
Am I Canadian If My Grandparent Was Canadian? Bill C-3 Guide (2026)
If you have a Canadian grandparent, a 2025 change to Canada’s citizenship law may matter to you. Bill C-3 removed the old first-generation limit on citizenship by descent in many situations, which can affect people who are the grandchild of a Canadian. This guide helps you work through the key questions – birth dates, the family chain, and the 1,095-day rule – so you can see whether you may already be Canadian, and how to prove it.
It is based on IRCC’s own published guidance, checked on July 16, 2026. Citizenship rules are detailed and case-specific, ancestry alone does not settle the result, and IRCC makes all final decisions.

Table of Contents
- Quick Answer
- Am I affected? Decision tree
- Rules for births before December 15, 2025
- Rules for births on or after December 15, 2025
- The 1,095-day substantial connection test
- Worked examples
- The documentary chain you may need
- Already a citizen vs applying for proof
- Adoption and complex historic cases
- How to apply for proof
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Official Sources Reviewed
Quick Answer
A Canadian grandparent may create a possible citizenship chain, but ancestry alone does not settle the result – IRCC must verify each generation, the relevant dates, parentage or adoption, citizenship status, and documentary evidence. Bill C-3, in effect December 15, 2025, removed the first-generation limit on citizenship by descent in many situations. In most cases, if you were born outside Canada to a Canadian parent before December 15, 2025, you are now automatically a citizen even in the second generation or later. If you were born abroad beyond the first generation on or after that date, you can be Canadian only if your Canadian parent (who was themselves born or adopted abroad) spent at least 1,095 days in Canada before your birth. Being a citizen is not the same as having proof, so if this may apply to you, apply for a citizenship certificate.
Think a Canadian parent or grandparent might make you a citizen? Book a consultation with MAK Canadian Immigration Services. Your immigration advice will be provided by a licensed RCIC regulated by the CICC. You can also start with our free immigration scanner. IRCC makes all final decisions.
Am I affected? Decision tree
Work through these questions. They point to whether Bill C-3 may apply – they are not a decision, only a guide to what matters:
- Where were you born? If in Canada, you are generally already a citizen. If outside Canada, continue.
- Was a parent or grandparent a Canadian citizen? If yes, a chain may exist. Note how each became Canadian (born in Canada, naturalized, or by descent).
- Which generation are you? Count from the first person born or adopted outside Canada to a Canadian citizen: their child born abroad is the first generation, that child’s child is the second, and so on.
- Were you born before, or on/after, December 15, 2025? This is the dividing line between the two rule sets below.
- If on/after December 15, 2025 and beyond the first generation: did your Canadian parent (also born or adopted abroad) spend at least 1,095 days in Canada before your birth?
- Adoption involved? Adopted-abroad cases follow separate rules and are not described as automatic citizenship.
Rules for births before December 15, 2025
This is where most people are affected. In most cases, you are now automatically a Canadian citizen if you were born before December 15, 2025, outside Canada, to a Canadian parent, even in the second generation or later – including where your parent became Canadian because of these very rule changes. Important caveats: the parent or ancestor chain must be legally established, other historic citizenship provisions can affect complex cases, and the way IRCC confirms your status is through a citizenship certificate application. If the change made you a citizen automatically but you do not want to be one, you can apply to renounce.
Rules for births on or after December 15, 2025
For a person born abroad in the second generation or later on or after December 15, 2025, citizenship is not automatic. Such a child may be Canadian only if both of these are true: their parent was also born or adopted outside Canada to a Canadian citizen (so the grandparent was Canadian), and that same parent spent at least 1,095 days physically in Canada before the child’s birth. For a direct grant of citizenship after a foreign adoption beyond the first generation, the official adoption rules apply and the outcome is a grant of citizenship, not automatic citizenship – the same substantial-connection idea applies to the Canadian parent before the adoption.
The 1,095-day substantial connection test
The 1,095 days means three years of physical presence in Canada by the Canadian parent before the child’s birth or adoption. The days do not need to be continuous. This test only matters for the second generation or later born or adopted on or after December 15, 2025 – it does not apply to the “before December 15, 2025” group above. Keep evidence that can show time in Canada (for example school, work, or residence records), because this is the kind of proof that supports the day count.
