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can you use your license in another country or is that a whole thing

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so my brother in law lives in canada and im going up to visit for like two weeks this summer and i was wondering if i can bring my HF rig and operate from his place. i have a general class license and ive been licensed for about 3 years now. i looked at part 97 for a while and got totally lost trying to figure out if theres some kind of reciprocal thing or if i need to apply for something ahead of time. i know canada and the US are pretty close in terms of how they do amateur radio but i genuinely dont know if thats enough or if i need paperwork. anyone done this before?

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yeah canada is actually one of the easier ones to deal with for this. there's a reciprocal operating arrangement between the US and canada so you dont need to apply for a separate license or anything like that. you basically operate under your US callsign but you have to follow canadian regulations which means IC (Industry Canada, or i guess its called ISED now) rules apply not FCC part 97. so your privileges are kind of the intersection of what both countries allow which in practice usually just means following whichever is more restrictive. you should append something to your callsign while operating from canada, like W1XYZ/VE3 or however your brother in laws province prefix works out. honestly just look up the CEPT agreement and also the specific canada-US arrangement because theyre slightly different things and people mix them up all the time including me for a while.

i did this exact thing a few years ago visiting family in ontario. it worked fine, nobody gave me any trouble. just made sure i had a printed copy of my FCC license with me and knew my callsign suffix deal. the hardest part was honestly just getting the rig across the border without the customs guy getting weird about it lol. he asked what it was and i said a radio and he just waved me through.

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