We provide comprehensive legal support to Michigan residents pursuing Canadian citizenship by descent under Bill C-3 and Canadian nationality law.
Canadian Citizenship by Descent
Complete eligibility review, ancestral documentation, and IRCC-compliant filing for Michigan residents with Canadian roots.
Eligibility Verification
We assess your Michigan family history against current Canadian citizenship rules to confirm whether you qualify.
Citizenship Certificate Application
Full preparation and submission support for Michigan applicants applying for a Proof of Canadian Citizenship from IRCC.
Family Lineage Review
Our legal team traces and verifies your generational connection to a qualifying Canadian ancestor.
IRCC Documentation Assistance
We ensure all records submitted on behalf of Michigan applicants fully meet IRCC documentation standards.
Legal Case Evaluation
Detailed assessment of your citizenship by descent claim, including risk analysis and eligibility opinion before you file.
Eligibility Rules for Michigan Applicants
Whether you qualify for Canadian citizenship by descent from Michigan depends largely on your birth date and the generation through which your claim flows.
Born before December 15, 2025: You automatically qualify if you can establish an unbroken ancestral link to a Canadian-born or Canadian-naturalized ancestor, regardless of how many generations were born outside Canada. The first-generation limit does not apply to you.
Born on or after December 15, 2025: The Canadian parent through whom you are claiming must demonstrate a “substantial connection” to Canada — defined as 1,095 days of physical presence in Canada prior to your birth.
Required Documents for Michigan Applicants
Michigan residents must provide an unbroken documentary chain connecting them to their Canadian anchor ancestor. Key documents include:
- Your Records: A long-form U.S. birth certificate that names both parents.
- Parent Records: A long-form birth certificate or Canadian Citizenship Certificate for your Canadian parent.
- Generational Links: Long-form birth certificates and marriage certificates for every intermediate generation connecting you to your Canadian-born ancestor.
- Name Changes: Marriage certificates or court orders documenting any name changes across the lineage.
How to Apply from Michigan
- Prepare Your Documents: Order certified long-form vital records from your Michigan county clerk or the Michigan state vital records office.
- Submit to IRCC: Applications are filed directly with the IRCC processing centre in Canada, there is no requirement to visit a Canadian consulate in Michigan.
- Track Your Application: Once submitted, you can monitor processing timelines through the official Government of Canada Citizenship Services portal.
Common Mistakes Michigan Applicants Make
Many Michigan residents unknowingly weaken their citizenship by descent claims through avoidable errors. Watch out for these pitfalls:
- Misreading the Residency Rule: Assuming you do not qualify because your parents never lived in Canada. If you were born before December 15, 2025, the 1,095-day presence rule does not apply to you.
- Relying on Old Passports: Using an ancestor’s expired passport as sole proof, IRCC requires documented evidence of how citizenship was originally acquired.
- Submitting Short-Form Certificates: Providing summary birth records rather than official long-form certificates that name both parents.
- Using Informal Records: Church records or census documents cannot substitute for official government-issued vital records.
- Unresolved Name Differences: Failing to legally reconcile surname variations or changes across generations in your ancestry chain.
- Broken Lineage: Missing historical citizenship events, such as past renunciations, that could sever your legal chain of descent.