Canada is set to overhaul its citizenship laws with Bill C-3, allowing citizens born abroad to pass Canadian citizenship to their children born or adopted overseas beyond the first generation. This change aims to correct longstanding inequities faced by families living abroad, particularly benefiting thousands of Indian-origin Canadians.
Bill C-3, which has recently received royal assent, amends the Citizenship Act to remove the restrictive “second-generation cut-off” rule that previously barred children born abroad to Canadian parents also born outside Canada from acquiring citizenship by descent. The bill introduces a “substantial connection” test, requiring that the parent must have lived physically in Canada for at least 1,095 cumulative days before the child’s birth or adoption.
Key highlights:
Ends the "second-generation cut-off," extending citizenship eligibility beyond the first generation born abroad.
Allows naturalized Canadians to pass citizenship to foreign-born or adopted children.
Introduces a substantial connection test to prove strong ties to Canada.
Responds to the 2023 Ontario Superior Court ruling striking down the previous limit as unconstitutional.
Provides retroactive citizenship rights to those previously excluded under old laws.
Expected to benefit thousands of Indian-origin families living globally.
Awaiting government’s cabinet order to set the official implementation date, likely by January 2026.
Strengthens and modernizes Canadian citizenship to reflect contemporary family dynamics.
This legislative reform marks a significant step toward fairness and inclusion in Canadian citizenship policy.
Sources: India Today, NDTV, Hindustan Times, Times of India, Government of Canada