Child entering Canada with both parents
Planning a trip to Canada next month, I am checking the required documents for us to enter the country. We are from Europe, have valid passports and have an eTA each. There is only one unknown : what documents does my child require in order to be able to enter and leave the country.
My child is 18 months old and does not talk enough to have any kind of conversation. I and my partner are his legal and biological parents, and we are married.
The relevant page of the Canadian Immigration lists a few options (child traveling alone, with another tutor, with only one parent, is adopted...) but not the basic case "Child with both parents".
Govenment of Canada page on Minors
My main concern is : how will the immigration officer know we are his parents? Neither our or his passport shows it. We moved recently so all the passports are not issued from the same administration (though the same country). Women do not change surname in our home country, so the mother does not have the same family name as the child.
For what it's worth, the child could be traveling with an uncle (same family name) and a total stranger.
Thanks in advance for any info!
legal canada international-travel minors
add a comment |
Planning a trip to Canada next month, I am checking the required documents for us to enter the country. We are from Europe, have valid passports and have an eTA each. There is only one unknown : what documents does my child require in order to be able to enter and leave the country.
My child is 18 months old and does not talk enough to have any kind of conversation. I and my partner are his legal and biological parents, and we are married.
The relevant page of the Canadian Immigration lists a few options (child traveling alone, with another tutor, with only one parent, is adopted...) but not the basic case "Child with both parents".
Govenment of Canada page on Minors
My main concern is : how will the immigration officer know we are his parents? Neither our or his passport shows it. We moved recently so all the passports are not issued from the same administration (though the same country). Women do not change surname in our home country, so the mother does not have the same family name as the child.
For what it's worth, the child could be traveling with an uncle (same family name) and a total stranger.
Thanks in advance for any info!
legal canada international-travel minors
3
Does the child have a birth certificate showing who his parents are? Bring a photocopy of that.
– Henning Makholm
Apr 10 '17 at 14:38
Canadian immigration officers will be aware of the fact that French women do not change surnames - that's common in Québec as well. I doubt you need anything, but bringing the original birth certificate (in Canada we get little summary cards that serve nicely and fit in a wallet), or a notarized copy of it, will be cheap insurance in case you have a problem.
– Jim MacKenzie
Feb 20 at 15:10
@JimMacKenzie indeed, as far as I know, women not changing their surnames when marrying is common throughout Canada.
– phoog
Feb 20 at 18:13
add a comment |
Planning a trip to Canada next month, I am checking the required documents for us to enter the country. We are from Europe, have valid passports and have an eTA each. There is only one unknown : what documents does my child require in order to be able to enter and leave the country.
My child is 18 months old and does not talk enough to have any kind of conversation. I and my partner are his legal and biological parents, and we are married.
The relevant page of the Canadian Immigration lists a few options (child traveling alone, with another tutor, with only one parent, is adopted...) but not the basic case "Child with both parents".
Govenment of Canada page on Minors
My main concern is : how will the immigration officer know we are his parents? Neither our or his passport shows it. We moved recently so all the passports are not issued from the same administration (though the same country). Women do not change surname in our home country, so the mother does not have the same family name as the child.
For what it's worth, the child could be traveling with an uncle (same family name) and a total stranger.
Thanks in advance for any info!
legal canada international-travel minors
Planning a trip to Canada next month, I am checking the required documents for us to enter the country. We are from Europe, have valid passports and have an eTA each. There is only one unknown : what documents does my child require in order to be able to enter and leave the country.
My child is 18 months old and does not talk enough to have any kind of conversation. I and my partner are his legal and biological parents, and we are married.
The relevant page of the Canadian Immigration lists a few options (child traveling alone, with another tutor, with only one parent, is adopted...) but not the basic case "Child with both parents".
Govenment of Canada page on Minors
My main concern is : how will the immigration officer know we are his parents? Neither our or his passport shows it. We moved recently so all the passports are not issued from the same administration (though the same country). Women do not change surname in our home country, so the mother does not have the same family name as the child.
For what it's worth, the child could be traveling with an uncle (same family name) and a total stranger.
Thanks in advance for any info!
legal canada international-travel minors
legal canada international-travel minors
asked Apr 10 '17 at 14:29
Jerome.DS
284
284
3
Does the child have a birth certificate showing who his parents are? Bring a photocopy of that.
– Henning Makholm
Apr 10 '17 at 14:38
Canadian immigration officers will be aware of the fact that French women do not change surnames - that's common in Québec as well. I doubt you need anything, but bringing the original birth certificate (in Canada we get little summary cards that serve nicely and fit in a wallet), or a notarized copy of it, will be cheap insurance in case you have a problem.
– Jim MacKenzie
Feb 20 at 15:10
@JimMacKenzie indeed, as far as I know, women not changing their surnames when marrying is common throughout Canada.
