Canada’s immigration backlog now exceeds 2 million persons

IRCC's temporary residence inventory increased with the introduction of the Canada-Ukraine Authorization for Emergency Travel.

Immigration Canada’s processing inventory now stands at more than 2 million people across all lines of business.

The temporary and permanent residence backlog has increased. Meanwhile, the citizenship backlog went down to about 400,000 persons in April, compared to more than 453,000 in March.

The backlog has progressed as follows since last summer:

  • April 11-12, 2022: 2,031,589
  • March 15 and 17, 2022: 1,844,424
  • February 1, 2022: 1,815,628
  • December 15, 2021: 1,813,144
  • October 27, 2021: 1,792,404
  • July 6, 2021: 1,447,474

CUAET driving the increase

Most of the gains between March and April were seen in the temporary residence inventory. As of April 11, there are more than 1.1 million temporary residence applicants, such as people applying for work and study permits, waiting on processing. On March 17, there were around 870,000 people.

According to an IRCC media spokesperson, the inventory for temporary resident visas and work permits has increased significantly recently with the introduction of the Canada-Ukraine Authorization for Emergency Travel (CUAET). This program allows IRCC to bring people to Canada through existing temporary resident visa processes, networks and infrastructure. It is a temporary residency pathway to Canada and not a refugee program. As of April 29, IRCC has received 180,903 CUAET applications.

 Application type  Persons as of April 11
 Study Permits  122,145
 Study Permit Extensions  34,242
 Temporary Resident Visas  558,498
 Visitor Records  73,450
 Work Permits  172,796
 Work Permit Extensions  141,244
 Total  1,102,375

Slight increase among permanent residence applicants but Express Entry is improving amid return to all-program draws in July

On April 11, the permanent residence inventory stood at about 530,000 people, up from nearly 519,000 in March. Slight increases were experienced across each permanent residence category.

 Immigration Category  As of April 11  As of March 15
 Economic  236,443  230,767
 Family Class  107,094  103,112
 Humanitarian & Compassionate  27,672  27,218
 Permit Holders Class  20  18
 Protected Persons  158,402  157,552
 Total  529,631  518,667

There has been a reduction in the Express Entry backlog. In April, there were more than 45,000 Express Entry applicants waiting on decisions, down from about 52,000 in March.

The reduction in Express Entry files was the impetus that led Immigration Minister Sean Fraser to announce that all-program draws will resume in July, and processing times will return to six months for most new applicants. Rounds of invitation have been temporarily paused for the Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP) since December 2020. Canadian Experience Class (CEC) candidates have not seen a draw since September 2021. Express Entry is the main way IRCC welcomes skilled immigrants.

 Immigration Program  Persons as of April 11  Persons as of March 15
 Canadian Experience Class  8,363  10,338
 Federal Skilled Worker Program 36,281  41,336
 Federal Skilled Trades  537  589
 Total  45,181  52,263

PR Data on April 11 2022 CIC News 752x844

IRCC continues to grapple with a large inventory exacerbated by the pandemic. IRCC has a budget of $85 million to reduce wait times for newcomers. This funding builds on the work that IRCC has already done to reduce wait times, such as hiring new processing staff, digitizing applications, and reallocating work among IRCC offices around the world. Despite these efforts, many people continue to experience wait times far in excess of IRCC’s standards. IRCC announced in January its intention to bring service standards back to normal for a variety of lines of business by the end of this year.

Archive