Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has released its latest update on temporary resident processing times, showing mixed but important shifts across work permits, study permits, visitor visas, and super visas between April 29 and May 6, 2026.
Overall, the update highlights small improvements in several categories, while a few regions experienced moderate delays due to IRCC’s ongoing adjustments in application volumes and processing capacity.
Work Permits: Slight Improvements in Key Countries
Work permit processing times improved slightly for some applicants:
- Nigeria and United States: reduced by 1 week
- Philippines: increased by 1 week
- Canada-based applications: improved from 217 to 212 days
- India and Pakistan: remained stable
While changes are minor, they show gradual movement rather than major shifts in backlog.
Study Permits: Mixed Results Across Countries
Study permit processing saw both gains and delays:
- Canada: improved significantly from 8 weeks to 6 weeks
- United States: improved by 1 week
- Pakistan: increased to 11 weeks (from 9 weeks)
- Philippines: slightly longer processing
- India and Nigeria: remained stable
Canada-based applications saw the most notable improvement in this category.
Visitor Visas: Mostly Stable Processing
Visitor visa processing times remained largely steady:
- Minor increases of 1–2 days for some countries
- No major changes overall
- India (27 days), USA (22 days), Canada (11 days) remained stable
This suggests consistency in visitor visa processing demand.
Super Visas: Noticeable Improvements in Some Regions
Super visa processing showed the strongest positive movement:
- United States: improved by 12 days
- Nigeria and the Philippines: slight improvements
- India: slower by 8 days
- Pakistan: slight improvement
Despite fluctuations, most regions benefited from reduced wait times.
Processing Times vs Service Standards
IRCC emphasizes an important distinction:
Processing times reflect real-world estimates based on current application volumes and backlog trends. These are updated frequently and vary by country and application type.
Service standards, on the other hand, are internal targets-typically aiming to finalize 80% of applications within a set timeframe (e.g., 60 days for outside-Canada applications, 120 days for in-Canada work permits).
While processing times can fluctuate weekly, service standards remain relatively stable and are updated less often.
Conclusion
The latest IRCC update shows a stable but uneven processing environment for temporary residents. Some categories, especially Canada-based study permits and super visas-show meaningful improvements, while others reflect slight delays depending on region.
Overall, the system continues to adjust to changing application volumes, with no major disruptions reported.


