In this video, Daniel Mandelbaum walks through the full timeline from arriving in Canada as a temporary worker to obtaining Canadian citizenship and what that passport actually opens up for you.
Stage 1: The Work Permit
The starting point for most skilled workers is a work permit. To get one, you either need an employer with a positive Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA), or you qualify for an LMIA-exempt category for example, under a trade agreement like CUSMA, or as an intracompany transferee.
As Daniel explains:
“Typically you’re looking at working in Canada for a minimum of one year as a temporary worker.”
That year is not just a waiting period. It is the foundation of your permanent residency application.
Stage 2: Permanent Residency
One year of skilled Canadian work experience makes you eligible for the Canadian Experience Class one of the three main Express Entry streams and significantly strengthens your CRS score.
“Once you’re a permanent resident of Canada and you’ve been here as a temporary resident for about 18 months, you’re still looking at about two to three years before you can apply for Canadian citizenship.”
In other words, from the moment you land on a work permit to the day you can apply for citizenship, the realistic timeline is approximately four to five years for a well-prepared applicant. The permanent residency stage sits in the middle and getting it right matters.
Stage 3: Citizenship and What It Unlocks
Canadian citizenship is not just a document. Daniel explains what it actually means in practice:
“When you have that passport, you’re open to the North American labour market as well, to the United States. You can get visas to work across the border in Detroit under Canada and the United States trade agreement.”
“By having that Canadian passport, you would have access to other countries that Canada has international trade agreements with to work anywhere around the world.”
And for your family:
“You’ll have the right to stay, to live, to work, to study, and your children will have the right to stay, to live, to work, to study through to adulthood if you acquire that Canadian citizenship.”
Why the Sequence Matters
Each stage has its own requirements, deadlines, and potential pitfalls. A work permit in a non-qualifying occupation, or an Express Entry profile built incorrectly, can interrupt the sequence entirely and add years to your timeline.
Our team of immigration lawyers in Toronto works with clients at every stage of this path from the initial work permit application through to permanent residency and citizenship planning.
To discuss your situation, fill out our immigration questionnaire or call us at (416) 646-3523.