– phoog
Feb 20 at 18:13
add a comment |
3
Does the child have a birth certificate showing who his parents are? Bring a photocopy of that.
– Henning Makholm
Apr 10 '17 at 14:38
Canadian immigration officers will be aware of the fact that French women do not change surnames - that's common in Québec as well. I doubt you need anything, but bringing the original birth certificate (in Canada we get little summary cards that serve nicely and fit in a wallet), or a notarized copy of it, will be cheap insurance in case you have a problem.
– Jim MacKenzie
Feb 20 at 15:10
@JimMacKenzie indeed, as far as I know, women not changing their surnames when marrying is common throughout Canada.
– phoog
Feb 20 at 18:13
3
3
Does the child have a birth certificate showing who his parents are? Bring a photocopy of that.
– Henning Makholm
Apr 10 '17 at 14:38
Does the child have a birth certificate showing who his parents are? Bring a photocopy of that.
– Henning Makholm
Apr 10 '17 at 14:38
Canadian immigration officers will be aware of the fact that French women do not change surnames - that's common in Québec as well. I doubt you need anything, but bringing the original birth certificate (in Canada we get little summary cards that serve nicely and fit in a wallet), or a notarized copy of it, will be cheap insurance in case you have a problem.
– Jim MacKenzie
Feb 20 at 15:10
Canadian immigration officers will be aware of the fact that French women do not change surnames - that's common in Québec as well. I doubt you need anything, but bringing the original birth certificate (in Canada we get little summary cards that serve nicely and fit in a wallet), or a notarized copy of it, will be cheap insurance in case you have a problem.
– Jim MacKenzie
Feb 20 at 15:10
@JimMacKenzie indeed, as far as I know, women not changing their surnames when marrying is common throughout Canada.
– phoog
Feb 20 at 18:13
@JimMacKenzie indeed, as far as I know, women not changing their surnames when marrying is common throughout Canada.
– phoog
Feb 20 at 18:13
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
For what it's worth, I have never been questioned critically when traveling alone or as a couple with an infant or toddler. Probably possession of the child + the child's ID and travel documents (passport/eTA and birth certificate) is more than adequate.
By the way, make sure you have a ticket for the infant- it is required for international flights even when the babe-in-arms does not occupy his or her own seat. There may be some cost involved for that.
add a comment |
If the child is travelling with both parents, a birth certificate should suffice.
If the child is travelling with one parent only or with a stranger, then a legally notorized permission on paper by the other or both parents should be sent along.
a birth certificate should suffice: any source for this idea? A birth certificate in French would in that case probably be valid for an arrival in the Quebec province.
– Jerome.DS
Apr 10 '17 at 14:56
1
@Jerome.DS Canadian immigration officers in the whole country speak at least enough French to handle immigration tasks. Furthermore, they can probably decipher a birth certificate in almost any language, though if it isn't in French or English a certified translation will certainly help. Finally, your child's passport, with photo, plus birth certificate, certifying your parenthood, is pretty much your only option. How could it be insufficient? What else would anyone need?
– phoog
Apr 10 '17 at 15:11
CBSA is Federal so it's mandated to be French/English bilingual, though they're more likely to be struggling with Hakka or Mandarin these days.
– Spehro Pefhany
Apr 10 '17 at 17:40
Does the passport include either of the parents' name?
– greatone
Apr 10 '17 at 18:33
add a comment |
Thank you all for you answers!
Feedback after the travel : presenting the infant passport (with no indication of residence or adres) as well as the passports of two adults (one male one female, only one of which shares the same last name as the child) was enough to grant us access to the country.
Although I do trust the professionalism of border agents, I still wonder how these documents proved we were both parents traveling with our child. It could have been my brother (sharing my last name) and an unrelated woman, and the documents would have been very similar (and the attitude of a baby after a 7h flight during which he did not sleep is difficult to gauge, at best).
Never the less, we had a great stay!
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
For what it's worth, I have never been questioned critically when traveling alone or as a couple with an infant or toddler. Probably possession of the child + the child's ID and travel documents (passport/eTA and birth certificate) is more than adequate.
By the way, make sure you have a ticket for the infant- it is required for international flights even when the babe-in-arms does not occupy his or her own seat. There may be some cost involved for that.
add a comment |
For what it's worth, I have never been questioned critically when traveling alone or as a couple with an infant or toddler. Probably possession of the child + the child's ID and travel documents (passport/eTA and birth certificate) is more than adequate.
By the way, make sure you have a ticket for the infant- it is required for international flights even when the babe-in-arms does not occupy his or her own seat. There may be some cost involved for that.
add a comment |
For what it's worth, I have never been questioned critically when traveling alone or as a couple with an infant or toddler. Probably possession of the child + the child's ID and travel documents (passport/eTA and birth certificate) is more than adequate.
