Misdemeanor Stay on Your Record in Canada

How Long Can a Misdemeanor Stay on Your Record in Canada? (2025โ€“2026 Guide)

Someone handed over their passport at the Canadian border. Routine crossing. The officer ran it, paused, and asked them to step inside. A DUI from eight years ago โ€” misdemeanor level in their home state, never cost them more than a fine and a licence suspension. They had no idea Canada would even know about it, let alone care. That scenario plays out thousands of times a year. This guide answers the actual question: how long does a misdemeanor stay on your record in Canada, what that record affects, and exactly what you can do about it.

โˆž
Criminal records last indefinitely in Canada unless actively sealed via Record Suspension
$50
Record Suspension fee in Canada โ€” reduced from $631 in January 2022
3 types
Canadian offence categories: summary, indictable, and hybrid โ€” no “misdemeanor” exists in Canadian law
10 yrs
Deemed rehabilitation threshold for most US misdemeanor equivalents entering Canada

Table of Contents

Canada Does Not Have “Misdemeanors” โ€” Here Is What It Has Instead

The word “misdemeanor” does not appear in any Canadian law. It is an American legal term. If you are searching this, you are either a US citizen asking about entering Canada, or you are in Canada and have been using American terminology for what is actually a Canadian summary conviction. Either way, the answer starts with understanding what Canada’s system looks like.

Canada divides criminal offences into three categories:

Canadian Equivalent of US Misdemeanor

Summary Conviction

Less serious offences โ€” minor theft, simple mischief, low-level drug possession. Tried in provincial court without a jury. Maximum sentence is usually a fine or up to two years less a day. Still a real criminal record.

Canadian Equivalent of US Felony

Indictable Offence

Serious crimes โ€” fraud, robbery, aggravated assault, major drug trafficking. Can go to superior court with a jury. Longer sentences. Stays on your record longer before you can apply for relief.

โš ๏ธ Unique to Canada โ€” Most Dangerous for Border Crossings

Hybrid Offence

Crown prosecutor decides whether to proceed summarily or by indictment. Includes DUI, simple assault, drug possession, fraud under $5,000, break and enter. Canada treats hybrid offences as indictable by default for border and immigration purposes.

๐Ÿšซ The Rule That Catches Most Americans Off Guard

Canada does not care whether your offence was a “misdemeanor” or “felony” in the US. Canada applies the Canadian equivalent of your crime. If that equivalent is hybrid or indictable, you can be denied entry regardless of how minor the American charge was. A US misdemeanor DUI carries the same Canadian inadmissibility weight as a felony-equivalent because the Canadian Criminal Code equivalent (impaired driving) has a maximum sentence of 10 years.

Quick Comparison โ€” US vs. Canadian Offence Classification

US TermCanadian EquivalentHow Canada Treats It at the Border
Misdemeanor (minor)Summary convictionLower inadmissibility risk
Misdemeanor (DUI, assault, drug possession)Hybrid offenceTreated as indictable โ€” HIGH risk
FelonyIndictable offenceHighest inadmissibility risk

How Long Does a Criminal Record Last in Canada?

โฑ The Direct Answer

Indefinitely โ€” unless you actively apply to seal it. Criminal records in Canada are stored in the RCMP’s Canadian Police Information Centre (CPIC), a national database accessed by all police forces and border agencies. Unlike some US states where minor offences age off automatically, Canadian records in CPIC have no automatic expiry date. A conviction from 1987 is still in CPIC today if the person never applied for a record suspension. There is no Canadian equivalent of automatic expungement.

What Actually Shows on a Canadian Criminal Record Check

Not all background checks show the same information. Three distinct levels exist in Canada โ€” and most people have only ever been subject to Level 1.

Level 1 โ€” Most Common
โœ… Name-Based CPIC Search

Used by most employers for standard hiring. Searches CPIC by name and date of birth. Shows criminal convictions and certain charges. Pardoned/suspended records do not appear here for most convictions.

Level 2 โ€” Security Roles
๐Ÿ” Fingerprint-Based CPIC Search

More thorough. Matches records by fingerprint identity, not just name. Used for higher security clearance positions. Can surface older records that name searches miss due to spelling variations or common names.

