Physical Presence Calculator Canada โ€“ Check Your Canadian Citizenship Eligibility in 2026

If you are a permanent resident planning to apply for Canadian citizenship, this physical presence calculator tells you exactly where you stand. Canada requires 1,095 days of physical presence within the 5 years before you sign your application โ€” and counting those days wrong can cost you the entire application.

1,095 Days required in 5 years
365 Max TR half-credit days
5 yr Fixed window before signing

What Is the Physical Presence Requirement for Canadian Citizenship?

You must be physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days within the 5-year period immediately before the date you sign your citizenship application.

That works out to 3 years out of the last 5 โ€” but the counting is stricter than most people expect. Not every day inside Canada counts equally, and days outside Canada never count at all, regardless of your reason for leaving.

โ„น๏ธ PR Residency vs. Citizenship โ€” Key Difference

To keep your permanent resident status, you need 730 days in 5 years. To get citizenship, the bar is higher โ€” 1,095 days โ€” and the 5-year window is fixed to your application date, not your PR anniversary.


How Does This Physical Presence Calculator Work?

The calculation follows the same logic as the official IRCC physical presence calculator โ€” but delivers your result instantly, without needing to log into a government account.

๐Ÿ“…

Enter Your PR Start Date

Found on your IMM 1000 (Box 45) or IMM 5292 (Box 46).

๐Ÿ—“๏ธ

Enter Your Planned Application Date

The date you intend to sign and submit your citizenship application.

โœˆ๏ธ

Add Absences from Canada

Any periods you were outside Canada โ€” the calculator subtracts them automatically.

โœ… What You Get

If you qualify, the calculator confirms your eligibility. If you don’t, it gives you the earliest date you can apply โ€” assuming you stay in Canada from that point forward.


Not All Days Count the Same โ€” This Is What Most Applicants Get Wrong

Your days in Canada are counted based on your legal status at the time โ€” not just the fact that you were there. Here is exactly how each status is treated:

Status in CanadaDoes It Count?How Much?
Permanent Resident โ€” inside Canadaโœ… Yes1 full day per day
Permanent Resident โ€” outside CanadaโŒ No0
Temporary Resident (visitor / worker / student) โ€” inside Canadaโš ๏ธ Partial0.5 day per day โ€” max 365 days credit
Temporary Resident โ€” outside CanadaโŒ No0
Protected Person / Convention Refugee (after positive decision) โ€” inside Canadaโš ๏ธ Partial0.5 day per day โ€” same 365-day cap as TR
Protected Person โ€” outside CanadaโŒ No0
Refugee Claimant (claim pending, even with work/study permit)โŒ No0
Without legal statusโŒ No0
โš ๏ธ Important: The 365-Day Cap Is Combined

The 365-day cap applies to temporary residents and protected persons combined โ€” not separately. If you used all 365 days as a temporary resident, you have no cap remaining for protected person time.


How to Count Your Days Correctly (Including Day Trips and Short Absences)

Most applicants lose days they were actually entitled to count โ€” or count days they shouldn’t. The rules here are specific.

  • โœ…The day you left Canada counts as a day of physical presence.
  • โœ…The day you returned to Canada counts as a day of physical presence.
  • โœ…If you crossed the border and came back the same day, that full day still counts.
  • โŒIf you were outside Canada for any complete 24-hour period, that day does not count.
๐Ÿš— Example: You drove to the US on Saturday morning and returned the same evening โ€” Saturday counts. But if you stayed overnight and drove back Sunday afternoon, Sunday counts โ€” Saturday does not. These lost days add up faster than you think.

Where to Find Your Physical Presence Records

Before you run any calculation, you need accurate dates. Here is where to find them.

1

PR Start Date

Check your Record of Landing (IMM 1000) Box 45, your Confirmation of Permanent Residence (IMM 5292/5509) Box 46, or the back of your PR card.

2

Travel History

Review all passports for entry and exit stamps โ€” especially from non-Canadian border points. Canada doesn’t always stamp you on exit, so foreign stamps are often your best evidence.

3

Request CBSA Records

Request your travel history directly from the CBSA. This pulls the same electronic border crossing data IRCC uses to verify your application.

โš ๏ธ Do Not Rely on Memory

IRCC cross-checks your declared absences against CBSA records. Discrepancies โ€” even small ones โ€” can flag your application for review.


What Your Calculator Result Means โ€” And What to Do Next

The calculator gives you one of three outcomes. Here is what each one means and exactly what to do with it.

โœ…

You Meet 1,095 Days

You are eligible to apply right now.

Save the calculation. Attach it to form CIT 0407 for paper applications, or enter dates directly into your IRCC online account.
โณ

Not Yet at 1,095 Days

Not yet eligible to apply.

The calculator shows your earliest possible application date. Stay in Canada and recheck closer to that date.
โš ๏ธ

Qualify with <30 Days Buffer

Eligible โ€” but risky to apply now.

Wait a little longer. One undeclared absence or a data discrepancy can push you below 1,095 and result in refusal.
๐Ÿ“„ About Form CIT 0407

This is the physical presence calculation form required for paper citizenship applications. If you apply through your IRCC online account, you do not submit this form separately โ€” you enter your presence and absence dates directly into the online system. Either way, the numbers must match what IRCC finds in their own records.


Common Mistakes That Get Citizenship Applications Rejected

These are the errors that show up again and again โ€” and most of them are entirely avoidable.

