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This spring, thousands of Americans are requesting copies of official documents from vital statistics offices and archives to prove their eligibility for Canadian citizenship by descent.

Last December, Canada eliminated the generational limit to inheriting Canadian citizenship, making millions of Americans with Canadian ancestry eligible to obtain Canadian passports.

Get a Free Consultation on Applying for Proof of Canadian Citizenship

To obtain one, applicants must first apply for a proof of citizenship certificate from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC). That application requires official documents proving the applicant’s continuous line of descent from a Canadian ancestor: birth certificates, marriage certificates, and, in some cases, baptismal records or death certificates for every generation in the chain.

Obtaining the initial document in the line of descent

In a citizenship by descent application, the starting point is typically the closest ancestor in your lineage whose Canadian citizenship can be proven with an official document.

In many cases, that will be a birth certificate showing that your ancestor was born in Canada.

Since Canada has no national vital statistics office, Americans will often need to request documents from different regional institutions depending on where in Canada their ancestor was born.

Where to request initial Canadian documents

Canadian vital records are held provincially, not nationally. Where you request a document depends on which province key events (birth, death, marriage) for your Canadian ancestor occurred in—and how far back the record dates.

Recent records are held by each province’s vital statistics office. Older records — typically more than 100 years old — are held by the provincial archives.

The tables below show which office holds which records for each province and territory.

Vital Statistics

All of the following offices, at a minimum, provide birth, marriage, and death certificates. Any additional documents that are available are noted in the table below.

Province / TerritoryOffice NameAdditional Documents AvailableRecords Date Range
AlbertaAlberta Registries (Vital Statistics)N/A• 1906–present

• Alberta became a province in 1905

• Registration from 1898
British ColumbiaBC Vital Statistics Agency• Registration of Live Birth for Genealogy, not available online• 1872–present

• Province-wide registration began in 1872
ManitobaManitoba Vital Statistics Branch (Winnipeg)• Genealogical copies of records

• Online searchable database available
• 1882–present

• Substantially complete by 1930
New BrunswickService New Brunswick (Vital Statistics)N/A• 1888–present

• Province-wide registration began January 1, 1888

• Delayed registrations back to 1810
Newfoundland and LabradorVital Statistics Division, Service NL (St. John’s)N/A• Modern registration period

• Newfoundland joined Canada in 1949, so pre-1949 citizenship rules differ
Northwest TerritoriesVital Statistics, Dept. of Health and Social ServicesN/A• 1925–present

• Earlier records included in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Yukon records
Nova ScotiaVital Statistics, Service Nova ScotiaN/A• Births: 1926–present

• Marriages: 1951–present

• Deaths: 1976–present
NunavutVital Statistics, Dept. of Health and Social ServicesN/A• 1999–present

• Pre-1999 records held by Northwest Territories Vital Statistics
OntarioServiceOntario (Office of the Registrar General)N/A• Births: 1920–present

• Marriages: 1945–present

• Deaths: 1955–present
Prince Edward IslandPEI Vital Statistics Office (Montague)N/AModern registration period
QuebecDirecteur de l’état civil (DEC)• Copies of acts• 1994–present

• Centralized civil registration began January 1, 1994

• Post-1900 records confidential — access restricted to named person, immediate family, or legal representative
SaskatchewaneHealth Saskatchewan (Health Registries Office, Regina)• Historical indexes searchable online• 1880–present

• Historical birth indexes from 1880–1907+ available online with partial transcriptions
YukonYukon Vital Statistics (Registrar)• No special genealogical certificates — regular certificates only• 1901–present

• Marriage licence applications from 1901–1917 indexed at Library and Archives Canada

Archives

All of the following offices, at a minimum, provide historic vital statistics records, such as birth, marriage, and death certificates. Any additional documents that are available are noted in the table below.

Province / TerritoryOffice NameDocuments AvailableRecords Date Range
AlbertaProvincial Archives of Alberta• Some delayed birth registrations, 1870–1890• Birth records 120+ years old

• Records from 1898–1905, NWT era
British ColumbiaBC Archives (Royal BC Museum Corporation)• Available at libraries and genealogical societies• Births: 1854–1903

• Baptisms: 1836–1888

• Index to registrations: 1870–1905
New BrunswickProvincial Archives of New Brunswick• Late birth registrations

• Church records
• Late birth registrations from 1810–1906, browsable images on FamilySearch

• Provincial returns of births: 1869–1905
Newfoundland and LabradorThe Rooms Provincial Archives• Church records

• Historical vital records

• British naturalization certificates, because pre-1949 Newfoundland was separate from Canada
• Church records from the 1700s in some cases

