Last Updated On 16 April 2026, 9:05 AM EDT (Toronto Time)

On April 15, 2026, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) released its latest round of weekly processing time data, and the April numbers tell a story of sharp contrasts.

Citizenship grants are now processing faster than at any point since late 2025, with the queue finally shrinking for the first time this year.

But Quebec parents’ and grandparents’ sponsorship exploded by 21 months in a single update, and visitor record extensions have blown past the 325 day mark.

This April 2026 IRCC processing times update covers every major stream, from work permits and family sponsorship to economic immigration and temporary visas.

IRCC bases these estimates on real applicant outcomes rather than internal targets.

The department publishes the window within which 80% of applicants received a decision.

Most permanent residency and citizenship categories receive monthly refreshes, while temporary resident streams like visitor visas, work permits, study permits, and PR cards are updated weekly.

Individual outcomes can still vary widely based on security screening requirements, country of origin, document completeness, background verification timelines, and IRCC’s internal capacity.

Below is a full, category by category breakdown of every processing time in the April 2026 release.

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Before getting into the full data, here are the most significant shifts that have occurred since the February 2026 update, providing essential context for anyone tracking trends across multiple months.

Category February 2026 April 2026 Net Change
Citizenship grant 14 months 12 months -2 months
Citizenship grant queue ~313,000 ~313,200 Flat (now shrinking)
Parents/grandparents (Quebec) 47 months 67 months +20 months
Spouse inside Canada (non-Quebec) 21 months 24 months +3 months
Spouse inside Canada (Quebec) 35 months 31 months -4 months
Atlantic Immigration Program 33 months 40 months +7 months
Federal Skilled Worker (FSWP) 7 months 6 months -1 month
CEC queue size ~34,200 ~54,600 +20,400 applicants
Visitor visa (India) 78 days 23 days -55 days
Visitor record extension 209 days 325 days +116 days
New PR card 61 days 47 days -15 days
Work permits inside Canada 246 days 240 days -6 days

Several patterns emerge from this two-month comparison.

Citizenship processing is firmly improving, and for the first time in 2026 the queue is actually contracting rather than growing.

The Quebec parents’ and grandparents’ sponsorship spike of 20 months is the single largest increase in any permanent residency category this year and will require close monitoring in the months ahead.

Indian visitor visa processing has undergone a remarkable correction, falling from 78 days in February to just 23 days in April.

And visitor record extensions continue their alarming ascent, gaining 116 days in two months and now approaching the 325 day barrier.

The CEC queue has ballooned by over 20,000 applicants since February despite steady processing times, pointing to an imbalance between incoming applications and completed decisions that could eventually push timelines higher.

The citizenship category is delivering the most sustained good news of any stream in the April 2026 update.

Application Type People Waiting (Change) Processing Time (April 7, 2026) Change Since March 2026
Citizenship grant ~313,200 (-7,100) 12 months -1 month
Citizenship certificate* ~56,300 (+5,400) 10 months No change
Resumption of citizenship Not available Not enough data No change
Renunciation of citizenship Not available 10 months No change
Search of citizenship records Not available 17 months No change

At the time of publishing, IRCC is sending acknowledgment of receipt (AOR) notices for citizenship applications that were filed on or around October 22, 2025.

* Applicants residing outside Canada or the United States may face longer processing windows.

Application Type Processing Time (April 15, 2026) Change Since March 31 Change Since January 21
New PR card 47 days -4 days -15 days
PR card renewal 26 days -1 day -5 days

PR card turnaround continues to be one of the strongest performers in the entire IRCC system.

Since February, new PR card processing has shaved off 15 days, making this one of the few categories where improvement has been both consistent and substantial across multiple months.

These processing times are updated on a weekly basis and will be refreshed once IRCC publishes its next round of figures.

Category People Waiting (Change) Processing Time (April 7, 2026) Change Since March 2026
Spouse/common-law outside Canada (non-Quebec) ~49,200 (+1,000) 15 months No change
Spouse/common law outside Canada (Quebec) ~18,700 (-200) 32 months -3 months
Spouse/common-law inside Canada (non-Quebec) ~53,900 (+1,500) 24 months +3 months
Spouse/common law inside Canada (Quebec) ~12,700 (+400) 31 months -5 months
Parents/grandparents (non-Quebec) ~44,900 (-1,700) 34 months No change
Parents/grandparents (Quebec) ~11,200 (-500) 67 months +21 months

Compared to February’s 35 months, this stream has shed three months of processing time.

This is a notable jump from the 21 months reported in both February and March.

