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can you go to canada with a dui

You can go to Canada with a DUI in some cases, but you are usually criminally inadmissible unless you get special permission or are found rehabilitated, so showing up unprepared can absolutely get you turned away at the border.

Big picture: DUI and Canada

  • Canada now treats most DUI‑type offenses as a serious crime under federal law, with a potential maximum sentence of up to 10 years. This makes even a single old DUI a possible ground to deny you entry.
  • Border officers see your criminal record when they scan your passport, so trying to “wing it” and hope they don’t notice is a gamble that often ends in refusal.

When a DUI makes you inadmissible

Canadian immigration law focuses on how your offense compares to the Canadian Criminal Code, not what your home state or country called it (misdemeanor vs felony).

Common situations that typically make you inadmissible unless you get special permission:

  • One DUI, DWI, OUI, OWI, DWAI, “wet reckless,” or similar impaired‑driving offense
  • Multiple impaired‑driving offenses
  • Related serious driving crimes (hit and run, vehicular homicide, dangerous driving causing injury, refusing a breath test where that’s a crime)

Even if your DUI is:

  • Many years old
  • Labeled “reckless driving” after a plea deal
  • A misdemeanor in your state

…it can still equate to an indictable offense in Canada and trigger inadmissibility.

Ways people still get in

You usually need one of a few legal pathways that essentially tell Canada, “I’m low‑risk, please let me in.”

1. Temporary Resident Permit (TRP)

  • What it is: Short‑term permission to enter even though you’re otherwise inadmissible.
  • When used:
    • Urgent travel (wedding, funeral, work trip, major family event).
    • Your offense is recent or you don’t yet qualify for full rehabilitation.
  • Key points:
    • Usually limited in time (up to about 3 years, sometimes just for the specific trip).
* Requires a clear reason for travel and evidence you’re not a risk (employment, ties to home country, proof of treatment or changed behavior, etc.).

2. Criminal Rehabilitation

  • What it is: A permanent decision that your past offense is no longer a barrier; once granted, you’re generally no longer criminally inadmissible for that offense.
  • When available:
    • You need to wait a certain number of years after completing all sentencing (probation, fines, classes, interlock, license suspension).
  • Why people like it:
    • One‑time application; if approved, you typically don’t need a TRP for that same offense again.

3. Deemed rehabilitation (now very limited)

Before Canada toughened its DUI laws in late 2018, some people with a single old DUI could be “deemed rehabilitated” automatically after enough time passed.

  • Law change: DUI is now a “serious” crime with up to 10 years maximum possible sentence, so it usually no longer qualifies for deemed rehabilitation.
  • Result: Even one decades‑old DUI can still cause problems unless an officer formally considers you rehabilitated or you get Criminal Rehabilitation.

Real‑world travel experiences

Forum and travel discussions show that people’s experiences vary a lot, which can make the topic feel confusing and “random”:

  • Some travelers report getting into Canada several times by air or car without anyone mentioning their old DUI, then suddenly being stopped and refused on a later trip when a different officer looked more closely.
  • Others describe being questioned about the offense, asked for documents, and told to apply for a TRP or rehabilitation before attempting to come back.
  • A recurring theme in discussions: “It’s a gamble if you don’t sort it out ahead of time; you might get lucky… until you don’t.”

Those stories don’t replace legal rules, but they show how inconsistent the experience can be if you rely only on luck at the border.

Practical steps if you’re planning a trip

Because this is a high‑stakes situation (vacations ruined, weddings missed, business trips canceled), it pays to prepare.

  • Gather documents:
    • Court records or dispositions showing charges, convictions, and final outcome.
    • Proof you completed all sentence terms (probation completion, fine receipts, treatment completion).
  • Check timing:
    • How long has it been since you completed everything? That affects whether rehabilitation is realistic or if a TRP makes more sense first.
  • Consider legal advice:
    • Many immigration and DUI‑focused lawyers specifically handle “Canada DUI entry” and can assess your exact risk and which application is best.
  • Don’t assume:
    • Don’t rely on “my friend got in with no problem” as a strategy; Canadian officers have broad discretion and access to detailed records.

TL;DR: “Can you go to Canada with a DUI?” — Yes, but not casually. You are often treated as inadmissible unless you secure a Temporary Resident Permit, Criminal Rehabilitation, or in rare cases are considered rehabilitated by time, and going to the border without a plan is a risky bet.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.