Americans are applying for Canadian citizenship in droves after a new law opened the door.
U.S. citizens accounted for the largest share of citizenship by descent applications in January 2026 – ten times the number of applications submitted citizens of the United Kingdom, the second-highest country on the list, according to data reported by The Canadian Press.
In January 2026, nearly 2,500 Americans filed applications for Canadian citizenship. In comparison, those of the U.K. filed just 290.
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The number of applications from U.S. citizens in January 2026 outnumbered the sum of those filed by all other top nine source countries: the U.K., France, China, Hong Kong, India, Australia, the Philippines, the UAE, and Germany in the same month.
The surge in applications came on the heels of new legislation that removed the generational limit to inheriting Canadian citizenship, creating millions of US-Canadian dual citizens at the stroke of a pen.
To get Canadian passports, newly-minted U.S.-Canadian dual citizens by descent need only apply for proof of Canadian citizenship. And thousands have been doing precisely that, just in case.
Why are Americans applying now?
Scott, a serial entrepreneur with young children, had found himself increasingly concerned with “the erosion of civil liberties, due process” he’d observed under the current U.S. administration.“A lot of what I see is not the country that I grew up in,” he said.
When Canada removed the first-generation limit to inheriting citizenship, Scott realized he had claim to Canadian citizenship through his grandmother.
Within a week of learning of the news, he’d engaged an immigration lawyer to handle his application.
Scott’s not planning on moving any time soon, however. “I’d rather stay in South Carolina where it’s warm,” he said.
Today, millions of American citizens like Scott are discovering that they are eligible to claim dual citizenship with Canada, including many whose families have been born and raise in the united states for generations.
For those born prior to December 15, 2025, there no limit on how far back the Canadian connection can go.
This is especially relevant in regions such as New England, where mass migration from Quebec to the northeastern US between the years 1840 and 1930 led to a one-in-four chance of a resident being Canadian.
Meanwhile, many, like Scott, have no immediate plans of moving to Canada either. Instead, they are applying to gain that second citizenship and the Canadian passport that is accessible through it.
The law passed in December. The rush is only beginning
Bill C-3 had been on the books for less than three weeks when January began. Many Americans were still learning the law existed. Word was spreading through family group chats, genealogy forums, and casual chatbot searches.
Yet, between December 15 and the end of January, Canada received over 12,000 citizenship by descent applications, with Americans leading the charge by a wide margin.
Notably, American interest in Canadian citizenship was already significant before Bill C-3 was passed. In all of 2025, Canada received 24,500 citizenship by descent applications from U.S. citizens — nearly 30% of the global total.
Many Americans are only now discovering their Canadian ancestry. For some, the discovery is being driven by a growing sense of political alienation at home. With Bill C-3 now in effect, curiosity is turning into action.
And if January’s numbers are any indication, this may be just the tip of the iceberg.
You can check your eligibility for Canadian citizenship through CanadaVisa’s citizenship by descent calculator.
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