Immigration Announcement
IRCC Inventory Reaches 2.15 Million Applications as Processing Pressures Continue
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) reported 2,153,900 applications across all immigration and citizenship inventories as of April 30, 2026. While the department continues to process hundreds of thousands of applications each year, backlog levels remain elevated in several key categories.
The latest update provides insight into how Canada’s immigration system is managing growing demand while working toward its goal of processing 80% of applications within service standards.
Snapshot of Canada’s Immigration Inventory
According to IRCC data:
- Total applications in inventory: 2,153,900
- Applications within service standards: 57%
- Applications exceeding service standards: 43%
Although IRCC continues to improve processing capacity, complex applications and annual admission limits continue to affect wait times.
Permanent Residence Processing Progress
Between January and April 2026:
- 155,500 permanent residence decisions were made
- 112,900 new permanent residents were welcomed
However, approximately 54% of permanent residence applications remain outside service standards, highlighting ongoing processing challenges.
Express Entry and Provincial Nominee Program applications continue to represent significant portions of the permanent residence inventory.
Temporary Residence Backlogs Remain Significant
Temporary residence applications continue to account for a large share of IRCC’s workload.
During the first four months of 2026, IRCC processed:
- 145,000 study permit applications
- 618,500 work permit applications
Despite these volumes, 36% of temporary residence applications remain beyond service standards.
This includes visitor visas, study permits, and work permits.
Citizenship Applications Show Strong Performance
Citizenship processing remains one of IRCC’s stronger-performing categories.
In April 2026 alone:
- 24,200 people became Canadian citizens
The citizenship backlog currently sits at 23%, which is lower than the permanent residence and temporary residence categories.
Why Some Applications Take Longer
IRCC explains that not all applications can be processed within standard timelines because of:
- Security screening requirements
- Missing documents
- Complex eligibility reviews
- Annual immigration target limits
- High application volumes
The department also notes that some applications must wait until future admissions spaces become available under Canada’s Immigration Levels Plan.
What Applicants Can Expect
The federal government continues to focus on balancing immigration growth with system capacity.
The 2026-2028 Immigration Levels Plan aims to:
- Stabilize permanent resident admissions
- Reduce temporary resident levels
- Prioritize labour market needs
- Improve processing efficiency
Applicants should continue monitoring official processing updates and ensure their files remain complete to avoid unnecessary delays.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
How many applications are currently in IRCC inventories?
IRCC reported 2,153,900 applications across all immigration and citizenship inventories as of April 30, 2026.
What percentage of applications are within service standards?
Approximately 57% of applications are currently being processed within service standards.
What is IRCC’s processing target?
IRCC aims to process 80% of applications within established service standards.
Which category has the highest backlog?
Permanent residence applications currently have the highest backlog rate at 54%.
How many new permanent residents were welcomed in 2026?
Canada welcomed 112,900 new permanent residents between January and April 2026.



