Two Ways to Get Canadian Dual Citizenship

THE GREAT ESCAPE: How thousands of Americans are snatching up Canadian passports to flee political chaos

It is the ultimate insurance policy in an increasingly unstable world.

As political tensions reach fever pitch south of the border, record numbers of U.S. citizens are desperately scrambling to claim their birthright to a second passport.

And Canada is handing them out.

Canadian law uniquely allows dual citizenship, meaning you can pledge allegiance to the Maple Leaf without ever surrendering your Stars and Stripes.

The rush has become so intense that immigration consultants report waitlists stretching for months.

THE FIRST ROUTE: Bloodline Citizenship

If you were born abroad to a Canadian parent, you might already be Canadian and not even know it.

Canada extends citizenship by descent automatically to the first generation born outside the country.

All it takes is paperwork.

Applicants must simply prove their parent was a Canadian citizen at the time of their birth, submit a proof of citizenship application, and pay the processing fee.

Within months, you could be clutching a Canadian passport.

THE SECOND ROUTE: The Naturalization Fast Track

No Canadian parents? No problem.

The alternative path requires rolling up your sleeves and moving north.

Foreign nationals can obtain citizenship through naturalization after becoming permanent residents and living in Canada for at least three out of the last five years.

You will need to pass a language test, prove you have filed your taxes, and swear an oath to the King.

But once that certificate lands in your hands, the benefits are immediate.

Two passports. Two homelands. Total freedom.

With global uncertainty showing no signs of slowing, experts warn the window for easy applications may be narrowing.

The question is no longer whether you can afford to become Canadian.

It is whether you can afford not to.


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