A clear, fast summary of the official Discover Canada guide — everything the test draws from, in one place.
20 questions, 15 to pass. This guide covers every topic the test draws from.
Charter freedoms, mobility, equality & the duties that come with them.
From New France to Confederation and modern Canada.
The Crown, Parliament, elections, the flag and national emblems.
A detailed, near-complete walkthrough of every section of the official 68-page guide — the single source of all citizenship-test questions. Built directly from the guide’s own text and rewritten in plain language, with the specific names, dates and facts you are expected to know. Read it straight through, or jump to any section.
New citizens swear or affirm faithful allegiance to the Sovereign, promise to observe Canada’s laws including the Constitution — which recognizes and affirms the Aboriginal and treaty rights of First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples — and pledge to fulfil their duties as Canadian citizens.
In Canada we profess loyalty to a person who represents all Canadians, not to a flag or document. In our constitutional monarchy, the country is personified by the Sovereign (Queen or King), just as the Sovereign is personified by Canada.
Canada is a constitutional monarchy, a parliamentary democracy and a federal state. For 400 years, settlers and immigrants have contributed to its diversity and richness. Citizenship is a two-way commitment: Canada offers rights and freedoms, and citizens accept responsibilities in return.
Canadian rights and freedoms come from our history, are secured by Canadian law, and reflect shared traditions and values. Canadian law has several sources: laws passed by Parliament and the provincial legislatures, English common law, the civil code of France, and the unwritten constitution inherited from Britain. These secure an 800-year-old tradition of ordered liberty dating to Magna Carta (1215), the “Great Charter of Freedoms.” Habeas corpus — the right to challenge unlawful detention — comes from English common law. In 1982 the Constitution was amended to entrench the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The Charter opens by recognizing “the supremacy of God and the rule of law,” underlining the dignity and worth of the human person. Canadian law draws on Parliament and the legislatures, English common law, the civil code of France, and the unwritten constitution inherited from Britain.
Defending Canada is a noble responsibility but is not compulsory — military service is voluntary (regular forces, reserves, Coast Guard, cadets). Equality of women and men is the law; Canada’s openness does not extend to “barbaric cultural practices” such as spousal abuse, “honour killings,” female genital mutilation or forced marriage, which are severely punished.
Canada is known as a strong and free country, and has inherited the oldest continuous constitutional tradition in the world. It is the only constitutional monarchy in North America, committed to “Peace, Order and good Government” — a key phrase from the British North America Act of 1867. To understand what it means to be Canadian, it helps to know the three founding peoples: Aboriginal, French and British.
From the first peoples through European exploration, the rivalry of France and Britain, Confederation and westward expansion, this is one of the most heavily tested sections. The key names and dates below are worth knowing well.
1497 Cabot maps the Atlantic coast · 1534 Cartier names Canada · 1608 Champlain founds Quebec City · 1759 Plains of Abraham (Britain beats France) · 1774 Quebec Act · 1812–14 War of 1812 keeps Canada independent of the U.S. · 1833 slavery abolished in the Empire · 1867 Confederation, first PM Macdonald · 1870 Manitoba · 1885 CPR completed · 1914–18 WWI, Vimy 1917 · 1918 most women get the federal vote · 1939–45 WWII, D-Day / Juno Beach 1944.
John Cabot — first to map the Atlantic coast (1497) · Jacques Cartier — named Canada (1534) · Samuel de Champlain — founded Quebec City (1608) · Sir John A. Macdonald — first Prime Minister (1867) · Sir George-Étienne Cartier — key Father of Confederation from Quebec · Sir Wilfrid Laurier — first French-Canadian PM · Louis Riel — Métis leader, father of Manitoba.
Through two world wars, post-war prosperity, social change and scientific achievement, Canada became a fully independent nation with a strong international role.
Banting & Best — discovered insulin · Alexander Graham Bell — the telephone · James Naismith — invented basketball (1891) · Lester B. Pearson — Nobel Peace Prize (1957), later PM · Terry Fox — Marathon of Hope (1980) · Wayne Gretzky — hockey great · The Group of Seven & Emily Carr — landmark painters.
There are three key facts about Canada’s system: it is a federal state, a parliamentary democracy and a constitutional monarchy. Responsibilities of the federal and provincial governments were defined in 1867 in the British North America Act (now the Constitution Act, 1867).