  • ๐Ÿšซ Signing Too Early

    The most common reason for refusal. Applicants hit 1,095 days and submit immediately โ€” but the application date itself does not count. One day short means a full refusal.

  • ๐Ÿšซ Not Declaring Short Trips

    A weekend in the US, a day trip across the border, a quick work visit โ€” these all count as absences if you were outside Canada for a full 24-hour period. Skipping them looks like misrepresentation, not an honest mistake.

  • ๐Ÿšซ Counting Refugee Claimant Time

    If your refugee claim was still pending, those days count as zero โ€” even if you had a valid work or study permit. Only days after a positive protected person decision count, and only at 0.5 days.

  • ๐Ÿšซ Forgetting Criminal Sentence Days

    Any time spent serving a sentence โ€” including probation, parole, or a conditional sentence โ€” must be listed and subtracted from your total.

  • ๐Ÿšซ Using the Wrong PR Date

    Your PR start date is not the day you got your PR card or the day IRCC approved your application. It is the date on your IMM 1000 (Box 45) or IMM 5292 (Box 46). Using the wrong date throws off every number that follows.

โšก Key Takeaway

  • IRCC cross-checks your travel history with CBSA records electronically.
  • Even a one-day miscalculation can result in outright refusal.
  • Your processing fee is non-refundable โ€” a refused application means you lose that money and start the wait again.

The Buffer Strategy โ€” Why You Should Wait Before Applying

Meeting 1,095 days is the minimum. It is not the ideal point to apply.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Aim for 30โ€“60 Extra Days Above 1,095

IRCC verifies your declared absences against CBSA electronic border records. If their records show even one absence you forgot to enter, your total drops below 1,095 and your application is refused outright.

Waiting until you have 30 to 60 extra days gives you a real safety margin that absorbs small discrepancies without putting your entire application at risk.

While you wait, use the time productively โ€” check your current CRS score and improve your Express Entry profile.

Check Your CRS Score โ†’

What Comes After Meeting the Physical Presence Requirement?

Physical presence is the biggest hurdle โ€” but it is not the only one. Before IRCC approves your citizenship application, you also need to meet these requirements.

๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ

Language (CLB 4+)

English or French across all four abilities โ€” speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Applies to applicants aged 18โ€“54.

๐Ÿ“š

Knowledge Test

Pass a citizenship test on Canadian history, values, institutions, and rights. Applicants aged 18โ€“54 must take this test.

๐Ÿงพ

Tax Filing

Filed taxes for at least 3 years within the 5-year period before your application, if required under the Income Tax Act.

๐Ÿ

Oath of Citizenship

Attend a citizenship ceremony and take the Oath of Citizenship โ€” the final step before you become a Canadian citizen.

โœ… Pre-Application Eligibility Checklist

  • At least 1,095 days of physical presence in the last 5 years
  • Valid permanent resident status (not expired or revoked)
  • CLB 4 or higher in English or French (if aged 18โ€“54)
  • Income tax filed for 3+ years in the 5-year period (if required)
  • No citizenship application fee unpaid
  • No prohibitions (e.g. criminal sentence days correctly subtracted)
  • Travel history fully documented with CBSA/passport records
  • PR start date confirmed on IMM 1000 or IMM 5292
๐Ÿ’ก Already a Canadian Citizen?

Use our CRS Calculator to help a family member check their Express Entry eligibility and start their own PR journey โ€” the first step toward citizenship.


Frequently Asked Questions About the Canada Physical Presence Calculator

How many days do I need to be in Canada for citizenship?

You need 1,095 days of physical presence within the 5-year period immediately before the date you sign your citizenship application. This is equivalent to 3 out of the last 5 years.

Does time as a temporary resident count toward Canadian citizenship?

Yes, but only at half credit. Each day inside Canada as a visitor, student, or worker counts as 0.5 days, with a maximum credit of 365 days toward your total.

Can I use the physical presence calculator before becoming a permanent resident?

No. You must already be a permanent resident to use this calculator. You also cannot meet the 1,095-day requirement without spending a minimum of 2 years in Canada as a PR.

Does the day I leave Canada count toward physical presence?

Yes. Both your departure day and your return day count as days physically present in Canada.

What happens if I don’t meet the 1,095-day requirement yet?

The calculator shows you the earliest date you will be eligible to apply, based on your current records and assuming you remain in Canada from that point forward.

Do I need to submit the CIT 0407 form with my application?

Only for paper applications. If you apply through your IRCC online account, you enter your presence and absence dates directly into the system โ€” no separate form needed.

What is a good buffer of days before applying for citizenship?

Aim for at least 30 extra days above 1,095 before you sign your application. This protects you against minor record discrepancies that could otherwise push you below the threshold. 60 days is even safer.

Does time spent in Canada without legal status count?

No. Only time as a permanent resident, temporary resident, or protected person counts โ€” and the latter two only at 0.5 days per day. Time without status, including while a refugee claim is still pending, counts as zero.


Why Applicants Trust This Calculator
๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Follows IRCC official counting rules
๐Ÿ”„ Updated for 2026 requirements
โšก Instant result โ€” no account needed
๐Ÿ“ฑ Works on mobile and desktop
๐Ÿ”’ No personal data stored

Ready to Take the Next Step?

Get a free immigration assessment and find out exactly where you stand โ€” whether you are on track for citizenship or still working toward Canadian PR.

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