Language selection

Search

Help Centre what do you need help with?

I’m Canadian, but my child was born outside Canada. Are they Canadian?

Status of changes to the first-generation limit on citizenship Updated

The Citizenship Act includes a first-generation limit to citizenship by descent. This limit generally means someone isn't automatically a Canadian citizen if

  • they were born outside Canada to a Canadian parent, and
  • their Canadian parent was also born outside Canada to a Canadian parent

In December 2023, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice declared that the first-generation limit for many individuals is unconstitutional.

However, the Court has suspended the declaration until August 9, 2024. This means that the current rules still apply until further notice.

Find out

  • how the first-generation limit affects you
  • what you can apply for (including urgent application, if applicable)

Check your next steps

Your child is likely a Canadian citizen if at least 1 parent (legal parent at birth [opens in a new tab] or biological parent)

  • was born in Canada, or
  • became a naturalized Canadian citizen before the child was born

To find out for sure, apply for a citizenship certificate for your child.

Did you find what you were looking for?

What was wrong?

You will not receive a reply. Telephone numbers and email addresses will be removed.
Maximum 300 characters

Thank you for your feedback


Help tool

  • Discover Canada Study Guide

Form and guide

Glossary term

Date modified: