Keep Your PR Status
The Permanent Resident Residency Obligation
Permanent residence in Canada comes with a duty to spend a minimum amount of time in the country. Under section 28 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, permanent residents must meet a residency obligation to keep their status. Understanding how the days are counted — and what time abroad still counts — helps you protect the status you worked hard to earn.
01 What the Residency Obligation Is
The residency obligation is the minimum amount of time a permanent resident (PR) must be present in Canada — or otherwise in compliance — to keep their status. It comes from section 28 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA) and applies to every permanent resident, whether or not they hold a valid PR card.
The obligation exists to confirm that permanent residents are genuinely settling in Canada. Importantly, you remain a permanent resident until an official decision is made on your status, even if you have spent a long period outside the country.
02 The 730-Day Rule
In general, a permanent resident must be physically present in Canada for at least 730 days within every rolling five-year period — roughly two years out of every five. These 730 days do not need to be continuous; they can be accumulated across multiple trips.
The five-year window is assessed looking backward from the date of examination, so the relevant period changes depending on when your status is reviewed. New permanent residents who have held status for less than five years are assessed on whether it is still possible for them to meet the obligation within their first five years.
03 Time Abroad That Counts
Time spent outside Canada generally does not count toward your 730 days — but IRPA s.28 sets out specific situations where days abroad do count. The main categories are:
Accompanying a Canadian citizen
Days you spend abroad accompanying a Canadian-citizen spouse, common-law partner, or — if you are a dependent child — your parent, count toward the obligation.
Working for a Canadian employer
Days abroad while employed full-time by a Canadian business, the federal public administration, or the public service of a province may count toward your days.
Accompanying a PR so employed
If you are the spouse, common-law partner, or dependent child of a permanent resident who is working abroad full-time for a Canadian business or government, your days with them can count too.
04 When It's Assessed
Your compliance with the residency obligation can be reviewed at several points. The most common are:
PR card renewal
When you apply to renew or replace your PR card, IRCC assesses whether you have met the residency obligation over the relevant period.
PR Travel Document (PRTD)
If you are outside Canada without a valid PR card, you apply for a PRTD to return — and the visa office reviews your residency obligation as part of that application.
Port of entry
A border services officer can assess your obligation when you seek to enter Canada, particularly after a long absence abroad.
05 If You Don't Meet It
If an officer determines that you have not met the residency obligation, you may be found inadmissible and could lose your permanent resident status. However, a finding of non-compliance is not always the end of the matter — there are avenues to respond.
- Loss of status / removal: a negative decision can lead to a loss of PR status and, in some cases, a removal order.
- Appeal to the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD): a permanent resident generally has a right to appeal a residency-obligation decision to the IAD, an independent tribunal that can review the decision.
- Humanitarian & compassionate (H&C) considerations: on appeal, the IAD can grant special relief where there are sufficient H&C considerations, taking into account the best interests of any child directly affected.
06 Practical Tips
A few habits make it much easier to demonstrate compliance if your status is ever reviewed:
- Keep a detailed record of your entries and exits, including travel dates and destinations.
- Retain documents that support any time abroad you intend to count — such as marriage or relationship proof, proof of a partner's or parent's Canadian citizenship, and employment contracts or letters confirming a Canadian employer.
- Plan longer absences carefully so you do not drift below the 730-day threshold within the rolling five-year window.
- If your PR card is expiring while you are abroad, look into the PR Travel Document process before you travel back.
- If you are unsure whether time abroad qualifies, get advice before you rely on it — the conditions are specific.
07 Frequently Asked Questions
How many days do I actually need in Canada?+
Does time outside Canada ever count toward my days?+
What happens if I haven't met the residency obligation?+
Do I lose my status automatically if I fall short?+
My PR card expired while I'm abroad — how do I return?+
Can BroadGate help with my residency obligation situation?+
Talk to a Licensed Expert
Worried about keeping your PR status?
Our licensed RCICs, regulated by the CICC, can review your time in and out of Canada, explain your options, and help you protect the status you've earned.