Level 3 โ€” Working with Vulnerable Persons
โš ๏ธ Vulnerable Sector Check

Required for childcare, schools, hospitals, shelters. The only check that can surface a pardoned record. If the pardoned conviction involved a sexual offence, it can be revealed even after a Record Suspension has been granted.

Youth Records โ€” Different Rules Apply

Offences committed between ages 12 and 17 fall under the Youth Criminal Justice Act (YCJA), not the Criminal Code. Youth records work completely differently from adult records.

โœ… Youth Record Auto-Sealing Timelines (YCJA)
  • Youth records are not entered into CPIC the way adult records are
  • Absolute or conditional discharge: sealed immediately upon completion of conditions
  • Summary conviction: automatically sealed 3 years after sentence completion (with no new convictions)
  • Indictable conviction: automatically sealed 5 years after sentence completion (with no new convictions)
  • After sealing: inaccessible to employers, landlords, and most third parties
  • Exception: if a youth is subsequently convicted of an adult offence, the youth record becomes accessible again during that adult proceeding

Record Suspension (Pardon) โ€” The Only Way to Seal a Canadian Criminal Record

When someone asks “can I get my record cleared in Canada?” โ€” a Record Suspension is the answer. It used to be called a pardon, and many people still use that word. The process, the authority, and the legal effect are the same.

What a Record Suspension Does โ€” and Does Not Do

  • Does: Seal the record in CPIC โ€” inaccessible to most third parties including employers and landlords
  • Does: Allow you to state you have no criminal record on most employment and housing applications
  • Does NOT: Destroy the record โ€” it still exists and IRCC and the Parole Board can still see it
  • Does NOT: Automatically restore firearms licence eligibility โ€” that requires a separate application
  • Does NOT: Guarantee entry to the US, UK, or Australia โ€” those countries operate independently
  • Does NOT: Prevent disclosure under a Vulnerable Sector Check for certain sexual offences

Waiting Periods โ€” When Can You Apply for a Record Suspension?

You must fully complete your sentence first โ€” all imprisonment, probation, community service, and fines paid. Then the waiting period begins from that completion date.

3 yrs
Summary Conviction
Most minor offences โ€” theft, mischief, minor drug possession
5 yrs
Summary (Schedule 1)
Certain sexual offences prosecuted summarily
5 yrs
Indictable Offence
Most indictable offences including DUI, assault, fraud
10 yrs
Serious Indictable (Schedule 1)
Serious sexual offences, violence, terrorism
๐Ÿšซ Permanently Ineligible โ€” No Record Suspension Available
  • Sexual offences against minors (Schedule 1 sexual offences against a child)
  • More than three indictable offence convictions each resulting in a sentence of two or more years
  • Terrorism-related offences
  • Certain offences listed in Schedule 1 of the Criminal Records Act

How to Apply for a Record Suspension

  1. 1

    Confirm Eligibility and Waiting Period

    Verify your sentence completion date, calculate the applicable waiting period (3, 5, or 10 years), and confirm your offence is not on the permanently ineligible list. If you have multiple convictions, the longest waiting period applies to the whole application.

  2. 2

    Get RCMP Fingerprints from an Accredited Service

    Must be done through an RCMP-accredited fingerprinting service โ€” the Parole Board will not accept prints from a non-accredited provider. Cost: approximately $50โ€“$100. This step is non-negotiable.

  3. 3

    Gather Local Police Record Checks

    Obtain a police record check from every police service that had jurisdiction over you during the entire waiting period โ€” every city or region where you lived. This can mean multiple checks across provinces. Costs typically $10โ€“$50 per jurisdiction.

  4. 4

    Obtain Court Documents for Each Conviction

    For each conviction: the Information or Indictment (charging document), the Abstract or Certificate of Conviction, and proof of payment of any fines or restitution orders. Contact the specific courthouse where each conviction occurred.

