Immigration Announcement
Canada Refugee Claim Backlog Reaches 300,000 as System Pressures Intensify
Canada refugee determination system is facing mounting pressure as pending refugee protection claims crossed a major threshold at the end of 2025. According to new data from the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, the number of unresolved refugee protection claims reached 300,163 in December, highlighting the growing gap between new intake and case resolution.
Despite steady monthly processing, the volume of incoming claims continues to exceed finalizations, pushing the backlog to its highest recorded level.
Refugee Claims Continue to Outpace Decisions
In December 2025 alone, the Refugee Protection Division finalized 6,724 claims. However, 7,397 new claims were referred during the same month. This pattern has repeated throughout the year, resulting in steady backlog growth.
The accumulation reflects both sustained global displacement pressures and the limits of Canada’s processing capacity. While decision-making has increased compared with earlier years, it has not kept pace with intake.
Appeals Add Another Layer of Complexity
Beyond initial claims, Canada’s refugee appeals system is also under strain. By December 2025, pending refugee appeals reached 4,665, up significantly from 3,303 at the beginning of 2024.
Appeals often involve complex legal and evidentiary issues, requiring careful review. While essential for procedural fairness, rising appeal volumes further stretch adjudicative resources.
Immigration appeals unrelated to refugee protection show similar trends. Non-stayed pending immigration appeals climbed to 2,550 by year-end, underscoring broader system-wide congestion.
Why the Backlog Keeps Growing
Several factors are contributing to the rising backlog:
- Continued high intake of refugee claims
- Resource constraints across adjudicative divisions
- Case complexity, including re-determinations ordered by courts
- Procedural safeguards that limit rapid decision-making
While these safeguards protect claimants’ rights, they also lengthen processing times when volumes remain elevated.
Impact on Claimants and Communities
For refugee claimants, prolonged waiting periods create uncertainty around employment, housing, and family stability. Many remain in temporary status for extended periods, relying on interim supports while awaiting decisions.
Communities and service providers also feel the impact. Housing demand, social services, and legal aid systems face ongoing strain as caseloads remain unresolved for longer periods.
Balancing Efficiency and Fairness
The IRB has emphasized that faster processing cannot come at the expense of fair hearings. Refugee determinations involve life-altering outcomes, and accuracy remains essential.
At the same time, the scale of the backlog highlights the need for sustained investment, procedural modernization, and coordination across the broader immigration system.
What the Numbers Signal for 2026
As Canada enters 2026, the refugee system faces a difficult balancing act. Without additional capacity or policy adjustments, backlogs are likely to remain high. However, incremental improvements in processing, combined with upstream measures, could help slow further growth. The December figures serve as a clear indicator of system pressure, reinforcing the importance of long-term planning to ensure both efficiency and protection obligations are met.



