Canada’s citizenship department built a section on its citizenship by descent application forms to accommodate applicants who want to apply under the new citizenship rules, but don’t have all the answers.
If, for example, you don’t know whether a grandparent was Canadian, you’re told to write “unknown.” If you’re not sure a parent was a citizen, there’s a place to say so and explain.
Canadian citizenship by descent doesn’t necessarily require a complete folder of official papers stretching back generations—as long as you can satisfy the government that the relevant citizenship and status facts are provable, and you document your attempts to find supporting documents.
Think you may be Canadian? Request a free consultation to find out which documents you actually need
Since Canada’s new citizenship law removed the first-generation limit on December 15, 2025, far more people born outside Canada can claim citizenship through a Canadian ancestor; however, many are finding the gathering and submission of accepted documentation to be their greatest hurdle.
What a proof of citizenship application usually asks for
IRCC wants you to submit documents along three themes:
- Proof of who you are;
- Proof of how you descend from your Canadian ancestor; and
- Proof that the ancestor was, in fact, Canadian.
There’s no rule that anyone in your family line must already hold a citizenship certificate or a Registration of Birth Abroad (the document that historically recorded a Canadian child born in another country).
A missing certificate somewhere up the family line isn’t a closed door, despite it being an evidence problem. IRCC accepts different types of evidence to fill the gap.
If a citizenship certificate was never issued, other records can stand in
IRCC’s own checklist lists alternatives for proving your ancestor is Canadian, such as:
- Provincial or territorial birth certificates;
- Citizenship or naturalization certificates;
- A Registration of Birth Abroad; or
- A Retention certificate.
There’s even a slot for a British naturalization certificate issued in Canada or in Newfoundland and Labrador, a reflection of how citizenship worked before 1947.
The Canadian link may also be supported by proxy: for example, a parent’s birth certificate naming a Canadian grandparent can help provide further proof that the grandparent was Canadian.
The checklist also leaves room for “any other evidence” in older or unusual situations. The point is that the chain can be rebuilt from different materials — it doesn’t depend on one specific document surviving.
It is important when submitting alternate documentation to meet IRCC’s requirements to the best of your ability. Failure to do so can result in suspension or revocation of your citizenship certificate, even after it has been granted.
Where to look when records seem to be missing
Most Canadian birth, marriage, and death records aren’t held federally.
They sit with the province or territory where the event happened: Quebec’s Directeur de l’état civil, Ontario’s registrar, British Columbia’s vital statistics office, and their counterparts.
Library and Archives Canada holds some older naturalization records and a small set of historic vital records, and it’s a useful place to search for an ancestor who may have naturalized long ago.
Older records can be thin, misfiled, or lost. Archivists suggest searching name variants and a range of years, because spelling shifted, borders moved, and some people were never recorded at all.
Want to find out more about where Americans are finding the documents they need for proof of citizenship applications? Visit our dedicated article on the topic.
Think you may be Canadian? Request a free consultation to find out which documents you actually need
A “no record” letter can help your application
When a search comes up empty, many offices will issue a letter confirming they looked and found nothing within the years and place you specified.
Ontario offers a birth search letter; British Columbia’s law provides for a written search report, and IRCC can search its citizenship records and tell you whether a record exists.
It is worth understanding what these letters do and do not prove.
A search letter documents the result of one search in one record set — helpful for showing you did the work and that a document genuinely isn’t there. It is not itself proof of citizenship. If you request an IRCC records search at the same time as your certificate application, the search fee is waived.
When you don’t know, say so
IRCC would rather have an honest “unknown” than an invented answer.
The form tells you to enter “unknown” for details you don’t have and “NA” for ones that don’t apply, and it gives you space to explain anything that’s changed, been replaced, or is uncertain.
Use a separate sheet if you run out of room, and note the question you’re answering. A clear explanation of a gap is part of a complete application, not a weakness in it.
One important note: For children born outside Canada on or after December 15, 2025, whose Canadian parent was also born abroad, IRCC may require proof that the parent spent at least 1,095 days of cumulative physical presence in Canada before the birth.
Read our dedicated article for more on this, including how you can legally bypass this requirement.
The gap isn’t the end of the story
Incomplete family records are not uncommon among those who apply for citizenship under the new laws.
The citizenship by descent pathway was designed to accommodate these variations in supporting evidence. A second citizenship is often closer than the missing documents make it look.
A lawyer who handles these applications can tell you which records you need, which gaps are easy to bridge, and which scenarios call for extra care.
Get a Free Consultation on Applying for Proof of Canadian Citizenship