  5. 5

    Submit the Application โ€” $50 CAD Fee

    The Parole Board of Canada charges $50 CAD (reduced from $631 in January 2022 โ€” a 92% reduction). This covers the full application regardless of how many convictions are included. Total out-of-pocket costs including documents and fingerprinting typically run $200โ€“$400.

  6. 6

    Wait for Processing

    Summary conviction applications: approximately 6 months. Indictable offence applications: approximately 12 months. Proposed refusals (complex cases): up to 24 months. If your application is accepted, the Board reviews and decides.

Criminal Record Affecting Your Canada Immigration Plans?

A past conviction does not automatically end your chance at Canadian permanent residence โ€” but it needs to be handled as part of the application strategy from day one. Get a free assessment from a regulated RCIC.


US Misdemeanor on Your Record โ€” Can You Enter Canada?

This section is for Americans and other non-Canadians who have a criminal conviction and want to know whether it affects entry to Canada.

Canada and the United States share criminal record data through an RCMP-FBI information-sharing agreement. When you present a US passport at a Canadian border crossing, your identity is checked against US FBI records. Border officers can see your full US criminal history. Thousands of Americans are turned back at the Canadian border every year for convictions they considered minor or resolved long ago.

Common US Misdemeanors and Their Canadian Equivalents

US MisdemeanorCanadian EquivalentCanadian ClassificationBorder Risk
DUI / DWI / OWIImpaired driving (s.320.14 Criminal Code)Hybrid โ€” max 10 yearsVery High
Reckless drivingDangerous drivingHybridHigh
Simple assaultAssault (s.266 CC)HybridHigh
Drug possession (small amount)Possession of controlled substanceHybridMedium-High
Petty theftTheft under $5,000Hybrid / SummaryMedium
Disorderly conductCausing a disturbanceSummaryLower
Minor in possession (alcohol)No direct equivalentDepends on age/contextLower

The DUI exception most Americans miss: A US misdemeanor DUI โ€” even a first offence plea-bargained to the lowest possible charge, even from 20 years ago โ€” typically makes Americans criminally inadmissible to Canada. The Canadian Criminal Code equivalent carries a maximum sentence of 10 years, making it a hybrid offence treated as indictable at the border. A DUI conviction before 5 years ago requires a TRP. After 5 years, Criminal Rehabilitation. After 10 years, check Deemed Rehabilitation eligibility carefully โ€” DUI often does not qualify because of the 10-year maximum sentence rule.

The Three Pathways to Enter Canada With a Criminal Record

Pathway 1 โ€” No Application Required

Deemed Rehabilitation

Available automatically when all conditions are met โ€” no paperwork filed, argue it at the border.

  • At least 10 years since sentence completion
  • One eligible conviction only (or two summary-equivalent)
  • No additional convictions in the 10-year period
  • Offence’s Canadian max sentence is less than 10 years
  • Note: DUI does NOT qualify โ€” max is 10 years exactly
Pathway 2 โ€” Permanent Solution

Individual Criminal Rehabilitation

Permanently resolves criminal inadmissibility โ€” no further process needed to enter Canada once approved.

  • At least 5 years since full sentence completion
  • Application to IRCC with supporting documentation
  • Processing time: 12โ€“18 months
  • Best option for DUI, multiple convictions, or offences with max 10+ year sentences
Pathway 3 โ€” Temporary Entry

Temporary Resident Permit (TRP)

Grants temporary entry despite inadmissibility. Does not permanently resolve the issue.

  • Sentence completed less than 5 years ago โ€” or while awaiting Rehab approval
  • Fee: CAD $239.75 per application
  • Consulate route: 3โ€“6 months โ€” recommended
  • Port of Entry route: immediate but uncertain

What a Summary Conviction (Misdemeanor Equivalent) Actually Affects in Canada

For Canadians with a domestic conviction โ€” here is where your criminal record shows up in day-to-day life.

๐Ÿ’ผ

Employment

Most Canadian employers run CPIC checks. Convictions appear on standard name-based checks. Regulated professions โ€” nurses, teachers, lawyers, financial advisors โ€” require mandatory disclosure to professional bodies regardless of conviction age. Government positions with security clearances have strict standards. Private-sector employers typically assess each case individually.