• Varies by parish and denomination
Nova ScotiaNova Scotia ArchivesN/A• Births: 1864–1877, 1908–1924

• Delayed registrations: 1830–1924

• No births recorded 1877–October 1908

• Marriages: Bonds 1763–1864; registrations 1864–1949
• Deaths: 1864–1877; Halifax 1890–1908; 1908–1974
OntarioArchives of Ontario• Certified copies of birth, marriage, and death registrations

• Can be used in place of original certificates for legal purposes

• Some pre-1869 church records and marriage bonds
• Births: 1869–1919

• Marriages: 1869–1944

• Deaths: 1869–1954

• Civil registration began July 1, 1869
Prince Edward IslandPublic Archives and Records Office (PARO)• Historical baptisms, marriages, and deaths via PARO Collection Database• Baptisms: 1777–1923

• Other records vary by parish

• FamilySearch has digitized additional records
QuebecBibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec (BAnQ)• Certified reproductions of church/parish registers, including baptisms, marriages, and burials

• Pre-1900 records available at BAnQ’s 9 regional offices
• Church registers from 1621 to pre-1900

• Some records extend to approximately the 1940s through the Drouin Collection

Important note for Quebec ancestry: IRCC does not accept Quebec birth or marriage certificates issued before January 1, 1994, for citizenship certificate applications. For events before that date, applicants need a certified reproduction from the Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec (BAnQ) or a reissued certificate from the Directeur de l’état civil (DEC).

Some applicants may use an initial document other than a birth certificate to as proof, such as a citizenship certificate, or Registration of Birth Abroad.

Documents needed for the line of descent

With the initial document in hand proving Canadian citizenship of their ancestor, applicants will require documents proving their continuous line of descent from that ancestor.

In cases where the line of descent you are claiming goes through an ancestor who changed their name under a marriage or common-law partnership, a marriage certificate will also likely be required.

What this looks like in practice

Consider a fictional example. Sarah Pelletier, born in Maine, believes her great-grandfather was born in Quebec. Her chain of descent runs four generations:

1. Henri Pelletier (great-grandfather) — born in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, 1905. This is the anchor. Sarah needs his Quebec birth certificate to prove his Canadian status.

2. Claire Pelletier (grandmother, Henri’s daughter) — born in Lewiston, Maine, 1932. Because Claire’s married name was Morin, Sarah needs both Claire’s birth certificate and marriage certificate connecting her maiden name (Pelletier) to her married name (Morin).

3. Paul Morin (father, Claire’s son) — born in Portland, Maine, 1960. Sarah needs Paul’s U.S. birth certificate showing Claire as his mother.

4. Sarah Morin (the applicant) — born in Portland, Maine, 1990. Sarah needs her own U.S. birth certificate showing Paul as her father.

In total, Sarah needs five documents:

  • One Canadian birth certificate (Henri’s);
  • Three US birth certificates (Claire’s, Paul’s, and her own); and
  • One marriage certificate (Claire’s, to link the name change).

If Henri’s wife had a different surname at birth, her marriage certificate might also be required.

If Claire had previously applied for and received a proof of citizenship certificate from IRCC, she would become the anchor ancestor: Sarah could use Claire’s proof of Canadian citizenship certificate, and would not require Henri’s birth certificate.

Get a Free Consultation on Applying for Proof of Canadian Citizenship

What information do you need when requesting documents?

Across all provinces, the core requirements are similar, with slight variations depending on the office and territory in question. Typically, you will need to provide the following:

  • Full name of the person whose record you are requesting;
  • Approximate date of the event (birth, marriage, or death); and
  • Location where the event occurred — at a minimum, the province, district, or neighbourhood.

Some offices also require proof of your relationship to the person and/or proof that the person is deceased.

Most provinces accept requests by mail. Several, including Quebec, Ontario, British Columbia, and Manitoba, also offer online applications.

Processing times and fees vary by province, and many institutions are currently experiencing significant delays due to the volume of requests from the United States.

Where possible, applicants may wish to attempt to confirm the exact details of a record through free online indexes (e.g. FamilySearch, the Nova Scotia Archives, or the Archives of Ontario) prior to placing a paid order, as as to avoid wasting time or money.

With documents in hand, applicants can submit their paper application for a proof of citizenship certificate themselves, or can hire a representative legally authorized by the Canadian government, such as an immigration lawyer.

If applying themselves, applicants should follow the citizenship department’s instructions with care, making sure to avoid common pitfalls that can result in delay, return, or refusal of their application.

You can check whether you may be eligible for Canadian citizenship using CanadaVisa’s citizenship by descent calculator.

Get a Free Consultation on Applying for Proof of Canadian Citizenship

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