I became PR on April 5, 2018 and it expires on May 19, 2023.
A very detailed info indeed, When I enter Canada on 28th April I would have 1089 days of absence from Canada and 736 days of presence of Canada. So I guess I should be ok to apply for my renewal of the PR. Right ??
Though meeting the RO for the 2nd term of PR card duration might be still up in airs.
The posts by
@armoured, responding to yours, covered and explained the situation quite well. Key succinctly put:
So for example: you apply tomorrow and (miracle!) you even get the new PR card two weeks later. Then you leave and in a month or so you are out of compliance with the RO.
After that, at any point, you hypothetically can be found non-compliant at any point you re-enter. There is no "good now for two years because I got a new PR card".
In my lengthy posts above I obviously mixed up your situation,
@VJ@1981, and that reported by
@sayadil. Your scenario is the one much closer to the PR-Harlan example I described and analyzed. Nevertheless, again, what I just quoted from a post by
@armoured succinctly tells the tale.
So once again I am largely repeating what has been said.
If you leave Canada this year for any significant period of time at all, you will be in breach of the RO. The extent of that breach will initially be small, but for every day you remain outside Canada it will get bigger. This means that EVEN if you are given a new PR card, if you leave Canada this year you will soon meet the definition of INADMISSIBLE, and thus be at risk for inadmissibility proceedings which could result in the loss of your PR status ANY TIME you arrive at a Canadian PoE or apply for a PR Travel Document.
So let's be clear,
if you come here and stay only briefly, even a few months, and then leave Canada, meeting the RO in the future will NOT be up in the air. You will be in breach of the RO. You will be at risk for inadmissibility proceedings the next time you come to Canada, whether that is early in 2024 or in two years.
A new PR card will make NO difference; you will still be in breach of the RO even if your application for a new PR card is approved and a new card is delivered to you.
Since you became a PR on April 5, 2018, MORE than FIVE YEARS ago, what matters when you arrive here on April 28 is whether you have been present in Canada at least 730 days between April 28, 2018 and the day you arrive, April 28, 2023; you need 730 days in Canada during this period to not be at risk of triggering a 44(1) inadmissibility proceeding. (If you have been absent only 1089 days since landing, as of the day you arrive, you will obviously have more than 730 days presence in the last five years; but not by a whole lot.)
Same approach to the day you apply for a new PR card. You need 730 days in Canada within the previous five years as of that day to not be at risk of triggering a 44(1) inadmissibility proceeding.
If you are required to do an in-person PR card pick-up (card not mailed to your residential address in Canada), you will need to have been in Canada at least 730 days within the previous five years as of that day, the day you appear at a local office, again to avoid being at risk of triggering a 44(1) inadmissibility proceeding.
If you get a new PR card, leave, and you return to Canada later this year, say December 19, 2023 for example, again to avoid being at risk of triggering a 44(1) inadmissibility proceeding at the PoE when you arrive, you will need to have been present in Canada at least 730 days between December 19, 2018 and that day, December 19, 2023. The fact that you have a new PR card valid until 2028 does not matter (noting, however, there is a high risk your PR card application will get tangled in non-routine processing, so one of the things that is up in the air is whether you will get a new PR card by December).
So . . .
Once 2 yrs have passed from the date of issue of the new PR then re-entry can be a problem as one doesn't know what the case might be,
Actually it is not difficult to know what the case will be. Quite easy to know what the case will be. Just count the days in Canada.
If you
stay here for the next two years, you will be in compliance with the RO and not in breach for up to three years after that.
If you only stay here a few months, let alone less, you will be in breach fairly soon after you leave Canada, and then in breach by a lot two years from now. And, again, to be clear, this is true even if you are issued a new PR card this year.
I am planning to return to Canada to renew my PR card on 28th April 2023.
If keeping PR status is a priority for you, you basically need to return to Canada to stay.
If you do not come to stay now, but you are hoping to keep PR status, you will be relying on either:
-- H&C relief to keep your PR status, or
-- hoping to get waived through the PoE when you next return to Canada (and then staying here)
There is Some Advantage to Getting New PR card:
Getting a new PR card will not make any difference at all in whether you meet the RO going forward. Whether you meet the RO going forward will depend entirely on counting days. (Yeah, I really am belaboring this. But understanding this is absolutely key to understanding one's obligations.)
One advantage to getting a new PR card is that will facilitate coming back to Canada in the future without having to apply for a PR Travel Document.
Second advantage is just in terms of probabilities, the odds. There are better odds of no referral to Secondary for RO questions when a PR presents a valid PR card at the PoE. But, and it is a
big BUT, but this is subject to the risk that something triggers RO questioning. And just the pattern in your history could trigger RO questioning. PRs not actually living in Canada are a lot easier for CBSA officers to spot than many believe.
OVERALL: the only safe way to save your PR status is to COME and STAY. If you leave soon, you will be in breach, and at risk of CBSA taking action to terminate your PR status the next time you return to Canada.
Moreover, your risk for non-routine processing of a PR card application probably ranges from high to very high; at the least, and especially if you leave Canada in the meantime (after applying for the new card), there is probably a high risk a card will not be mailed but you will need to pick it up in person. While
@bricksonly is not the only one reporting no problem returning to Canada by land from the U.S. using an expired card, whether also presenting the letter for PR card pick-up or not, there is plenty of reporting to the contrary for PRs who are in breach; indeed, it appears that many times the in-person pick-up is deliberately aimed at PRs perceived to be outside Canada, and a
FLAG or
ALERT is added to their GCMS file, precisely aimed at triggering RO compliance examination at the PoE or otherwise alerting visa offices who might process a PR TD application.