Criminal History and Canadian Citizenship: What Gets You Rejected?

The Moral Character Assessment

IRCC reviews your criminal history. They look at: felonies, misdemeanors, fraud, drug-related offenses, violence crimes. They also check if you're under investigation or prosecution.

What Disqualifies You

Automatic refusal: murder, treason, or crimes against humanity (in any country). Serious crimes: aggravated assault, sexual assault, drug trafficking (lifetime bar). Most other crimes: time-dependent (5-10 years since completion of sentence).

What Doesn't Disqualify You

Minor infractions: speeding tickets, single possession charge (in some provinces), small theft with restitution paid. These won't stop you. IRCC distinguishes between youthful mistakes and serious criminal behavior.

How to Handle It

Disclose everything on your application. Hiding it is worse than having it. If you have a criminal record: 1) Consult a citizenship lawyer, 2) Get a pardon if eligible (you can in Canada after enough time passes), 3) Then apply.