Inside Canada, Quebec spousal sponsorship delivered the best news in the family class, plunging five months to 31 months from 36 months in March.

Compared to February’s 35 months, that represents a four-month improvement.

The Quebec parents and grandparents stream, however, produced the single most alarming figure in the entire April dataset.

Processing rocketed from 46 months in March to 67 months in April—a 21 month increase in one reporting cycle.

To put that in perspective, this stream sat at 47 months as recently as February.

Category People Waiting (Change) Processing Time (April 7, 2026) Change Since March 2026
H&C outside Quebec ~51,800 (+1,300) More than 10 years No change
H&C in Quebec ~18,700 (+200) More than 10 years No change
Protected persons inside Canada (outside Quebec) ~103,700 (+2,900) About 16 months No change
Protected persons inside Canada (in Quebec) ~38,000 (+900) About 114 months +2 months
Dependents of protected persons (outside Quebec) ~58,100 (+1,100) About 32 months -7 months
Dependents of protected persons (in Quebec) ~21,200 (+100) More than 10 years No change

This group of categories continues to represent the most severe bottleneck in the Canadian immigration pipeline.

The most positive movement came from dependents of protected persons outside Quebec, where processing fell by seven months to about 32 months.

Since February, when this stream sat at 37 months, the reduction totals five months. The queue grew by 1,100 to about 58,100 despite the faster processing.

Application Type Current Processing Time Change Since March 2026
New passport (in person, Canada) 10 business days No change
New passport (mail, Canada) 20 business days No change
Urgent pickup Next business day No change
Express pickup 2–9 business days No change
Passport mailed from outside Canada 20 business days No change

Passport services continue their streak of absolute reliability.

Key takeaway: Passport services remain rock solid and are easily the most dependable segment of IRCC’s operation.

Category People Waiting (Change) Processing Time (April 7, 2026) Change Since March 2026
Canadian Experience Class (CEC) ~54,600 (+10,300) 7 months No change
Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP) ~44,100 (-1,200) 6 months -1 month
Federal Skilled Trades Program (FSTP) Not available Not enough data No change
PNP (Express Entry) ~13,700 (+700) 7 months No change
Non-Express Entry PNP ~108,100 (+100) 13 months No change
Quebec Skilled Worker (QSW) ~25,700 (-1,200) 11 months No change
Quebec Business Class ~3,800 (-100) 78 months -2 months
Federal Self-Employed ~8,100 (No change) More than 10 years No change
Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP) ~13,200 (-300) 40 months +7 months
Startup Up Visa ~46,200 (+300) More than 10 years No change

Canada’s economic immigration pathways show a largely frozen picture in April 2026, but the underlying queue dynamics tell a more complex story.

Since February, the CEC queue has added over 20,400 people — an extraordinary surge that has not yet translated into longer processing times but almost certainly will if the trend continues.

The Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP) is the bright spot in this section, dropping to six months from seven—its first improvement since early 2025.

The Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP) took a sharp turn in the wrong direction, jumping seven months to 40 months from 33 months in March.

The AIP had been stable at 33 months since at least February, making this sudden spike a significant development for applicants in that stream.

The temporary visa landscape for April 2026 spans visitor visas, super visas, study permits, and work permits across the five most commonly tracked countries of origin.

Because these figures refresh weekly rather than monthly, they offer a more granular view of how rapidly conditions are shifting.

These processing times are updated on a weekly basis and will be refreshed once IRCC publishes its next round of figures.

Visitor Visas From Outside Canada

Country Processing Time
(April 15, 2026)
Change Since
March 31
Change Since
January 28, 2026
India 23 days -14 days -59 days
United States 18 days +2 days -7 days
Nigeria 42 days -9 days +2 days
Pakistan 43 days +1 day -13 days
Philippines 15 days +1 day -1 day
  • Visitor visa inside Canada: 10 days (-1 day since March 31 and -4 days since Dec 31, 2025)
  • Visitor record extension: 325 days (+19 days since March 31 and +164 days Since January 28, 2026)

Anyone planning to extend their visitor status should file well in advance to preserve implied status while IRCC adjudicates the request.

Super Visa Processing Times

Country Processing Time
(April 15, 2026)
Change Since
March 31
Change Since
January 28, 2026
India 182 days -9 days -32 days
United States 164 days -14 days -23 days
Nigeria 39 days -4 days +1 day
Pakistan 107 days -19 days -17 days
Philippines 37 days -13 days -72 days

Study Permit Processing Times

Most countries held steady on study permit timelines this week, but one glaring exception dominates this category.

