Updated IRCC Processing Times for April 2026

Updated IRCC Processing Times for April 2026

IRCC published its processing time update for April 7, 2026, and this month’s report shows a very clear pattern of extremes.

 

The time required to process citizenship applications is shorter now than any time since late 2025, and the queue size is finally decreasing this month for citizenship.

 

However, parent and grandparent sponsorships from Quebec saw a massive jump of 21 months, and visitor record renewals went above 299 days.

 

In this IRCC processing times update of April 7, 2026, every program was included, including all work permit programs, family sponsorships, and economic immigrant streams.

 

IRCC uses actual processing times of applications, not departmental goals or internal expectations, to publish these estimates.

 

The window used is the timeframe between when 20 and 80 percent of applicants had their cases processed and decided upon.

 

Permanent residency and citizenship programs see monthly updates, while temporary resident application types are updated weekly – including visit visas, work permits, study permits, and PR Cards.

 

Of course, individual results may be affected depending on factors such as screening requirements, origin, documentation, background checks, and processing time limits at IRCC.

 

Below are complete processing time estimates for each application type in the April 2026 update.

Biggest Moves In Last 2 Months

To begin, let’s consider what changes have happened in the past two months, which are worth noting before looking at the complete set of data for the period under consideration.

CategoryFebruary 2026April 2026Net Change
Citizenship grant14 months12 months-2 months
Citizenship grant queue~313,000~313,200Flat (now shrinking)
Parents/grandparents (Quebec)47 months67 months+20 months
Spouse inside Canada (non-Quebec)21 months24 months+3 months
Spouse inside Canada (Quebec)35 months31 months-4 months
Atlantic Immigration Program33 months40 months+7 months
Federal Skilled Worker (FSWP)7 months6 months-1 month
CEC queue size~34,200~54,600+20,400 applicants
Visitor visa (India)78 days28 days-50 days
Visitor record extension209 days306 days+97 days
New PR card61 days51 days-10 days
Work permits inside Canada246 days253 days+7 days

From comparing two months, we can see several clear trends:

 

Citizenship processing has definitely improved; for the first time in 2026, its queue has decreased.

 

Quebec parents’ and grandparents’ sponsorship processing experienced a 20-month peak in 2026, marking the highest increase among permanent residence categories and needing special attention for future months.

 

The Indian visitor visa processing underwent an unexpected adjustment, declining from 78 days in February to 37 days in April.

 

Finally, visitor record extension processing shows a frightening rise, increasing by 90 days over two months and reaching the 300 day level.

 

CEC processing has been consistently stable, yet the number of applicants increased by more than 20,000 over two months.

 

Citizenship Processing Times (Updated monthly)

Citizenship is the most positive category with consistent progress updates in the April 2026 report card.

Application TypePeople 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 monthsNo change
Resumption of citizenshipNot availableNot enough dataNo change
Renunciation of citizenshipNot available10 monthsNo change
Search of citizenship recordsNot available17 monthsNo change

In the current date when this report is written, Citizenship Visa Applications submitted around October 22, 2025, are getting acknowledgement of receipt (AOR) notifications from IRCC.

 

* Citizenship visa applicants living outside Canada or America will have to wait longer for approval.

 

Permanent Resident Card Processing Times (Updated weekly)

The PR Card processing time remains one of the top-performing streams within the IRCC system.

Application TypeProcessing Time (March 31, 2026)Change Since Previous WeekChange Since January 21
New PR card51 days-2 days-11 days
PR card renewal27 daysNo change-4 days

For the month of February, there has been an additional reduction of 10 days for processing PR Cards, becoming one of the few streams that have experienced continuous progress for a number of months.

 

The statistics provided below have been revised every week, until new data is published by IRCC.

 

Family Sponsorship Processing Times (Updated monthly)

CategoryPeople Waiting (Change)Processing Time (April 7, 2026)Change Since March 2026
Spouse/common-law outside Canada (non-Quebec)~49,200 (+1,000)15 monthsNo 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 monthsNo change
Parents/grandparents (Quebec)~11,200 (-500)67 months+21 months

That’s a dramatic decrease from 35 months recorded in February.

 

This is an impressive increase from 21 months recorded in February and March.

 

Within Canada, the fastest process was the Quebec spousal sponsorship under the family class category, recording five months less time at 31 months compared to 36 months in March.

 

Compared to February, where the number of months was 35, this is a four-month improvement.

 

On the other hand, the Quebec parents and grandparents stream came up with the most surprising statistics for April.

 

The number of months jumped from 46 months in March to 67 months in April—an increase of 21 months in one reporting period.

 

As a point of comparison, this stream only took 47 months in February.