Canadians elect representatives to the House of Commons. Federal elections are held on the third Monday in October every four years, though the PM may ask the Governor General to call an earlier election.
Provincial, territorial and municipal elections are also held by secret ballot, but the rules differ from federal elections — find out your local rules so you can exercise your right to vote at every level.
The justice system guarantees everyone due process — the government must respect all the legal rights a person is entitled to. It rests on the rule of law, freedom under the law, democratic principles and the presumption of innocence. The law applies to everyone, including judges, politicians and police.
Canada has many important symbols — objects, events and people that carry special meaning and together express the national identity.
Canada has always been a trading nation, with one of the ten largest economies in the world.
Canada is the second-largest country on earth (about 10 million km²), bordered by three oceans — the Pacific (west), the Atlantic (east) and the Arctic (north) — and to the south by the Canada–U.S. boundary. There are ten provinces and three territories, each with its own capital, grouped into five regions. You should know the capital of your own province or territory as well as the national capital.
Ottawa, on the Ottawa River, was chosen as the capital by Queen Victoria in 1857 and is today Canada’s fourth-largest metropolitan area. The surrounding National Capital Region covers about 4,700 km².
Most easterly point in North America, with its own time zone. The oldest British colony; known for fisheries and coastal villages, now offshore oil & gas, with immense hydro-electric resources in Labrador.
The smallest province; beaches, red soil and potatoes. The birthplace of Confederation, linked to the mainland by the Confederation Bridge; setting of Anne of Green Gables.
Most populous Atlantic province; the world’s highest tides in the Bay of Fundy. Halifax is a deep-water, ice-free port and Canada’s largest east-coast naval base; strong Celtic and Gaelic culture.
Founded by Loyalists; the only officially bilingual province (about one-third Francophone). Forestry, fisheries, mining and the St. John River system; Moncton is the main Acadian centre.
Nearly 8 million people, mostly French-speaking, along the St. Lawrence. Canada’s largest producer of hydro-electricity and pulp and paper; Montreal is the second-largest mainly French-speaking city in the world after Paris.
Over 12 million people — more than a third of Canadians. Toronto is the largest city and main financial centre; the Niagara region grows grapes and fruit; bordered by the five Great Lakes (Ontario, Erie, Huron, Michigan, Superior).
Agriculture, mining and hydro power. Winnipeg’s Portage and Main is a famous intersection; St. Boniface has Western Canada’s largest Francophone community; the largest Aboriginal population share of any province.
The “breadbasket” — 40% of Canada’s arable land and its largest grain producer; the world’s richest uranium and potash deposits. Regina hosts the RCMP training academy.
Most populous Prairie province, named after Princess Louise Caroline Alberta. Five national parks including Banff (1885); the largest producer of oil and gas (the oil sands), plus major cattle ranching.
Pacific gateway, population about four million. The Port of Vancouver is Canada’s largest; forestry is the most valuable in Canada, plus mining, fishing and the Okanagan wine industry.
Capital Yellowknife, the “diamond capital of North America.” Over half the population is Aboriginal; the Mackenzie River is the second-longest river system in North America.
Famed for the Gold Rush of the 1890s; mining remains important. Holds Canada’s coldest recorded temperature (−63°C); Mount Logan is Canada’s highest peak.
Meaning “our land” in Inuktitut; created in 1999 from the eastern NWT. About 85% Inuit; Inuktitut is an official language; the assembly chooses a premier by consensus.
The three territories hold one-third of Canada’s land but only ~100,000 people — the “Land of the Midnight Sun,” much of it tundra with permanently frozen soil. The Canadian Rangers patrol the Arctic. National capital: Ottawa, on the Ottawa River, Canada’s fourth-largest metro area.
Not all of this is in the booklet, but the test includes questions about your own province — its capital, your representatives, and who holds key offices. Since you’re in Alberta, these are the facts most likely to come up. The names of office-holders change over time, so confirm the current ones before your test.
For “your province” questions, be ready to name: your capital (Edmonton), your Premier, your Lieutenant Governor, your MLA, your federal MP, and your electoral district. The office-holders above are current as of 2026 — double-check them close to your test date, since they can change.
The guide ends with practice Study Questions (p.52) drawn entirely from its content, a For More Information section (p.54), the legal Authorities (the Citizenship Act and Regulations, p.64), and Memorable Quotes (p.66) from leaders such as Laurier and Diefenbaker (these quotes are not tested).