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Could you be Canadian?

Recent changes to Canadian citizenship law have opened a door that many Americans aren't aware of. If you have an ancestor who was born in Canada, or who lived there before immigrating to the United States, you may be eligible for Canadian citizenship recognition. We’re not talking about naturalization; we’re talking about recognition. As in, the citizenship may already be yours.

The connection might be less obvious than you'd think. People with deep roots in New England, the Midwest, or Louisiana often have Canadian ancestors hiding in plain sight. 

And here's a factor most people never consider: if you have a Loyalist ancestor who left during or after the Revolutionary War, there's a real chance they resettled in what is now Canada, and may have created a Canadian line folded into a very American family history.

I'm a researcher and writer who has spent years following family lines — including documenting my own family's path to Italian citizenship. I know what this research takes, and I know how to read a tree quickly for Canadian potential.

Image by Community Archives of Belleville and Hastings County

How This Works

Stage 1 - The Initial Assessment · $125

I start building your tree with one question in mind: Is there a Canadian path here?

I'll focus on the lines most likely to lead somewhere useful — skipping recent immigrant branches that won't apply, and following the threads that might. Within 2–3 hours of research using Ancestry and other online resources, I'll have a preliminary read on your family's potential.

What You Get:

An initial assessment of your Canadian eligibility prospects, plus editor access to a starter tree on Ancestry.com that you can continue to build on.

If it's clear there's no path, you'll know — and you'll have a tree to show for it. If there's reason to look further, you move to Stage 2.

Stage 2 — The Deeper Dive · $249

This is where we go back further in time — deeper into the promising branches and across other family lines, searching earlier generations for a Canadian ancestor that didn't surface in Stage 1. 

That said, genealogy research is rarely tidy. A common surname can eat up hours. A line that looks promising can hit a wall. 

I'll always tell you where I stopped and why — whether the available records ran dry, the time was better spent on another branch, or if a line became too complex to pursue within this scope. If that happens, our closing Zoom call is where we talk through what further research might look like and whether it makes sense for you to continue. There are rarely absolute dead ends in genealogy, but there are diminishing returns — and knowing where those are is part of the expertise I bring.

At the end of Stage 2, we'll land in one of two places:

  • A CANADIAN LINE WORTH PURSUING — One or more viable paths exist and you have a clear direction forward.

  • NO CLEAR PATH FOUND — Canada doesn't appear to be in the cards based on what's available online.

What You Get:

Significantly expanded research, a much fuller Ancestry tree, and a personal Zoom call to go over everything I found — viable Canadian lines, threads I stopped pursuing and why, and whatever remains unfinished. You leave with a clearer picture of your family's story, and where it may lead.

A note on eligibility: what I find is a research foundation, not a legal determination. Eligibility is ultimately Canada's call, and policies can change. I offer my guidance based on current rules, what I find, and my best recommendations.

Stage 3 — The Paper Trail · $45/hour (typically no more than 5 hours)

Once we've found a viable Canadian line, the next step is building your case. I'll research what documentation exists for your specific line and give you a clear picture of what to gather and how to obtain it — whether that's an online database, a records office, a church archive, or other methods.

What You Get:

A personalized checklist that tells you exactly what to look for and where — vital records, census entries, baptismal certificates, and whatever else might serve as evidence for your particular line. Where I've already located supporting documents online, I'll include those as well, which in some cases has been enough for recognition on its own. Certified copies, if required, will be yours to obtain — but you won't be starting from scratch, and you won't be going in blind. 

A Little About Me

I came to genealogy by way of Hollywood, where I spent years working in an industry obsessed with character, story, and the hidden forces that shape a life. That instinct never left me — which is why I'm as compelled by the family history hunt as I am by what the hunt turns up. Ancestors aren't just data points to me: they were real people with real stories, and the lines I follow are rarely just lines.

I'm a regular contributor to several Medium publications, writing about culture, identity, and the ways the past shapes the present. My research spans traditional records and genetic genealogy — using DNA to break through brick walls and solve family mysteries.

And I know this particular journey from the inside. I navigated Italian citizenship recognition for my own family — and came away with a clear-eyed sense of where genealogical research ends and legal determination begins.

Ready to Find Out?

Interest in Canadian citizenship among Americans is growing fast — and the earlier you know whether you have a viable line, the better positioned you'll be.

If you're ready to start, get in touch and I'll send you a short questionnaire to get the ball rolling. If you'd rather talk it through first, I'm happy to hop on a free exploratory call. No pressure, just an honest conversation about whether this is worth pursuing for your family.

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