Yes—most U.S. green card holders can visit Canada visa-free when they carry a passport and valid proof of U.S. permanent residence.
Most trips to Canada go smoothly for U.S. lawful permanent residents. The snag is usually a document gap, not a hidden rule. A green card proves U.S. status. It does not replace a passport. Canadian officers and airlines usually want both so they can confirm identity and status in one glance.
Below you’ll get the practical rule, what changes by travel method, and a prep checklist that saves time at the counter and the booth.
What canada requires from U.S. permanent residents
Canada’s baseline is simple:
- A valid passport from your country of citizenship (or another accepted travel document)
- A valid U.S. green card (Form I-551) or equivalent proof you hold U.S. permanent resident status
Canada’s immigration department also says U.S. lawful permanent residents are exempt from the eTA requirement and must present a passport plus a valid green card for travel to Canada. IRCC’s green card holder entry document list spells out the required documents.
Can Green Card Holder Go to Canada Without Visa? what “without visa” covers
For short visits like tourism, seeing family, or attending an event, most green card holders do not need to apply for a Canadian visitor visa in advance. Your nationality still matters for which passport you carry, yet the green card itself is not what creates a visa requirement for a standard visit.
Two things can still stop entry: missing documents and a trip that doesn’t fit the visitor category. Border officers can refuse entry if details don’t add up. Most travelers avoid issues by keeping their paperwork clean and their plans clear.
Land crossings: car, bus, train
At land borders, people sometimes assume a green card is enough. Plan on bringing your passport and green card each trip, even for a day trip. Have your destination address ready and expect longer waits on holiday weekends.
Air travel: the airline check matters
Flying adds an airline document check before you even reach Canada. Staff will ask for the passport and the green card. If either is missing, you may not board.
If your card is expired and you filed to renew it, you can still hold valid status, yet you need the current evidence you were issued. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services explains travel documentation and related evidence for lawful permanent residents. USCIS guidance on travel documents is a solid starting point.
Cruises and ferries: route rules vary
Cruise lines tend to follow strict document checks to avoid carrying someone who can’t enter. Bring the passport and green card, even on closed-loop routes. If the itinerary includes a flight segment, treat it like air travel.
Before you go: small prep that saves big headaches
Use these steps as your pre-trip routine:
- Confirm your passport will be valid for the full trip.
- Check your green card condition. If it’s cracked, peeling, or unreadable, replace it before travel if you can.
- Match names across documents. If you changed your name, carry the legal document that links the two names.
- Write down your stay details: address, phone number, dates.
- If your situation is unusual (recent move, long time outside the U.S.), keep one proof of U.S. ties handy, like a lease or pay stub.
That’s it. You’re not building a file cabinet. You’re removing easy reasons for an extra interview.
What Canadian border officers tend to ask
Interviews are often quick. Expect questions that confirm you’re a visitor and you plan to leave when the trip ends:
- Why are you coming to Canada?
- How long will you stay?
- Where will you stay?
- What do you do for work?
- What are you bringing with you?
Keep answers plain and consistent. If you don’t know an address, pull it up. If your plans changed, say what changed and why.
Stay length: don’t assume a set number
Many visitors hear “up to six months” and treat it like a promise. Officers can set a shorter stay based on the facts of the trip. If you need extra time, be ready to explain the reason and show you can cover costs.
Admissibility checks: why documents aren’t the only factor
Even with perfect paperwork, Canada still decides entry at the border. Officers can refuse entry if they think you won’t follow visitor rules, you can’t explain your plans, or you’re not admissible under Canadian law.
The most common reasons regular travelers get pulled aside are simple: unclear trip purpose, inconsistent answers between passengers, or luggage that doesn’t match the story (a “two-day visit” with a car full of household goods). Keep your plan honest and keep your packing aligned with it.
Past arrests and convictions
Canada can refuse entry based on criminal inadmissibility, even when the issue is old and even when you were allowed to enter other countries. If you have any criminal history, don’t guess at what counts. Bring the court disposition paperwork you have, be ready to answer directly, and expect extra screening.
