Canada’s Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship (IRCC) has just released its processing roadmap for permanent residence (PR) applications in 2025. The lighting up of which immigration streams will see full clearance — and which will only get partial attention — has major implications for prospective immigrants, immigration consultants, and policy watchers alike.
In this guide, we break down IRCC’s plan, summarize wait-time trends, and offer insights into how to strategize your PR application (or advocacy) in 2025.
What IRCC Plans to Process Fully vs Partially in 2025
✅ Streams slated for full inventory clearance
IRCC has committed to fully clearing its backlog (i.e. all current inventories) in 2025 for several key economic PR pathways. These are:
Express Entry streams: Canadian Experience Class (CEC), Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP), Federal Skilled Trades Program (FSTP)
Quebec’s skilled worker pathways: Quebec Skilled Worker (PSTQ), Quebec Experience Class (PEQ), and Quebec’s pilot streams
By focusing on clearing these, IRCC is signalling these remain strategic priorities — both for their volume and alignment with federal-provincial immigration goals.
⚠️ Streams receiving partial processing in 2025
Not all pathways enjoy full attention. For many, IRCC will only process a portion of the existing queue. Below is a snapshot of select programs and their 2025 processing targets:
PR Pathway
% of Inventory to be Processed in 2025
Inventory Size (as of Sept 11)
Notes / Wait-time Trends
Base PNP (non-Express Entry)
~35%
~87,700
Wait times: 11 → 24 → 19 months
Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP)
~33%
~12,100
Wait times surged to ~27 → 24 months
Caregiver Pilots
~14%
~34,400
Wait times ballooned from 27 → 108 months
Economic Mobility Pathways Pilot (EMPP)
~12%
~2,500
Wait times rising: 10 → 54 months
Quebec Business (Investor / Entrepreneur)
~3%
~4,100
Extremely long delays: 108 months (9 years) projected
Start-Up Visa (SUV)
~2%
~38,600
Wait times exploded in recent quarters: 420 months (~35 years)
Agrifood Pilot
~5%
~8,900
Wait times: 22 → 180 → 228 months
By contrast, the targeted high-priority streams will see their entire backlog resolved in 2025. For instance:
Express Entry – FSW / CEC tails: FSW had ~12,500 in queue and IRCC will process all of them.
Express Entry–aligned PNP: ~16,300 inventory, all to be processed.
Community Pilots: ~3,500 in inventory — full clearance planned.
Quebec Skilled Worker (PSTQ, PEQ, pilot): ~27,600 inventory, full processing.
Wait Time Trends: What the Data Shows
Understanding processing volumes is one thing — but how long will applicants wait? Historical trends offer clues.
Express Entry (FSW / CEC)
Over recent quarters, FSW has hovered around 5–6 months of delay.
CEC saw 6 → 7 → 5 months fluctuations through early 2025.
These relatively short timelines are part of the reason these streams are prioritized for full clearance — they are manageable and central to Canada’s skilled immigration goals.
PNP and Base Streams
Express Entry–aligned PNP: 6 → 7 → 6 months.
Base PNP (non-aligned): 11 → 13 → 24 → 19 months.
The jump into 24 months (i.e. two years) is a red flag, showing just how delayed some non-aligned applications have become.
Other Streams (Caregiver, AIP, EMPP, Startup, Agrifood)
Start-Up Visa: 48 → 420 months — the backlog is massive and growing.
Agrifood: 22 → 180 → 228 months. Once promising, now almost stalled.
The wide divergence across pathways underscores IRCC’s need to triage — it cannot push everything through at once.
Why This Strategy?
1. Efficiency & priority alignment
Clearing pathways with manageable timelines (Express Entry, aligned PNP, community pilots) gives IRCC “quick wins.” These also serve Canada’s high-skilled labour and regional settlement strategies.
2. Backlog realism
Some pathways have become so backlogged (e.g. Start-Up Visa, caregiver, agrifood) that tackling them all simultaneously would overwhelm system capacity. Partial processing allows for some forward motion without total collapse.
3. Flexibility and capacity balancing
By focusing on high-volume but shorter-turnaround files, IRCC can manage staffing, adjudication resources, and interdepartmental coordination more predictably.
What This Means for Prospective Applicants (2025 Focus)
If you’re planning to apply (or have already applied), here’s how this announcement affects your strategy:
Prefer high-priority streams if eligible: If you have the option (e.g. switching to Express Entry-aligned PNP), it may reduce your waiting risk.
Be realistic for lower-priority streams: If you’re in a stream like Start-Up Visa or agrifood, expect delays measured in years.
Monitor IRCC updates: The announced percentages are targets, not guarantees — real progress may shift depending on staffing, policies, or political priorities.
Seek legal or expert advice: If you hold an application in a slower-moving stream, lawyers or consultants may guide you to alternate strategies or appeals.
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