
The May 12 update is an important window into how IRCC is currently managing its inventory. Compared with the previous April 7 release, several core economic categories saw clear increases in wait times, while a handful of family sponsorship streams posted long-awaited declines. Notably, the April update had marked the first FSWP improvement in 15 months and what one outlet called the fastest pace for citizenship grants since late 2025 — both of which have now reversed. The pattern is a useful reminder that IRCC's posted processing times are a backward-looking statistic, calculated from cases recently completed rather than forecasting where applications will land in the months ahead.
Economic immigration: only AIP shortens, all others flat or longer
Express Entry
After dipping for the first time in months, FSWP returned to seven months and is now level with CEC. CEC itself held at seven months, but its inventory continued to climb noticeably: 60,900 applications are now awaiting assessment, an increase of 6,300 in a single month, while FSWP's queue rose by 7,900 to 52,000. Industry tracking from immigration analysts shows the CEC backlog has now grown by more than 20,000 cases since February 2026, with this update extending that trend. IRCC continues to withhold a published processing-time estimate for the Federal Skilled Trades Program (FSTP) due to insufficient data.
| Application type | Current (May 12) | Previous (April 7) |
|---|---|---|
| Canadian Experience Class (CEC) | 7 months | 7 months |
| Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP) | 7 months | 6 months |
| Federal Skilled Trades Program (FSTP)* | N/A | N/A |
*IRCC does not publish FSTP processing-time estimates. The service standard for all Express Entry applications is six months.
Provincial Nominee Program (PNP)
The enhanced PNP stream, processed through Express Entry, held at seven months with an inventory of 14,000 (up by 300). The base PNP stream lengthened from 13 to 14 months, with the inventory reaching 110,200 applications (up by 2,100). The official service standard is six months for enhanced and 11 months for base applications, meaning base PNP wait times now exceed the standard by roughly 27% — one of the widest standard-versus-reality gaps in the economic suite.
| Application type | Current (May 12) | Previous (April 7) |
|---|---|---|
| Through Express Entry (enhanced) | 7 months | 7 months |
| Non-Express Entry (base) | 14 months | 13 months |
Quebec immigration
Wait times for the Quebec Skilled Worker Selection Program (PSTQ) and the Quebec Business Class were unchanged at 11 months and 78 months, respectively. PSTQ inventory dropped by 900 to 24,800, while the Quebec Business Class fell by 100 to 3,700, making this one of the few sets of streams where both backlog and wait times moved in stable territory.
| Application type | Current (May 12) | Previous (April 7) |
|---|---|---|
| Quebec Skilled Worker Selection Program (PSTQ) | 11 months | 11 months |
| Quebec Business Class | 78 months | 78 months |
Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP)
AIP wait times eased from 40 to 38 months, with inventory falling by 300 to 12,900. While a two-month drop in a single update is a rare bright spot, it must be read in a longer context: the previous April update had seen AIP jump seven months from 33 to 40, so this release is closer to a partial correction than a turning point. AIP wait times remain 27 months above IRCC's 11-month service standard. Several immigration practitioners have argued that sharp swings in AIP estimates often reflect IRCC's periodic clearance of older, complex backlog files rather than meaningful improvements for new applicants.
Other economic programs
The federal Start-Up Visa and the Self-Employed Persons Program both remained at "more than 10 years," extending a streak of unchanged readings across multiple updates. The Start-Up Visa inventory eased slightly to 46,000 (down by 200), while the Self-Employed Persons inventory held steady at 8,100. Neither program publishes a service standard, and both have long been viewed within the industry as effectively paused intake channels.
Family sponsorship: outside-Quebec spousal wait times broadly longer, PGP eases across the board
| Application type | Current (May 12) | Previous (April 7) |
|---|---|---|
| Spouse or common-law partner (inside Canada) | Outside Quebec: 25 months; in Quebec: 31 months | Outside Quebec: 24 months; in Quebec: 31 months |
| Spouse or common-law partner (outside Canada) | Outside Quebec: 16 months; in Quebec: 32 months | Outside Quebec: 15 months; in Quebec: 32 months |
| Parents and Grandparents Program (PGP) | Outside Quebec: 33 months; in Quebec: 66 months | Outside Quebec: 34 months; in Quebec: 67 months |
For spousal sponsorship, every "to reside outside Quebec" sub-category lengthened by one month, while every "to reside in Quebec" sub-category was unchanged. The inside-Canada spousal queue (outside Quebec) reached 55,200 (up by 1,300) and the inside-Canada Quebec queue rose to 13,100 (up by 400); the outside-Canada outside-Quebec queue grew to 51,300 (up by 2,100), while the outside-Canada Quebec queue eased slightly by 100 to 18,600. The IRCC service standard for outside-Quebec spousal sponsorship is 12 months, meaning even the fastest outside-Canada channel (16 months) now sits four months over the standard, and the slowest inside-Canada channel (25 months) is more than a year above it.
PGP was the only family-sponsorship category to drop across the board: outside-Quebec wait times fell from 34 to 33 months, in-Quebec from 67 to 66 months, with the outside-Quebec inventory falling by 1,400 to 43,500 and the in-Quebec inventory falling by 200 to 11,000. Crucially, however, the program remains closed to new intake. Under the March 13, 2025 Ministerial Instructions, IRCC will only process PGP sponsorship applications received in 2025 throughout 2026, with a cap of 10,000 applications, and no new interest-to-sponsor window has been opened. The shorter wait time therefore coexists with a closed front door — IRCC continues to recommend the Super Visa as the primary alternative for parents and grandparents.
Citizenship: grants reverse course, renunciation drops sharply
Citizenship grants moved from 12 to 13 months, breaking a multi-month acceleration trend. VisaHQ's coverage of the April update had described grants as running at their fastest pace since late 2025. The May data show the inventory rising further to 321,100, an increase of 7,900 in a single month, against a 12-month service standard. In other words, the queue is still growing faster than the backlog is being worked down, and the processing-time estimate has lengthened accordingly.
Citizenship renunciation applications fell sharply from 10 to seven months — the largest single drop in this update — while citizenship records searches were unchanged at 17 months.
| Application type | Current (May 12) | Previous (April 7) |
|---|---|---|
| Citizenship grant | 13 months | 12 months |
| Renunciation of citizenship | 7 months | 10 months |
| Search of citizenship records | 17 months | 17 months |
What it means for applicants
Taken together, the May 12 readings suggest that prospective and pending Express Entry and base PNP applicants should reset expectations to seven months and 14 months respectively, and pay close attention to submitting complete documentation up front to avoid the secondary delays caused by additional information requests. AIP and PGP applicants benefited modestly this round, but absolute wait times remain measured in years, and they should plan in parallel for temporary status renewals and family-reunification alternatives. Citizenship applicants in queue should note that the inventory continues to grow faster than it can be processed, and that movement of one or two months between updates is well within the normal range.