๐Ÿ 

Housing & International Travel

Landlords can legally request criminal background checks. A conviction affects rental applications in competitive markets. For travel: a Canadian record affects entry to the United States (RCMP-FBI data sharing), the UK (visa applications require disclosure above a threshold), and Australia (immigration forms require disclosure). A Canadian Record Suspension does not automatically clear these foreign inadmissibilities.

๐Ÿ“‹

Professional Licences & Volunteering

Professional regulatory bodies (CPSO, Law Society, OSFI, etc.) conduct their own checks independent of employer hiring. A past conviction must be disclosed and is assessed for fitness to practise. Vulnerable sector volunteer roles require the most thorough check โ€” and a Record Suspension may not fully protect you if the conviction involved a sexual offence.

๐Ÿ”ซ

Firearms Licensing (PAL) & Immigration

A Possession and Acquisition Licence (PAL) requires no criminal record. Some convictions result in automatic ineligibility; others are assessed case-by-case. A Record Suspension can restore PAL eligibility for some offence types, but not all. For immigration applications โ€” PR through Express Entry, PNP, or family sponsorship โ€” a conviction must be disclosed and will trigger inadmissibility review. See our guide on medical and other inadmissibility grounds for how these interact.


Common Offences and Their Record Duration โ€” Quick Reference

OffenceClassificationRecord Duration Without SuspensionSuspension Waiting Period
Minor theft under $5,000Summary or HybridIndefinite3โ€“5 years
Mischief under $5,000Summary or HybridIndefinite3โ€“5 years
Simple assaultHybridIndefinite5 years
Impaired driving (DUI)HybridIndefinite5 years
Small amount drug possessionHybridIndefinite5 years
Fraud under $5,000HybridIndefinite5 years
Break and enterHybridIndefinite5โ€“10 years
Sexual assaultIndictable / HybridIndefinite10 years (or ineligible)
Youth summary conviction (YCJA)YCJAAuto-sealed after 3 yearsN/A
Youth indictable conviction (YCJA)YCJAAuto-sealed after 5 yearsN/A
Absolute / conditional dischargeNot a convictionRemoved automatically (1โ€“3 years)N/A โ€” no suspension needed
๐Ÿ“Œ Two Important Notes on Non-Conviction Records

Discharges: An absolute or conditional discharge is not a conviction. You are generally not required to disclose it after the relevant period ends. It appears on background checks during that period but is removed automatically โ€” no Record Suspension application needed.

Non-conviction records (stayed, withdrawn, acquitted charges): Can appear on Enhanced Police Information Checks temporarily. They are not convictions and should not be reported as such. You can request a purge of non-conviction records from the relevant police service. Worth doing โ€” some employers confuse “record” with “conviction” when they see anything appear.

If a past conviction intersects with a Canada immigration application, use our CRS Score Calculator to understand your Express Entry standing, and our Come to Canada Tool to identify which programs may still be accessible.


Frequently Asked Questions

Does a summary conviction show on a criminal record check in Canada?

Yes. A summary conviction produces a real criminal record that appears on standard CPIC background checks. It stays there until a Record Suspension is granted. The exceptions are youth records after the YCJA auto-sealing period, and adult summary convictions after a successful Record Suspension application through the Parole Board of Canada.

Can I travel to the United States with a Canadian criminal record?

Possibly not without prior authorization. Canada and the US share criminal record data โ€” US border officers can see Canadian RCMP records. A Canadian conviction may make you inadmissible to the US under categories including crimes involving moral turpitude or drug-related offences. A US waiver (I-192 for inadmissible non-immigrants) may be required. A Canadian Record Suspension does not resolve US inadmissibility โ€” the two countries’ systems operate independently of each other.

What is the difference between a pardon and expungement in Canada?

A Canadian Record Suspension (pardon) seals the record โ€” it remains in existence but becomes inaccessible to most parties. It can be revoked if the person reoffends. Expungement, an American concept, typically destroys or permanently erases the record. Canada does not have true expungement for ordinary criminal records, except for a narrow category of historically unjust convictions (such as same-sex consensual acts that are no longer offences) under the Expungement of Historically Unjust Convictions Act.

