Dual citizenship flying back to the country of origin with the intention to stay longer than 90 days
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I am going to fly back to my country of origin, Romania, as a Canadian citizen. My Romanian passport has expired and I am planning to renew it when arriving in Romania. If planning to stay longer than 90 days in Romania, do I need to do declare something to the Canadian authorities?
canada paperwork dual-nationality romanian-citizens
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up vote
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I am going to fly back to my country of origin, Romania, as a Canadian citizen. My Romanian passport has expired and I am planning to renew it when arriving in Romania. If planning to stay longer than 90 days in Romania, do I need to do declare something to the Canadian authorities?
canada paperwork dual-nationality romanian-citizens
5
Man, I hope not. I'm a Canadian citizen who has lived outside of the country for about ~7000 days now without informing the Canadian authorities, and it honestly never occurred to me to do so.
– Michael Seifert
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
Most countries which allow 'dual citizenship' insist that you enter on that countries passport afaik. They couldn't refuse entry to a citizen even with an expired passport (although there might be some administrative hassle). The 'other' country's authorities have no say in the matter.
– brhans
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
@brhans They can fine you if not having a valid passport if the Country requires it; however as pointed out in my answer, Romania accepts expired passports
– Crazydre
Jun 22 '17 at 16:01
1
What do you imagine might happen if you're outside Canada for over 90 days (or any specific period) without informing Canadian authorities?
– phoog
Jun 22 '17 at 17:01
If what you are planning is a "permanent" move out of Canada you may need to report when you became non-resident on next April's tax return so they don't expect you to continue filing them and to account for any exit and non-resident tax liabilities. If you're not doing that but are away for a long time (much longer than 90 days) you could lose eligibility for provincial health insurance and need to deal with that when you get back. Beyond this Canada won't care where you are and there's nothing to tell them.
– Dennis
Jun 22 '17 at 18:04
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
I am going to fly back to my country of origin, Romania, as a Canadian citizen. My Romanian passport has expired and I am planning to renew it when arriving in Romania. If planning to stay longer than 90 days in Romania, do I need to do declare something to the Canadian authorities?
canada paperwork dual-nationality romanian-citizens
I am going to fly back to my country of origin, Romania, as a Canadian citizen. My Romanian passport has expired and I am planning to renew it when arriving in Romania. If planning to stay longer than 90 days in Romania, do I need to do declare something to the Canadian authorities?
canada paperwork dual-nationality romanian-citizens
canada paperwork dual-nationality romanian-citizens
edited Jun 22 '17 at 16:03
Crazydre
50.7k990224
50.7k990224
asked Jun 22 '17 at 15:50
deni
211
211
5
Man, I hope not. I'm a Canadian citizen who has lived outside of the country for about ~7000 days now without informing the Canadian authorities, and it honestly never occurred to me to do so.
– Michael Seifert
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
Most countries which allow 'dual citizenship' insist that you enter on that countries passport afaik. They couldn't refuse entry to a citizen even with an expired passport (although there might be some administrative hassle). The 'other' country's authorities have no say in the matter.
– brhans
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
@brhans They can fine you if not having a valid passport if the Country requires it; however as pointed out in my answer, Romania accepts expired passports
– Crazydre
Jun 22 '17 at 16:01
1
What do you imagine might happen if you're outside Canada for over 90 days (or any specific period) without informing Canadian authorities?
– phoog
Jun 22 '17 at 17:01
If what you are planning is a "permanent" move out of Canada you may need to report when you became non-resident on next April's tax return so they don't expect you to continue filing them and to account for any exit and non-resident tax liabilities. If you're not doing that but are away for a long time (much longer than 90 days) you could lose eligibility for provincial health insurance and need to deal with that when you get back. Beyond this Canada won't care where you are and there's nothing to tell them.
– Dennis
Jun 22 '17 at 18:04
add a comment |
5
Man, I hope not. I'm a Canadian citizen who has lived outside of the country for about ~7000 days now without informing the Canadian authorities, and it honestly never occurred to me to do so.
– Michael Seifert
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
Most countries which allow 'dual citizenship' insist that you enter on that countries passport afaik. They couldn't refuse entry to a citizen even with an expired passport (although there might be some administrative hassle). The 'other' country's authorities have no say in the matter.
– brhans
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
@brhans They can fine you if not having a valid passport if the Country requires it; however as pointed out in my answer, Romania accepts expired passports
– Crazydre
Jun 22 '17 at 16:01
1
What do you imagine might happen if you're outside Canada for over 90 days (or any specific period) without informing Canadian authorities?
– phoog
Jun 22 '17 at 17:01
If what you are planning is a "permanent" move out of Canada you may need to report when you became non-resident on next April's tax return so they don't expect you to continue filing them and to account for any exit and non-resident tax liabilities. If you're not doing that but are away for a long time (much longer than 90 days) you could lose eligibility for provincial health insurance and need to deal with that when you get back. Beyond this Canada won't care where you are and there's nothing to tell them.
– Dennis
Jun 22 '17 at 18:04
5
5
Man, I hope not. I'm a Canadian citizen who has lived outside of the country for about ~7000 days now without informing the Canadian authorities, and it honestly never occurred to me to do so.
– Michael Seifert
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
Man, I hope not. I'm a Canadian citizen who has lived outside of the country for about ~7000 days now without informing the Canadian authorities, and it honestly never occurred to me to do so.
– Michael Seifert
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
Most countries which allow 'dual citizenship' insist that you enter on that countries passport afaik. They couldn't refuse entry to a citizen even with an expired passport (although there might be some administrative hassle). The 'other' country's authorities have no say in the matter.