Worked examples
These are simplified, hypothetical examples to show how the rules interact. They are not legal determinations, and IRCC assesses every case on its own facts.
The documentary chain you may need
Because IRCC verifies each generation, you may need documents that establish the family link and each person’s status. Not every item is mandatory in every case – confirm against the current official application instructions:
| Generation / link | Evidence that may be needed |
|---|---|
| The Canadian ancestor | Canadian birth certificate, or citizenship/naturalization records |
| Each parent-child link | Long-form birth certificates showing parentage |
| Citizenship already recognised | Existing citizenship certificates, where held |
| Name changes | Marriage or legal name-change records |
| Adoption | Adoption orders and related records |
| Where relevant | Death records to complete the chain |
Already a citizen vs applying for proof
These are two different things. Under Bill C-3 you may already be a citizen by operation of law, without doing anything. A citizenship certificate is the official proof of that status – applying for it is not the same as applying to become a citizen. You need the certificate for practical purposes: to apply for a Canadian passport and to avoid problems at the border. Applying is also the reliable way to confirm, for certain, whether the change actually applies to you.
Adoption and complex historic cases
Adopted-abroad cases, older historic citizenship provisions, and unusual family chains can change the outcome. The term “Lost Canadian” covers people who lost citizenship or never received it because of past provisions, including the first-generation limit – but not every second-generation applicant is in an identical legal position. If your family history is complicated, treat the rules above as a starting point and get your specific chain reviewed.
How to apply for proof
If you think Bill C-3 made you a citizen, apply for a citizenship certificate, the official proof of Canadian citizenship. IRCC reviews the application and, if you are a citizen, issues the certificate, which you then use for a passport. If you applied under the interim measure that ran after the 2023 court decision and your application is still in progress, IRCC will process it under the new Bill C-3 rules and you do not need to submit a new certificate application.
A note for Americans with Canadian ancestry
Many people in the United States have a Canadian parent or grandparent and are asking whether Bill C-3 makes them Canadian. The same rules apply regardless of where you live now: the generation count, the birth-date dividing line, and the 1,095-day test for the second generation or later born on or after December 15, 2025. Holding US citizenship does not prevent you from also being Canadian, but you should confirm your status by applying for a citizenship certificate rather than assuming.
Not sure if a Canadian parent or grandparent makes you a citizen? Book a consultation with MAK Canadian Immigration Services, in person at our Mississauga office or online. Your immigration advice will be provided by a licensed RCIC regulated by the CICC. You can also start with our free immigration scanner, or review our professional fees. IRCC makes all final decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Am I Canadian if my grandparent was Canadian?
You may be, but a Canadian grandparent alone does not settle it. IRCC must verify each generation, the relevant dates, parentage or adoption, citizenship status, and documents. Whether you qualify depends on the generation count, your date of birth relative to December 15, 2025, and, for the second generation or later born on or after that date, the 1,095-day rule.
When did Bill C-3 take effect?
Bill C-3, which amends the Citizenship Act, took effect on December 15, 2025.
What is the 1,095-day substantial connection requirement?
For a child born abroad beyond the first generation on or after December 15, 2025, the Canadian parent (who was also born or adopted abroad) must have spent at least 1,095 days (three years) physically in Canada before the child’s birth or adoption.
Does this change affect people who are already citizens?
No. If you were already a Canadian citizen before Bill C-3 became law, you remain a citizen and nothing about your status changes.
How do I prove I became a citizen under Bill C-3?
Apply for a citizenship certificate, the official proof of citizenship. IRCC reviews your application and, if you are a citizen, issues the certificate so you can get a passport.
Official Sources Reviewed
This article was reviewed against current official Government of Canada and IRCC sources. Official sources last checked: July 16, 2026.
- IRCC – Change to citizenship rules in 2025 (Bill C-3)
- IRCC – Find out if you are already a citizen
- IRCC – Apply for a citizenship certificate (proof of citizenship)
