–64 must meet language requirements and pass knowledge test
Physical Presence No requirement for residents to be physically present in Canada 183 days of physical presence in Canada during each of the 4 calendar years of permanent residence
Intent to reside No "intent to reside" Must show "intent to reside"
Time in Canada before Permanent Residence Time as a non-permanent resident may count towards residence for citizenship Eliminates consideration for time spent in Canada as a non-permanent resident for most applicants
Misrepresentation Misrepresentation on applications could only be considered by RCMP Applicants can be refused for misrepresenting or withholding material facts with 5-year ban
Taxes No requirement to file Canadian income taxes Requires adult applicants to file annual income tax returns
Consultants Consultants not required to be registered or regulated Consultants required to be registered or regulated
Application Process Limited authority to define what constitutes a complete application Defines what constitutes a complete application and what evidence applicants must provide
Decision Process Citizenship is a three-step decision-making process Citizenship is a single-step process for most applications
Criminality Bars applicants with domestic criminal charges and convictions Expansion of criminal prohibitions to bar applicants for crimes committed abroad
"Lost Canadians" Most "Lost Canadians" had citizenship restored in 2009, but small number remained ineligible for citizenship Extends citizenship to "Lost Canadians" born before 1947 as well as their 1st generation children born abroad
Citizenship by Descent NA Citizenship for those born outside of Canada, limited to first generation
Special Processing No fast-track mechanism to citizenship for members of the military to honour their service to the Canadian Armed Forces Creates fast-track mechanism to citizenship for individuals serving or on exchange with the Canadian Armed Forces to honour their service to Canada
Revocation No authority to revoke citizenship beyond fraud or misrepresentation Minister may revoke from dual citizens convicted of terrorism, high treason and/or treason or espionage; and most other cases.

Complex cases by Federal Court
Impact of Revocation   10-years existing fraud; permanent on new grounds
Renunciation NA No renunciation if Minister initiates process
Appeal Federal Court, No Leave Federal Court, With Leave

Federal Court Appeal

Supreme Court Canada, Leave
Authority to Abandon None Minister may determine application abandoned for failure to comply
Authority to Suspend NA Minister may suspend processing for as long as "necessary"

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.