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What If My Parents Didn’t Know They Were Canadian?

In this article, let’s explore a situation that surprises a lot of people: What happens if your parents were Canadian, but never even knew it?

For example, Sarah grew up in the United States. Her mother was born in the U.S., and her grandmother was born in Canada. It was just part of the family story, nothing more. No one ever talked about citizenship, and her mother never applied for anything Canadian.

So naturally, Sarah assumed it did not apply to her. One day, she came across an article about Canadian citizenship by descent. It mentioned that some people may already be Canadian without realizing it.

That made her pause. “My mom isn’t Canadian,” she thought. “She was born in the U.S.”

But then a second thought followed. “What if she actually is?”

The Question Most People Miss

Sarah started to look into it.

She realized the real question was not: “Did my mother know she was Canadian?”

It was: “Was my mother legally Canadian under the law?”

That is a very different question.

If Sarah’s grandmother was born in Canada, she was likely Canadian. That meant Sarah’s mother may have automatically become Canadian at birth, depending on the law at the time.

And if that was true, the next question became: Did citizenship pass from her mother to her?

Citizenship Does Not Always Depend on Awareness

One of the most surprising things Sarah learned was this:

You do not need to know you are Canadian to actually be Canadian.

Citizenship is determined by law, not by whether someone applied for it, talked about it, or even understood it.

That means a person can:

        be legally Canadian

        never apply for proof

        never hold a passport

        and never realize it

And still pass citizenship down, if the law allows.

How Bill C-3 Changed Things

Sarah also learned that the law changed in December 2025.

Under Bill C-3, some people who were previously excluded may now:

        qualify for citizenship

        or already be considered Canadian under the updated law

This is especially important in cases where a parent was born outside Canada and never realized they might have citizenship.

In some situations, the law now recognizes those cases more broadly than before.

Why These Cases Still Need Careful Review

Even though this sounds straightforward, it is not always simple.

The outcome still depends on:

        when each person was born

        how the law applied at that time

        whether citizenship legally passed through each generation

        and whether the chain remained intact

So even if a parent did not know they were Canadian, the key issue is still whether they were legally Canadian under the law.

What Sarah Realized

By the end of her research, Sarah understood something important.

Her mother’s lack of awareness did not automatically mean anything was lost.

What mattered was whether her mother was legally Canadian, and whether that status passed down to her.

That was something worth looking at properly.

So, If your parent did not know they were Canadian, it does not mean your case ends there.

In many situations, the real question is not what your parent knew. It is what the law says about their status at the time.

That is where the analysis begins.

At A&M Canadian Immigration Law Corporation, we regularly help individuals in situations like this.

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