Here’s a concise update on the latest status of Bill C-3 and Canadian citizenship.
What Bill C-3 changes
- Bill C-3, An Act to amend the Citizenship Act, expanded citizenship by descent beyond the first generation born abroad. This means more people born outside Canada to Canadian parents (including those born to Canadian parents who themselves were born abroad) can obtain Canadian citizenship more readily.[3][5][6]
- The changes were enacted in December 2025 and began taking effect around that time, with official guidance indicating the new rules apply to eligibility going forward and to many who were previously excluded under the first-generation limit.[1][6][9][3]
Who is newly eligible
- Individuals who would have been Canadian citizens but for the old first-generation limit are now recognized as Canadian and can apply for proof of citizenship, retroactive to the law’s effective date (December 15, 2025) or earlier in some cases through transitional provisions.[6][1]
- Going forward, children born abroad to a Canadian parent who was also born abroad will be eligible for citizenship if the parent can document a substantial connection to Canada and meet the presence requirements (three years of physical presence in Canada prior to birth/adoption).[4][9][1]
Key terms to know
- First-generation limit (FGL): The previous rule that restricted citizenship by descent to the first generation born abroad; Bill C-3 eliminates this limit for eligible cases.[5][3]
- Substantial connection to Canada: The new framework includes criteria to demonstrate a meaningful connection to Canada for eligibility, particularly for descendants born outside Canada.[3][4]
Practical steps for affected individuals
- If you or your family may be affected (e.g., “Lost Canadians” or descendants of Canadian parents born abroad), you should gather:
- Proof of your parent’s Canadian status and their birth abroad (if applicable)
- Evidence of the required physical presence in Canada (the 3-year rule prior to birth/adoption)
- Documentation showing the birth/adoption abroad and your relationship to the Canadian parent
- Many interim measures and applications filed under prior rulings were recognized under the new law, with some cases processing automatically.[1][6]
Implementation timeline
- The law took effect in mid-December 2025, with subsequent guidance and updates from Canada’s immigration authorities outlining how the new rules apply in practice and what forms to use for proof of citizenship.[9][1]
- Public discussions and analyses remain focused on clarifying transitional provisions and ensuring Lost Canadians and their descendants can access citizenship certificates promptly.[5][9]
Where to find official guidance
- Canada.ca: Department of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) pages detailing Bill C-3, eligibility, and procedural steps.[10]
- OpenParliament and professional notes provide summaries of the bill’s intent and implications for descendants of Canadian citizens.[8][3]
Illustrative example
- Before Bill C-3, a person born abroad to a Canadian parent who themselves were born abroad could not automatically pass citizenship to their child. Under C-3, if the parent and child meet the new substantial connection and presence criteria, the child may obtain citizenship by descent, and many previously excluded individuals are now eligible.[1][3]
Would you like me to pull the most recent official guidance from Canada.ca and summarize specific eligibility scenarios for your family’s situation? I can tailor the summary to your location (Marseille, France) and provide a checklist of documents you’d likely need.
Citations:
- Bill C-3 and expanded eligibility.[3]
- Lost Canadians and transitional processing.[6][5][1]
- Substantial connection and future eligibility criteria.[4]
- Governmental guidance and dates.[9][10]
Sources
Bill C-3, which took effect on 15 December 2025, removes the first-generation limit on citizenship by descent. Canadians born abroad can now pass citizenship to their foreign-born children if they prove three years of prior residence in Canada, while thousands previously excluded (“Lost Canadians”) become eligible immediately. The reform eases compliance burdens for globally mobile Canadian professionals and their employers.
www.visahq.comCanada’s Citizenship Act contains a first-generation limit to citizenship by descent for individuals born abroad, which generally means that a Canadian citizen parent can only pass on citizenship to a child born outside Canada if the parent was either born or naturalized in Canada before the birth of the child. Canadians born or naturalized in Canada before adopting a child abroad can apply for a direct grant of citizenship for the adopted child
www.canada.caThis Insight prepared with the assistance of Carly King, a student at law at our Saskatoon office. Two years following the Ontario Superior Court’s ruling that Canada’s now-former “second generation...
www.mltaikins.comBill C-3 is now law. Learn who is newly recognised as Canadian, how citizenship by descent works now, and what applicants can do immediately.
immigration.caThousands of lost Canadians previously affected by the first-generation limit (FGL) to citizenship by descent are now eligible to gain Canadian citizenship. On December 15, 2025, Bill C-3, “An Act to Amend the Citizenship Act", became law. “This new legislation strengthens the bond between Canadians at home and around the world, and reaffirms the values
www.cicnews.comThe CBA Urges Refinements to Bill C-3 on Citizenship
cba.orgResponds to court ruling on citizenship: The bill directly addresses the Ontario Superior Court's December 2023 ruling, which found Canada's citizenship law inconsistent and two-tiered, and aims to rectify this by the November 20 deadline. Extends citizenship by descent: Bill C-3 extends automatic citizenship to children born abroad to Canadian parents, including "lost Canadians" and their descendants, ensuring fairness and upholding charter mobility and equality rights.
openparliament.caGovernment legislation to extend access to citizenship by descent beyond the first generation has become law after being adopted in the Senate.
senate-gro.ca