
IRCC May Processing-Time Update: Express Entry and PNP Wait Times Climb Again, While AIP and Citizenship Renunciation Ease
On May 12, 2026, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) released its updated official processing times for permanent residence and citizenship applications, revealing a split picture in which most economic and citizenship streams lengthened while several family sponsorship and Atlantic categories eased. Under Express Entry, the Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP) climbed from six to seven months and the base Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) stretched from 13 to 14 months, with the Canadian Experience Class (CEC) inventory rising by 6,300 in a single month and the base PNP backlog growing by 2,100 — a continuation of the trend that has added more than 20,000 cases to the CEC queue since February 2026. At the same time, the Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP) eased from 40 to 38 months, the Parents and Grandparents Program (PGP) shortened by one month for both inside-Quebec and outside-Quebec applicants, and citizenship renunciation dropped sharply by three months to seven; however, citizenship grants reversed several months of acceleration, climbing from 12 to 13 months as the inventory grew by 7,900 to 321,100 applications, while Quebec's Business Class, the Start-Up Visa and the federal Self-Employed Persons Program all remained stuck at "more than 10 years" or 78 months.
05/13/2026

Canada Issues 380 ITAs to Provincial Nominees in First Express Entry Draw of May, CRS Cut-Off Climbs to 798
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) held its 27th Express Entry draw of 2026 — and the first of May — on May 11, issuing 380 invitations to apply (ITAs) to Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) candidates with a minimum Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score of 798, while requiring eligible profiles to have been created before 5:23 a.m. UTC on January 7, 2026. The round is the tenth PNP-specific draw of the year, and compared with the April 27 PNP draw of 473 ITAs at a 795 cut-off, this round saw the invitation pool shrink by roughly 20% and the score threshold rise for a second consecutive round. Against the broader backdrop of the Carney government's 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan — which raised the federal PNP allocation from 55,000 in 2025 to 91,500 in 2026, the largest single-year PNP increase in Canadian history — provincial nominee rounds have nevertheless retained a "high cut-off, small batch, steady cadence" profile. So far in 2026, IRCC has issued a total of 72,007 ITAs across all categories, with Canadian Experience Class (CEC) and French-language candidates continuing to dominate this year's invitations.
05/12/2026

Canada Sets July 15 Launch for Sweeping Overhaul of Immigration Consultant Regulation, with First-Ever Compensation Fund for Victims
Canada's federal government announced on May 6, 2026 that a sweeping overhaul of the regulatory framework governing the College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants (CICC) will come into force on July 15, 2026 — the most significant regulatory upgrade since the CICC succeeded the Immigration Consultants of Canada Regulatory Council (ICCRC) on November 23, 2021. The new rules give the College stronger disciplinary teeth, allow the federal government to step in and take over the College's board if it fails to protect the public, and establish, for the first time, a dedicated compensation fund to provide redress to clients who suffer financial losses because a CICC-licensed consultant engaged in theft, fraud, misappropriation of funds, misrepresentation, or refusal to cooperate with professional liability insurance; at the same time, the College's public register will be expanded with additional disclosures about each licensee, making it easier for the public to verify a consultant's licensing status, good standing, and disciplinary history — and squeezing the operating space of so-called "ghost consultants."
05/08/2026

Canada Activates Fast-Track TR-to-PR Channel: 33,000 Rural Temporary Workers to Get Phased PR Approvals
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) on May 4, 2026 released the long-awaited eligibility details for its In-Canada Workers Initiative — better known as the TR-to-PR pathway — confirming that the one-time program will fast-track permanent residence (PR) applications for up to 33,000 temporary workers already in Canada over 2026 and 2027, prioritizing those who have already filed PR applications under one of six streams (the Provincial Nominee Program, the Atlantic Immigration Program, the Rural Community Immigration Pilot, the Francophone Community Immigration Pilot, the Caregiver pilots, and the Agri-Food Pilot) and who have lived in a smaller community for at least two years; IRCC will identify eligible applicants directly from existing inventories without requiring any action from candidates, and as of the end of February 2026 it had already granted PR to 3,600 workers under the initiative — 18% of this year's at-least-20,000 target — with the remaining roughly 13,000 spots expected to be processed within 2026 and the balance pushed into 2027, in line with Ottawa's broader objective of cutting Canada's temporary resident population to under 5% of the national total by the end of 2027 and complementing the rural low-wage Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) flexibilities that took effect on April 1, 2026, together cementing a clear policy tilt toward rural communities and away from major urban centres.
05/05/2026

Canada Eases In-Canada Status Restoration Rules: Out-of-Status Workers and Students Can Now Apply to Stay as Visitors
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) on May 1, 2026, updated the operational instructions issued to immigration officers, formally expanding the scope of in-Canada restoration of status: temporary residents who have lost their worker or student status may now apply to be restored directly as visitors, instead of being effectively forced to leave Canada and re-enter as visitors as was generally the case under the previous guidance; applicants must still file within 90 days of losing status, remain in Canada while their application is processed, and immediately stop any activities that depended on the work or study authorization they no longer hold; the change comes at a moment when Canada's temporary resident population is contracting sharply — falling from roughly 3.149 million on October 1, 2024 to about 2.676 million on January 1, 2026, with more than 314,000 work permits set to expire in the first quarter of 2026 alone — and is widely viewed as a softer in-country bridge for workers and international graduates who cannot immediately secure a new work permit or a permanent residence pathway.
05/02/2026