 

Humanitarian and Compassionate And Protected Persons (Updated monthly)

CategoryPeople Waiting (Change)Processing Time (April 7, 2026)Change Since March 2026
H&C outside Quebec~51,800 (+1,300)More than 10 yearsNo change
H&C in Quebec~18,700 (+200)More than 10 yearsNo change
Protected persons inside Canada (outside Quebec)~103,700 (+2,900)About 16 monthsNo 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 yearsNo change

These sets of categories continue to be the major chokepoint in the Canadian immigration process.

 

The best improvement was recorded in the dependents of protected persons not in Quebec, with processing times reduced by seven months to average 32 months.

 

From the beginning of February, when processing took 37 months, a total of five months have been trimmed off. This category has increased by 1,100, totaling 58,100 applicants.

 

Canadian Passport Processing Times

Application TypeCurrent Processing TimeChange Since March 2026
New passport (in person, Canada)10 business daysNo change
New passport (mail, Canada)20 business daysNo change
Urgent pickupNext business dayNo change
Express pickup2–9 business daysNo change
Passport mailed from outside Canada20 business daysNo 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.

 

Permanent Residency Processing Times (Updated monthly)

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

The immigration streams for economic immigrants in Canada appear quite static by April 2026; however, there are still some interesting developments taking place beneath the surface.

 

For one, the number of people added to the queue for the CEC has exceeded 20,400 since February, which can only be described as phenomenal, without having led to an increase in the time taken to process cases thus far.

 

The sole bright side in this area, on the other hand, comes from the FSWP, with its time frame decreasing from seven to six months, marking the first such change since early 2025.

 

Lastly, it should be mentioned that the AIP experienced a massive drop off, rising from 33 months in March to an astounding 40 months.

 

Temporary Visa Processing Times (Updated weekly)

The temporary visa process during April 2026 includes visitor visas, super visas, study permits, and work permits for the five most frequently observed countries of origin.

 

As these numbers are revised on a weekly, not monthly basis, it becomes possible to see just how quickly conditions change.

 

The processing times provided below are updated on a weekly basis until IRCC provides their next set of statistics.

 

Visitor Visas From Outside Canada

CountryProcessing Time (March 31, 2026)Change Since Last WeekChange Since January 28, 2026
India28 days-9 days-54 days
United States16 days+1 day-9 days
Nigeria51 days-1 day+11 days
Pakistan42 days-6 days-14 days
Philippines14 daysNo change-2 days
  • Visitor visa inside Canada: 11 days (-1 day since last week and -3 days since Dec 31, 2025)
  • Visitor record extension: 306 days (+7 days since last week and +145 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

CountryProcessing Time (March 31, 2026)Change Since Last WeekChange Since January 28, 2026
India191 days-11 days-23 days
United States178 days-7 days-9 days
Nigeria43 daysNo change+5 days
Pakistan126 days+4 days+2 days
Philippines50 daysNo change-59 days

Study Permit Processing Times

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

 

CountryProcessing Time (March 31, 2026)Change Since Last WeekChange Since January 28, 2026
India3 weeks-1 week-1 week
United States4 weeks-1 week-3 weeks
Nigeria7 weeks-1 weekNo change
Pakistan11 weeksNo change+6 weeks
Philippines5 weeksNo changeNo change

 

  • Study permit inside Canada: 7 weeks (-1 week since last week, but no change Since January 28, 2026)
  • Study permit extension: 95 days (No change since last week, but -9 days Since January 28, 2026)

Work Permit Processing Times

The work permit outlook is relatively quiet, although a couple of extremely sharp outliers deserve special mention.

CountryProcessing Time (March 31, 2026)Change Since Last WeekChange Since January 28, 2026
India7 weeksNo change-1 week
United States8 weeksNo change-2 weeks
Nigeria13 weeksNo change+4 weeks
Pakistan26 weeks-3 weeks+6 weeks
Philippines7 weeksNo change+1 week
  • Work permits inside Canada including extensions: 253 days (-2 days since last week, +12 days since January 28, 2026, and +43 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): 3 weeks (No change since last week, but -3 weeks since Dec 31, 2025)
  • Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA): 5 minutes for most applicants; up to 72 hours for additional screening

April 2026 processing times for IRCC reflect a process that is being pulled in different directions at the same time.

 

Citizenship seems to be back on track with reduced processing times and shorter queues – the first such occurrence this year.

 

Indian visit visas have been cut by half from February. PR cards and FSW program application processing times have both improved recently.

 

However, Quebec parent and grandparent sponsorships have skyrocketed to 67 months, the Atlantic immigration program rose by seven months, the CEC queue is growing rapidly in unsustainable numbers, and visit visa extensions are approaching 300 days.

 

It would be best for applicants to keep track of these developments and provide all necessary information as soon as possible.

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