At this point, if she doesnât hold the maple leaf card and you arenât vaxxed, she wonât be let in, and you will need to quarantine.
If you guys are willing to quarantine, ask the CTOT for info on your wife.
Secondly, you will not be allowed to take ANY aeroplane from Canada, within or outside Canada without being double vaxxed.
Regardless of the debate on vaccines. This is not my opinion, itâs just whatâs going on. If you expect to touch Canada anytime soon, be prepared to be double vaxxed. Even I am a bit sceptical over one size fits all regulation, but I know you and I will need to be double vaxxed to get out of Canada.
Every time I check for the actual policy, itâs not there. So all we have is a press release (not binding) and general online information (not binding). Plus they postponed the scheme by a month already.
Weâll see.
Oh and as currently explained (though like I said itâs not binding), you can transit in designated airports as long as you donât stay overnight (except YYZ) and donât leave the airport, so if youâre really desperate and qualify for entry into a neighboring country by land or water, you can do that just for the sake of flying back to Canada and flying out again.
Oh yeah, plus âemergencyâ exceptions, whatever those are.
Double vaxxed plus 14 days. Currently AZ, Moderna, and BNT are acceptable vaccines.
If a Canadian citizen (like you) shows up unvaccinated, youâll need to do 14 days quarantine. Without vaccination, you wonât be able to board trains as well as planes, including the one taking you back to Taiwan. You will also run into issues getting into restaurants, pubs, etc.
WAY off topic, but last time I looked into this, I thought a spouse wouldnât be able to get PR status unless we actually lived in Canada for a while. We looked into this (over a decade ago!), and couldnât find a way to give my (Taiwanese) wife any legal status in Canada unless we were also willing to move to Canada.
But we may have been wrong then, or things may have changed.
Yes, obviously. But trying to avoid this turning into a conversation on the vaccines there are other threads for that. As mentioned, we will be waiting roughly another year before likely getting vaccinated.
This w smy impression as well. And one needed to maintain residency status there, so living here and going back every few years seemed unlikely to be ok. But could also be remembering wrong.
You can apply for permanent residency while in Taiwan. We did that and stayed in Taiwan until the PR was approved. We actually ended up staying a year longer because of COVID-19 so we needed to get the PR re-approved.
Once approved, they send you a letter saying you have approval for permanent residency. You just take that letter to customs when you arrive in Canada, they stamp it and then mail you a PR card to a Canadian address (you need to have an address where they can send the cardâwe used my motherâs address).
If you want to become a citizen, then you need to have lived in Canada for 5 years (I think).
Thanks for the clarification. But is that possible when we donât have any plans to move to Canada? Iâd like for my wife to have status there if we decide or need to move in a hurry, but can we apply for something like that, get the letter, and then have it sit in a cabinet for two to twenty years before actually using it, if ever?
You actually have to have a plan for moving to Canada. The approval letter is actually only good for a year, so you need to get to Canada before the approval letter expires.
Once you have the PR card, you can leave again but you need to stay in Canada for at least two years out of every five (or something like that). The two years donât need to be continuous.
" How long must I stay in Canada to keep my permanent resident status?
To keep your permanent resident status, you must have been in Canada for at least 730 days during the last five years. These 730 days donât need to be continuous. Some of your time abroad may count towards the 730 days." https://www.cic.gc.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?qnum=727&top=10
OK, thanks. So it seems things havenât changed significantly in the decade since I last looked into this.
(This is one of those things we almost never think about, but every few years China gets ⌠noisy ⌠and I start to wonder about options for leaving in a hurry.)
Ya, it seems more or less the same, PR isnt really possible if living in taiwan. Although that is logical as permanent residency should be based off of, well, residency haha. I think we all agree that is logical and fair. Here its gotta be half the year here. I find that also fair, though at least canada ha been reasonable road to citizenship unlike taiwan. But i digressâŚ
Lets swing back to entering canada without a vaccine currently, PR becomes a non possibility for non PR immediate family members of canadian citizens it would seem. Is that right? So spouses are still locked out. I wonder how it works in said situation if the spouse is the mother/father of the canadian citizens child and are travelling together?
Of interest to forumosans in Canada, or visiting Canada: the US land border will finally reopen for nonessential travel after being closed for around 20 months. This is a big deal! Double vaccination (or in the case of J&J recipients, single vaccination) required to enter the US in this way. Under 18s are apparently exempt.