Country Processing Time
(April 15, 2026)
Change Since
March 31
Change Since January 28, 2026
India 3 weeks No change -1 week
United States 4 weeks No change -3 weeks
Nigeria 7 weeks No change No change
Pakistan 12 weeks +1 week +7 weeks
Philippines 5 weeks No change No change
  • Study permit inside Canada: 8 weeks (+1 week since March 31)
  • Study permit extension: 97 days (+2 days since March 31, but -7 days Since January 28, 2026)

Work Permit Processing Times

The work permit picture is largely calm, though a pair of sharp outliers demand attention.

Country Processing Time
(April 15, 2026)
Change Since
March 31
Change Since
January 28, 2026
India 8 weeks +1 week No change
United States 7 weeks -1 week -3 weeks
Nigeria 13 weeks No change +4 weeks
Pakistan 16 weeks -10 weeks -4 weeks
Philippines 7 weeks No change +1 week
  • Work permits inside Canada including extensions: 240 days (-13 days since March 31, -1 day since January 28, 2026, but +30 days since Dec 31, 2025)
  • Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program: 7 days (No change since last week and -3 days since Dec 31)
  • International Experience Canada (IEC): 4 weeks (+1 week since March 31, but -2 weeks since Dec 31, 2025)
  • Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA): 5 minutes for most applicants; up to 72 hours for additional screening

The April 2026 IRCC processing times capture a system pulling in multiple directions at once.

Citizenship is firmly on the mend with faster processing and a shrinking queue for the first time this year.

Indian visitor visas have been halved since February. PR cards and the Federal Skilled Worker Program are both trending positively.

But Quebec parents’ and grandparents’ sponsorship has spiralled to 67 months, the Atlantic Immigration Program jumped seven months, the CEC queue continues to swell at an unsustainable pace, and visitor record extensions are closing in on 300 days.

Applicants should track these updates closely, submit complete documentation at the earliest opportunity, and consult qualified professionals when navigating complex or time-sensitive situations.

For the latest developments on Canadian immigration news, evolving policy landscapes, and IRCC processing times, save this page and return regularly as new weekly and monthly data drops throughout 2026.

Why did Quebec parents’ and grandparents’ sponsorship jump from 46 to 67 months in one update?

A 21 month increase in a single reporting cycle typically signals a change in how IRCC calculates or assigns processing estimates for that specific stream rather than a sudden slowdown in officer output. Quebec sponsorship applications go through a two-stage process involving both the provincial government and IRCC, and a policy or procedural adjustment at either level can cause the published estimate to recalibrate sharply. Applicants already in the queue should not assume their individual case has been pushed back by 21 months. The published figure reflects the 80th percentile of completed cases, which can shift significantly when a batch of older cases skews the data.

How accurate are IRCC processing time estimates for planning purposes?

IRCC processing times represent the window within which 80 percent of applicants in that category received a decision. That means roughly one in five applicants will wait longer than the stated estimate. Accuracy also varies by category. Stable streams like passport services and PR cards tend to be highly predictable, while categories experiencing rapid queue growth or policy changes can see estimates shift dramatically from one month to the next. Applicants should treat the published figures as directional guidance and build a buffer of several weeks or months into their personal planning timelines.

Can I withdraw my IRCC application and reapply under a faster stream?

Yes, you can withdraw a pending IRCC application at any time by submitting a withdrawal request through your online account or via the IRCC web form. However, application fees are generally not refundable after processing has begun, and withdrawing does not guarantee eligibility for a different stream. Before withdrawing, confirm that you meet all requirements for the alternative pathway and that the expected processing time would genuinely improve your situation. Consulting a regulated immigration professional is advisable before making this decision, as withdrawing and reapplying resets your queue position entirely.

Does applying online versus paper affect how fast IRCC processes my application?

Online applications are generally processed faster than paper submissions. Digital applications enter the IRCC system immediately upon submission, whereas paper applications must be physically received, opened, scanned, and manually entered into the processing system before review can begin. IRCC has also increasingly prioritized digital workflows and automated preliminary checks for online submissions. For categories that accept both formats, choosing the online route can save days or even weeks at the intake stage alone.

What should I do if my IRCC application has been processing longer than the published estimate?

If your application has exceeded the published processing time, you can submit a case inquiry through the IRCC web form to request a status update. IRCC generally only accepts inquiries after the published estimate has passed. Before contacting IRCC, check your online portal to ensure there are no outstanding document requests or messages you may have missed. If the delay is significant and causing hardship, a regulated immigration consultant or lawyer can submit a formal inquiry on your behalf and, in some cases, escalate the matter through the appropriate channels.



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