Prince Edward Island Archives logs four years of document requests in four months as Americans rush for Canadian citizenship records
The Public Archives and Records Office of Prince Edward Island received 1,776 requests for ancestry documents between January 1 and April 30, 2026—more than triple the 585 requests logged in all of 2025. Staff describe the surge as "four years' worth of requests in four months," driven almost entirely by Americans seeking proof of Canadian citizenship under Bill C-3, which took effect December 15, 2025. The law eliminated Canada's first-generation limit on citizenship by descent, opening the door to anyone who can prove lineage from a Canadian ancestor, regardless of how many generations back that connection runs. According to CIC News, 99.9% of the PEI requests have come from American applicants, with a handful arriving from Ireland, Australia, and France.
Wait times at the PEI Archives have stretched from one week to approximately three months, and the office warns that estimate will likely climb as requests continue to pour in. The backlog mirrors strain across Canada's provincial archives: Quebec's Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec reports a 3,000% increase in requests, and New Brunswick's Provincial Archives saw genealogy inquiries quadruple in 2026 compared to 2025. At the federal level, IRCC now quotes 12 months to process a proof of Canadian citizenship certificate—meaning applications submitted in May 2026 won't be completed until May 2027.
Bill C-3 and why Americans are flooding the system
Bill C-3 restored citizenship to descendants of Canadians born abroad who were previously cut off by the 2009 first-generation limit. Under the old rule, a child born outside Canada to a Canadian parent could claim citizenship, but their own children born abroad could not. The December 2025 law change reversed that cutoff, and the effect was immediate. PEI Archives staff noticed an uptick in October 2025, when the Canadian government introduced interim measures allowing those with Canadian ancestry to apply for a discretionary grant of citizenship. Requests spiked further after the Christmas break. "Coming back from Christmas holidays, we came back to a large amount of requests," the office said. "It was instant, and requests are only increasing as time goes on."
For Americans, the appeal is straightforward: a Canadian passport offers visa-free access to 185 countries, a stable parliamentary democracy, universal healthcare, and a hedge against domestic political uncertainty. The catch is proving the lineage. To apply for a proof of citizenship certificate—the prerequisite for a Canadian passport—applicants must submit official copies of documents establishing their Canadian ancestry. That requirement has sent a wave of requests into provincial archives and vital statistics offices across the country.
The documents applicants need
The most common requests to the PEI Archives are for birth certificates, baptismal records, marriage certificates, death records, and census records. These documents form the paper trail needed to prove a direct line of descent from a Canadian ancestor. The specific documents required depend on the applicant's family tree: if the Canadian ancestor is a grandparent, the applicant will need their own birth certificate, their parent's birth certificate, and the grandparent's birth certificate, plus any marriage certificates that show name changes. If the connection runs through a great-grandparent or earlier generation, the chain lengthens.
Vital statistics offices in each province maintain birth, marriage, and death records, but typically only for the past 100 to 120 years. Records older than that are held by provincial archives, which is why offices like PEI's are seeing the surge. Baptismal records, which predate civil registration in many regions, are often held by local churches rather than government offices, adding another layer of complexity. For applicants tracing ancestry back to the 1800s or early 1900s, locating the right archive or parish and ordering certified copies can take months even before the current backlog.
The IRCC forms library includes the application package for proof of citizenship (form CIT 0001), but the form itself is straightforward—it's the supporting documentation that takes time. IRCC's May 2026 instructions for international proof of citizenship applicants eased the initial completeness check, allowing applicants to submit only the form, payment, photos, and signature up front, with other documents following after the application is accepted. That change helps applicants get into the queue faster, but it doesn't eliminate the need to eventually produce the ancestry records.
Wait times at PEI, Quebec, and New Brunswick
PEI's three-month estimate is a best guess, not a guarantee. The office has stopped providing timeline updates and is asking applicants not to resubmit requests or contact staff for status checks. "We have several online resources available to help people locate and order these type of records," the office said. "We do not offer any expedition of the process nor can we provide any timeline updates."
Quebec's Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec, which holds vital statistics records for the province dating back to the 1600s, has seen the steepest percentage increase: 3,000% more requests in early 2026 compared to the same period in 2025. New Brunswick's Provincial Archives reports that genealogy-related requests quadrupled. Many provincial archives now quote six weeks or longer for a response, and some have implemented online request portals to manage the volume.