By the way, make sure you have a ticket for the infant- it is required for international flights even when the babe-in-arms does not occupy his or her own seat. There may be some cost involved for that.
For what it's worth, I have never been questioned critically when traveling alone or as a couple with an infant or toddler. Probably possession of the child + the child's ID and travel documents (passport/eTA and birth certificate) is more than adequate.
By the way, make sure you have a ticket for the infant- it is required for international flights even when the babe-in-arms does not occupy his or her own seat. There may be some cost involved for that.
edited Apr 10 '17 at 17:45
answered Apr 10 '17 at 17:32
Spehro Pefhany
11.1k2045
11.1k2045
add a comment |
add a comment |
If the child is travelling with both parents, a birth certificate should suffice.
If the child is travelling with one parent only or with a stranger, then a legally notorized permission on paper by the other or both parents should be sent along.
a birth certificate should suffice: any source for this idea? A birth certificate in French would in that case probably be valid for an arrival in the Quebec province.
– Jerome.DS
Apr 10 '17 at 14:56
1
@Jerome.DS Canadian immigration officers in the whole country speak at least enough French to handle immigration tasks. Furthermore, they can probably decipher a birth certificate in almost any language, though if it isn't in French or English a certified translation will certainly help. Finally, your child's passport, with photo, plus birth certificate, certifying your parenthood, is pretty much your only option. How could it be insufficient? What else would anyone need?
– phoog
Apr 10 '17 at 15:11
CBSA is Federal so it's mandated to be French/English bilingual, though they're more likely to be struggling with Hakka or Mandarin these days.
– Spehro Pefhany
Apr 10 '17 at 17:40
Does the passport include either of the parents' name?
– greatone
Apr 10 '17 at 18:33
add a comment |
If the child is travelling with both parents, a birth certificate should suffice.
If the child is travelling with one parent only or with a stranger, then a legally notorized permission on paper by the other or both parents should be sent along.
a birth certificate should suffice: any source for this idea? A birth certificate in French would in that case probably be valid for an arrival in the Quebec province.
– Jerome.DS
Apr 10 '17 at 14:56
1
@Jerome.DS Canadian immigration officers in the whole country speak at least enough French to handle immigration tasks. Furthermore, they can probably decipher a birth certificate in almost any language, though if it isn't in French or English a certified translation will certainly help. Finally, your child's passport, with photo, plus birth certificate, certifying your parenthood, is pretty much your only option. How could it be insufficient? What else would anyone need?
– phoog
Apr 10 '17 at 15:11
CBSA is Federal so it's mandated to be French/English bilingual, though they're more likely to be struggling with Hakka or Mandarin these days.
– Spehro Pefhany
Apr 10 '17 at 17:40
Does the passport include either of the parents' name?
– greatone
Apr 10 '17 at 18:33
add a comment |
If the child is travelling with both parents, a birth certificate should suffice.
If the child is travelling with one parent only or with a stranger, then a legally notorized permission on paper by the other or both parents should be sent along.
If the child is travelling with both parents, a birth certificate should suffice.
If the child is travelling with one parent only or with a stranger, then a legally notorized permission on paper by the other or both parents should be sent along.
answered Apr 10 '17 at 14:46
Saadia
34827
34827
a birth certificate should suffice: any source for this idea? A birth certificate in French would in that case probably be valid for an arrival in the Quebec province.
– Jerome.DS
Apr 10 '17 at 14:56
1
@Jerome.DS Canadian immigration officers in the whole country speak at least enough French to handle immigration tasks. Furthermore, they can probably decipher a birth certificate in almost any language, though if it isn't in French or English a certified translation will certainly help. Finally, your child's passport, with photo, plus birth certificate, certifying your parenthood, is pretty much your only option. How could it be insufficient? What else would anyone need?
– phoog
Apr 10 '17 at 15:11
CBSA is Federal so it's mandated to be French/English bilingual, though they're more likely to be struggling with Hakka or Mandarin these days.
– Spehro Pefhany
Apr 10 '17 at 17:40
Does the passport include either of the parents' name?
– greatone
Apr 10 '17 at 18:33
add a comment |
a birth certificate should suffice: any source for this idea? A birth certificate in French would in that case probably be valid for an arrival in the Quebec province.
– Jerome.DS
Apr 10 '17 at 14:56
1
@Jerome.DS Canadian immigration officers in the whole country speak at least enough French to handle immigration tasks. Furthermore, they can probably decipher a birth certificate in almost any language, though if it isn't in French or English a certified translation will certainly help. Finally, your child's passport, with photo, plus birth certificate, certifying your parenthood, is pretty much your only option. How could it be insufficient? What else would anyone need?
– phoog
Apr 10 '17 at 15:11
CBSA is Federal so it's mandated to be French/English bilingual, though they're more likely to be struggling with Hakka or Mandarin these days.
