
Le NAS — votre premier numéro officiel au Canada.
1. What is the SIN?
The Social Insurance Number (SIN) is a 9-digit federal government number.
It's required to:
- Work in Canada
- Receive government benefits
- Open a savings account or an RRSP
2. When to apply
Apply within your first days after arrival. It's the very first official step in Canada.
3. Documents to bring
Documents to bring:
- Permanent residents: passport + Confirmation of Permanent Residence (or PR card)
- Work / study permit: passport + valid permit
- A proof of address in Canada (recommended but not always required)
4. How to apply
Two options:
- In person at Service Canada — free, often done same day
- Online on the Service Canada website — 4 to 6 weeks wait
5. What to do once you have it
Once you have it:
- Memorize it or store it in a safe place (not in your wallet)
- You'll give it to your employer, your bank, and the government
- It follows you for your whole life in Canada
6. Your action list
Follow these concrete steps to get your SIN. Check each box as you go — your progress is saved if you're signed in.
- Find the nearest Service Canada office
- Gather the documents: passport, PR card/permit, proof of address
- Visit Service Canada (or apply online)
- Receive and memorize your SIN in a safe place
- Give the SIN to your employer upon hire
- Update your bank with your SIN
7. In person vs online — which to choose?
Service Canada offers both options for obtaining a SIN. Both are free — the choice depends mainly on your situation and your tolerance for delay.
Practical verdict: if you arrive with a job starting within 30 days, choose in-person — you leave with your SIN the same day. Otherwise, the online option avoids the wait at the office.
| Criterion | In person | Online |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Free | Free |
| Wait | Same day | 4–6 weeks |
| Documents | Originals | Scans (PDF / photo) |
| Canadian mailing address | Recommended | ✅ Required |
| Appointment | Optional | Not required |
| Main risk | 60–90 min queue | Postal delay, possible refusal |
8. Frequently asked questions
The most common questions about the SIN: how much the application costs, whether you can work before receiving the number, what a SIN starting with 9 means, and how to replace the SIN confirmation letter.
How much does the SIN application cost?
The application is entirely free, whether you apply in person or online. Any site asking you to pay to obtain a SIN is a scam. The SIN itself is not a card — it's a 9-digit number confirmed by official letter.
Can I start working before receiving my SIN?
Yes, but Service Canada recommends getting it within 3 business days of starting work. Your employer needs your SIN to process your first paycheque.
If you're waiting on the SIN, give your employer the proof of application (in-person receipt or online confirmation).
My SIN starts with 9. What does it mean?
A SIN that starts with 9 indicates a temporary status in Canada — typically a work permit, study permit, or asylum claimant. This SIN has an expiry date matching your permit.
When you become a permanent resident, you receive a new SIN starting with 1–8 that never expires. Important: stop giving your old SIN-9 to your employer after the transition.
What if I lose the paper confirming my SIN?
You can request a confirmation from Service Canada in person or by phone at 1-800-622-6232, free and multiple times. The SIN itself remains valid — the paper can be replaced, not the number.
Keep your original letter in a safe place with your other identity documents.
9. Official sources
For official information:
Phone: Service Canada at 1-800-622-6232.
10. See also
These related guides may be useful:
- Get your RAMQ health insurance card — the other essential first-arrival step.
- Renew or replace your PR card — the identity document required to get a SIN as a permanent resident.
- Apply for a Canadian passport — the next admin step once you become a citizen.
Author's Note: Do it on day 1 or 2. Without a SIN, everything else is blocked — banking, work, benefits. Once done, you can move forward on everything else.