Customs and declarations
Customs questions are separate from immigration questions. Declare what you bought, what you’re bringing back, and any restricted items. If you’re driving, keep receipts accessible. If you’re flying, know what’s in your checked bag. Straight answers tend to shorten the interaction.
Common situations and what to carry
This table maps typical green card holder trips to the documents that usually get you through airline check-in and the Canadian border with fewer delays.
| Situation | What to carry | Extra notes |
|---|---|---|
| Driving to Canada for a weekend | Passport + green card | Keep your lodging address handy. |
| Flying to Canada for tourism | Passport + green card | No eTA needed for U.S. permanent residents, yet airlines still verify both. |
| Green card renewal pending | Passport + green card + extension evidence (if issued) | Arrive early so check-in staff can verify dates. |
| Lost green card close to departure | Passport + official temporary proof of status | Reentry to the U.S. may require extra steps. |
| Traveling with a U.S. citizen child | Your passport + your green card; child’s U.S. passport | Bring a consent letter if one parent isn’t traveling. |
| Traveling with a spouse in a different status | Each traveler’s passport; your green card | Your spouse’s Canadian entry rules follow their nationality. |
| Business trip with work gear | Passport + green card + itinerary | Be clear on what the gear is for if asked. |
| Transiting through Canada | Passport + green card + onward ticket | Airlines may ask for proof of onward travel. |
When a Canadian visa can still be needed
Green card holders often mix up “U.S. visa” and “Canadian visa.” Canada looks at your status and your travel purpose. A Canadian visitor visa may still be needed if:
- You’re not a U.S. permanent resident yet and only have another U.S. status.
- Your proof of U.S. permanent residence is not valid at the time of travel.
- You plan to work or study in Canada in a way that requires a permit.
If you’re planning work or study, sort the right permit category early, since timelines can be longer than a weekend trip.
Expired or missing green card: what to expect
Expired card with a renewal in process
If you filed to renew, you may have paperwork that extends the card’s validity for travel and work purposes. Carry that evidence with your expired card and passport. Expect closer checks at airline counters.
Lost or stolen card
Canada may accept other official proof of your U.S. status, yet returning to the U.S. is where the pain shows up. Plan for extra steps with U.S. authorities to replace proof of status before you try to travel back. If you filed a police report, keep a copy.
Returning to the United States
Most returns are easy with a valid passport and green card. The tougher cases are long trips, damaged documents, or travel patterns that suggest you may not live in the U.S. full time.
If you’ve been outside the U.S. for many months, expect more questions. Keep simple proof of your home base in the U.S., like a lease, job letter, or recent bills. Also keep a list of your travel dates so you can answer without guessing.
Travel day checklist
Print this or save it to your notes app.
| Carry | Where | What it solves |
|---|---|---|
| Passport | On your person | Primary ID for Canada entry and airline checks. |
| Green card (Form I-551) | On your person | Proof you are a U.S. lawful permanent resident. |
| Name-change document (if needed) | Carry-on folder | Links different names across documents. |
| Renewal extension evidence (if needed) | Carry-on folder | Helps when your card is expired. |
| Lodging details | Phone notes + printed backup | Makes border questions fast to answer. |
| One proof of U.S. ties (optional) | Phone or folder | Useful if your travel pattern draws extra questions. |
Delays to avoid at the border
- Damaged documents: If a card can’t be read, officers may need manual verification.
- One-way plans: One-way travel can trigger extra questions. Be ready to explain your return plan.
- Restricted items: Don’t carry cannabis across the border. Declare goods truthfully.
If you travel often, keep your passport and green card in the same safe spot and track your trip dates. A small routine beats last-minute scrambling.
References & Sources
- Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).“I am a lawful permanent resident of the U.S. (green card holder). Do I need an eTA?”Confirms eTA exemption and lists passport + green card as required documents for travel to Canada.
- U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).“Travel Documents.”Explains travel documentation and related evidence used by lawful permanent residents when returning to the United States.