– Spehro Pefhany
Apr 10 '17 at 17:40
Does the passport include either of the parents' name?
– greatone
Apr 10 '17 at 18:33
a birth certificate should suffice: any source for this idea? A birth certificate in French would in that case probably be valid for an arrival in the Quebec province.
– Jerome.DS
Apr 10 '17 at 14:56
a birth certificate should suffice: any source for this idea? A birth certificate in French would in that case probably be valid for an arrival in the Quebec province.
– Jerome.DS
Apr 10 '17 at 14:56
1
1
@Jerome.DS Canadian immigration officers in the whole country speak at least enough French to handle immigration tasks. Furthermore, they can probably decipher a birth certificate in almost any language, though if it isn't in French or English a certified translation will certainly help. Finally, your child's passport, with photo, plus birth certificate, certifying your parenthood, is pretty much your only option. How could it be insufficient? What else would anyone need?
– phoog
Apr 10 '17 at 15:11
@Jerome.DS Canadian immigration officers in the whole country speak at least enough French to handle immigration tasks. Furthermore, they can probably decipher a birth certificate in almost any language, though if it isn't in French or English a certified translation will certainly help. Finally, your child's passport, with photo, plus birth certificate, certifying your parenthood, is pretty much your only option. How could it be insufficient? What else would anyone need?
– phoog
Apr 10 '17 at 15:11
CBSA is Federal so it's mandated to be French/English bilingual, though they're more likely to be struggling with Hakka or Mandarin these days.
– Spehro Pefhany
Apr 10 '17 at 17:40
CBSA is Federal so it's mandated to be French/English bilingual, though they're more likely to be struggling with Hakka or Mandarin these days.
– Spehro Pefhany
Apr 10 '17 at 17:40
Does the passport include either of the parents' name?
– greatone
Apr 10 '17 at 18:33
Does the passport include either of the parents' name?
– greatone
Apr 10 '17 at 18:33
add a comment |
Thank you all for you answers!
Feedback after the travel : presenting the infant passport (with no indication of residence or adres) as well as the passports of two adults (one male one female, only one of which shares the same last name as the child) was enough to grant us access to the country.
Although I do trust the professionalism of border agents, I still wonder how these documents proved we were both parents traveling with our child. It could have been my brother (sharing my last name) and an unrelated woman, and the documents would have been very similar (and the attitude of a baby after a 7h flight during which he did not sleep is difficult to gauge, at best).
Never the less, we had a great stay!
add a comment |
Thank you all for you answers!
Feedback after the travel : presenting the infant passport (with no indication of residence or adres) as well as the passports of two adults (one male one female, only one of which shares the same last name as the child) was enough to grant us access to the country.
Although I do trust the professionalism of border agents, I still wonder how these documents proved we were both parents traveling with our child. It could have been my brother (sharing my last name) and an unrelated woman, and the documents would have been very similar (and the attitude of a baby after a 7h flight during which he did not sleep is difficult to gauge, at best).
Never the less, we had a great stay!
add a comment |
Thank you all for you answers!
Feedback after the travel : presenting the infant passport (with no indication of residence or adres) as well as the passports of two adults (one male one female, only one of which shares the same last name as the child) was enough to grant us access to the country.
Although I do trust the professionalism of border agents, I still wonder how these documents proved we were both parents traveling with our child. It could have been my brother (sharing my last name) and an unrelated woman, and the documents would have been very similar (and the attitude of a baby after a 7h flight during which he did not sleep is difficult to gauge, at best).
Never the less, we had a great stay!
Thank you all for you answers!
Feedback after the travel : presenting the infant passport (with no indication of residence or adres) as well as the passports of two adults (one male one female, only one of which shares the same last name as the child) was enough to grant us access to the country.
Although I do trust the professionalism of border agents, I still wonder how these documents proved we were both parents traveling with our child. It could have been my brother (sharing my last name) and an unrelated woman, and the documents would have been very similar (and the attitude of a baby after a 7h flight during which he did not sleep is difficult to gauge, at best).
Never the less, we had a great stay!
answered Feb 20 at 14:30
Jerome.DS
284
284
add a comment |
add a comment |
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3
Does the child have a birth certificate showing who his parents are? Bring a photocopy of that.
– Henning Makholm
Apr 10 '17 at 14:38
Canadian immigration officers will be aware of the fact that French women do not change surnames - that's common in Québec as well. I doubt you need anything, but bringing the original birth certificate (in Canada we get little summary cards that serve nicely and fit in a wallet), or a notarized copy of it, will be cheap insurance in case you have a problem.
– Jim MacKenzie
Feb 20 at 15:10
@JimMacKenzie indeed, as far as I know, women not changing their surnames when marrying is common throughout Canada.
– phoog
Feb 20 at 18:13