Does a peace bond create a criminal record in Canada?

No. A peace bond (recognizance) under section 810 of the Criminal Code is not a conviction. If you complete the peace bond without breaching it, you have no criminal conviction. However, the peace bond itself and the underlying allegations may appear on certain Enhanced Police Information Checks for a period. If charges were being stayed in exchange for signing a peace bond, consult a lawyer about the best approach for your record.

Does a conditional discharge stay on my record?

A conditional discharge is not a conviction. It appears on background checks during the discharge period (typically the probation period plus 3 years). Once that period ends, it is removed from standard checks automatically โ€” you do not need to apply for a Record Suspension. However, a conditional discharge for a sexual offence may still appear on Vulnerable Sector Checks under specific circumstances.

Can my employer see my record after a Record Suspension?

For most employers running a standard background check โ€” no. The record is sealed and does not appear on standard CPIC name-based checks. The exception is the Vulnerable Sector Check, which can surface pardoned records where the conviction was for certain sexual offences. If you work or volunteer with children or vulnerable adults, understand this exception before assuming your pardoned record is completely invisible.

Does a non-conviction (stayed charges, acquittal) show on a background check?

It can โ€” temporarily. Non-conviction records including stayed, withdrawn, or acquitted charges may appear on Enhanced Police Information Checks for a period after the matter is resolved. They should not appear on standard CPIC conviction checks. You can request a purge of non-conviction records from the relevant police service with a letter and identification. This is worth doing, as some employers confuse “record” with “conviction” when they see anything appear.

How much does a Record Suspension application cost in Canada?

The Parole Board of Canada charges $50 CAD as of January 1, 2022 โ€” reduced from $631 in a policy change designed to increase access. This is separate from document gathering costs: local police record checks ($10โ€“$50 per jurisdiction), court documents, and RCMP-accredited fingerprinting ($50โ€“$100). Total out-of-pocket costs for a complete application typically run $200โ€“$400 depending on how many jurisdictions are involved.

Can a youth record affect me as an adult?

A sealed youth record does not affect you in most circumstances. Employers, landlords, and most government bodies cannot access it. The two situations where it can matter: if you are subsequently convicted of an adult offence, your youth record may become accessible during sentencing; and in very narrow security clearance contexts, a judge can order access. For most people with a sealed youth record, it is functionally gone from their daily life.

How do I get a criminal record check done in Canada?

Most people obtain a record check through their local police service or RCMP. For a standard name-based check, bring valid government ID to a police station or apply through the RCMP online portal. Accredited private providers also offer RCMP-level name checks. Fingerprint-based checks and Vulnerable Sector Checks require additional steps โ€” the requesting organization will specify the type of check needed for a particular role.

Why Canadians and US Visitors Use CRSCalculate.com for Immigration Questions

๐Ÿ“Š
2026 Data Current Record Suspension fees, inadmissibility thresholds, and processing times updated for 2025โ€“2026.
๐Ÿ“‹
Free RCIC Assessment Personalised review of your inadmissibility situation from a regulated consultant โ€” free.
๐ŸŽฏ
All Pathways Covered CRS, Express Entry, PNP, inadmissibility, citizenship โ€” every Canadian immigration tool.
๐Ÿ”’
No Registration Use every calculator instantly โ€” no account, no email, no data stored.

Related Immigration Tools & Guides

If a criminal record intersects with your Canada immigration plans, these tools help you build the full picture:

Criminal Record and Canada Immigration โ€” Get the Right Advice Before You Apply

A past conviction does not automatically close the door on Canadian permanent residence, entry, or citizenship. But it does need to be addressed properly โ€” before the IME, before the application, and before the border crossing. Get a free assessment from a regulated RCIC who handles inadmissibility cases.

โœ… Free  ยท  Regulated RCIC review  ยท  No obligation  ยท  Confidential

This guide reflects Canadian criminal law and immigration rules as of May 2026. Criminal inadmissibility and Record Suspension eligibility depend on individual facts. Consult a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) or criminal lawyer before making decisions about your record or cross-border travel.

Similar Posts