– brhans
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
Most countries which allow 'dual citizenship' insist that you enter on that countries passport afaik. They couldn't refuse entry to a citizen even with an expired passport (although there might be some administrative hassle). The 'other' country's authorities have no say in the matter.
– brhans
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
@brhans They can fine you if not having a valid passport if the Country requires it; however as pointed out in my answer, Romania accepts expired passports
– Crazydre
Jun 22 '17 at 16:01
@brhans They can fine you if not having a valid passport if the Country requires it; however as pointed out in my answer, Romania accepts expired passports
– Crazydre
Jun 22 '17 at 16:01
1
1
What do you imagine might happen if you're outside Canada for over 90 days (or any specific period) without informing Canadian authorities?
– phoog
Jun 22 '17 at 17:01
What do you imagine might happen if you're outside Canada for over 90 days (or any specific period) without informing Canadian authorities?
– phoog
Jun 22 '17 at 17:01
If what you are planning is a "permanent" move out of Canada you may need to report when you became non-resident on next April's tax return so they don't expect you to continue filing them and to account for any exit and non-resident tax liabilities. If you're not doing that but are away for a long time (much longer than 90 days) you could lose eligibility for provincial health insurance and need to deal with that when you get back. Beyond this Canada won't care where you are and there's nothing to tell them.
– Dennis
Jun 22 '17 at 18:04
If what you are planning is a "permanent" move out of Canada you may need to report when you became non-resident on next April's tax return so they don't expect you to continue filing them and to account for any exit and non-resident tax liabilities. If you're not doing that but are away for a long time (much longer than 90 days) you could lose eligibility for provincial health insurance and need to deal with that when you get back. Beyond this Canada won't care where you are and there's nothing to tell them.
– Dennis
Jun 22 '17 at 18:04
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
11
down vote
There's no need to complicate things by entering Romania as a Canadian, being that expired Romanian passports (or anything proving nationality, including but not limited to ID cards) are accepted for entry
And no, there's nothing to be declared to the Canadians
1
While there is no requirement to register with the Canadian embassy, you may want to do so if you think there is any chance you might require their assistance.
– DJClayworth
Jun 22 '17 at 17:49
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
11
down vote
There's no need to complicate things by entering Romania as a Canadian, being that expired Romanian passports (or anything proving nationality, including but not limited to ID cards) are accepted for entry
And no, there's nothing to be declared to the Canadians
1
While there is no requirement to register with the Canadian embassy, you may want to do so if you think there is any chance you might require their assistance.
– DJClayworth
Jun 22 '17 at 17:49
add a comment |
up vote
11
down vote
There's no need to complicate things by entering Romania as a Canadian, being that expired Romanian passports (or anything proving nationality, including but not limited to ID cards) are accepted for entry
And no, there's nothing to be declared to the Canadians
1
While there is no requirement to register with the Canadian embassy, you may want to do so if you think there is any chance you might require their assistance.
– DJClayworth
Jun 22 '17 at 17:49
add a comment |
up vote
11
down vote
up vote
11
down vote
There's no need to complicate things by entering Romania as a Canadian, being that expired Romanian passports (or anything proving nationality, including but not limited to ID cards) are accepted for entry
And no, there's nothing to be declared to the Canadians
There's no need to complicate things by entering Romania as a Canadian, being that expired Romanian passports (or anything proving nationality, including but not limited to ID cards) are accepted for entry
And no, there's nothing to be declared to the Canadians
answered Jun 22 '17 at 16:00
Crazydre
50.7k990224
50.7k990224
1
While there is no requirement to register with the Canadian embassy, you may want to do so if you think there is any chance you might require their assistance.
– DJClayworth
Jun 22 '17 at 17:49
add a comment |
1
While there is no requirement to register with the Canadian embassy, you may want to do so if you think there is any chance you might require their assistance.
– DJClayworth
Jun 22 '17 at 17:49
1
1
While there is no requirement to register with the Canadian embassy, you may want to do so if you think there is any chance you might require their assistance.
– DJClayworth
Jun 22 '17 at 17:49
While there is no requirement to register with the Canadian embassy, you may want to do so if you think there is any chance you might require their assistance.
– DJClayworth
Jun 22 '17 at 17:49
add a comment |
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5
Man, I hope not. I'm a Canadian citizen who has lived outside of the country for about ~7000 days now without informing the Canadian authorities, and it honestly never occurred to me to do so.
– Michael Seifert
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
Most countries which allow 'dual citizenship' insist that you enter on that countries passport afaik. They couldn't refuse entry to a citizen even with an expired passport (although there might be some administrative hassle). The 'other' country's authorities have no say in the matter.
– brhans
Jun 22 '17 at 15:59
@brhans They can fine you if not having a valid passport if the Country requires it; however as pointed out in my answer, Romania accepts expired passports
– Crazydre
Jun 22 '17 at 16:01
1
What do you imagine might happen if you're outside Canada for over 90 days (or any specific period) without informing Canadian authorities?
– phoog
Jun 22 '17 at 17:01
If what you are planning is a "permanent" move out of Canada you may need to report when you became non-resident on next April's tax return so they don't expect you to continue filing them and to account for any exit and non-resident tax liabilities. If you're not doing that but are away for a long time (much longer than 90 days) you could lose eligibility for provincial health insurance and need to deal with that when you get back. Beyond this Canada won't care where you are and there's nothing to tell them.
– Dennis
Jun 22 '17 at 18:04