IRCC Issues 4,000 ITAs to French-Speaking Candidates in Third Express Entry Draw of the Week
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) held a category-based Express Entry draw on April 29, 2026, issuing 4,000 invitations to apply (ITAs) to candidates in the French-language proficiency stream with a minimum Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score of 400 and a tie-breaking date of April 7, 2026 at 20:13:59 UTC. The round marks the fifth French-language draw of 2026 and the twenty-sixth Express Entry selection of the year overall, capping a week in which IRCC ran three back-to-back draws. Set against Ottawa's commitment to lift Francophone permanent residence outside Quebec to 9 percent of admissions in 2026 — and a freshly reserved pool of 5,000 federal spaces for French-speaking candidates — the French-language category has become, despite a comparatively low frequency of draws, the second-largest source of ITAs this year, trailing only the Canadian Experience Class (CEC); IRCC has now issued 71,627 ITAs in 2026, with the bulk going to in-Canada candidates holding provincial nominations or domestic work experience.
04/30/2026

IRCC Issues 2,000 CEC Invitations in Express Entry Draw, CRS Cut-Off Holds at 514
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) closed out April with another targeted Express Entry draw on April 28, 2026, issuing 2,000 Invitations to Apply (ITAs) to candidates in the Canadian Experience Class (CEC) at a Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) cut-off of 514. This marks the ninth CEC-specific round of 2026 and the 25th overall Express Entry draw of the year, lifting the year-to-date ITA total to 67,627 — of which CEC alone accounts for 34,250. With CEC and French-language draws together making up more than 80% of all 2026 ITAs and all-program draws absent from this year's calendar, the latest round reinforces Ottawa's broader strategy under the 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan: prioritising candidates already working in Canada or selected through provincial nominations, and channelling more of the country's annual 380,000 permanent resident admissions toward "in-Canada" applicants.
04/29/2026

Canada Issues 473 ITAs to Provincial Nominees in April 27 Express Entry Draw, CRS Cut-Off at 795
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) held a new Express Entry round on April 27, 2026, issuing 473 invitations to apply (ITAs) to candidates already holding a provincial nomination, with a minimum Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score of 795 and a profile-creation cut-off of 11:11 p.m. UTC on April 13, 2026. This was the 23rd Express Entry selection of 2026, bringing the year's total to 65,627 ITAs, with Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) draws now numbering nine — the highest count of any draw type — and continuing to share top billing with the Canadian Experience Class (CEC). Read alongside Ottawa's 2026 Immigration Levels Plan, which lifts the PNP target from roughly 55,000 in 2025 to 91,500, the latest round further confirms IRCC's broader strategy of prioritizing in-Canada candidates with provincial nominations and Canadian work experience.
04/28/2026

Canada's New TR-to-PR Pathway Shuts Out Every Major Urban Centre as Minister Confirms Full CMA Exclusion
Canada's Immigration Minister Lena Diab has confirmed that the federal government's new Temporary Resident to Permanent Resident (TR to PR) Pathway will exclude every one of Canada's 41 Census Metropolitan Areas (CMAs), meaning temporary foreign workers currently employed in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, Calgary, Ottawa and other major urban centres will be shut out of the one-time program that is set to grant permanent residence to 33,000 rural and small-community workers over 2026 and 2027; speaking on the April 18, 2026 edition of the immigration show "I'm Canada," Diab said the full selection criteria — including work-experience duration and occupational scope — will be released "in the coming weeks," though she indicated applicants may need close to two years of Canadian work experience and that the pathway is unlikely to be sector-restricted; the CMA carve-out aligns with a broader federal push toward rural immigration, including temporary Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) flexibilities that took effect April 1, 2026 for rural employers outside CMAs and that have so far been adopted by Nova Scotia, Quebec, and Manitoba, together pointing to a coordinated policy shift that concentrates permanent-residence pipelines in smaller communities while tightening them in Canada's largest cities.
04/24/2026

International Student Population in Canada Falls by More Than 200,000 Over Two Years as Study Permit Caps Take Effect
Canada's population of international students holding only a study permit has dropped sharply over the past two years, signalling a clear structural shift in federal immigration policy. According to the latest data from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), the number of study-permit-only holders fell from 673,920 in December 2023 to 460,695 in January 2026, a net reduction of more than 210,000 people, or over 30 percent. The decline became visible from mid-2024, accelerated sharply between March and July 2025, and has remained consistently below 500,000 since late 2025. Analysts broadly attribute the drop to Ottawa's systematic effort to cap international student volumes — a policy first introduced under Justin Trudeau's government in January 2024 and since extended and tightened under Prime Minister Mark Carney, whose 2025 budget slashed the 2026 new study permit allocation from 305,900 to 155,000 (a 49 percent cut), alongside stricter eligibility rules, tougher scrutiny of designated learning institutions (DLIs) and explicit links between intake and housing and labour market capacity. Observers say this is not a short-term correction but a structural turning point that will reshape tuition revenues at Canadian post-secondary institutions, the future pool of permanent resident candidates and housing demand in major cities.
04/17/2026