If you are waiting for your Express Entry application to be processed, you are probably checking your IRCC portal daily and wondering: how long does this actually take?
IRCC's official processing times tool states that most Express Entry applications are processed within six months. But anyone in the immigration community knows that official estimates do not always reflect reality. Processing times vary significantly based on your stream, your country of residence, and dozens of other factors that IRCC does not publicly break down.
That is why we built the Express Entry Timeline Tracker at Soon To Be Canadian. We collect real processing timelines directly from applicants going through the system right now. No speculation, no outdated data from 2019 forums, just current experiences from people in the same situation as you.
Based on 700+ community-submitted timelines, here is what Express Entry processing actually looks like in 2026.
Express Entry Processing Times by Stream (2026 Data)
Processing times vary considerably depending on which Express Entry stream you applied under. Here is what our community data shows for applications submitted in 2025 and processed through early 2026.
Canadian Experience Class (CEC)
The Canadian Experience Class consistently shows the fastest processing times in our dataset. This makes sense: CEC applicants already have Canadian work experience, making background checks and verification faster.
Median AOR to eCoPR: 58 days
- 25th percentile: 42 days
- 75th percentile: 89 days
- Fastest reported: 21 days
- Slowest reported: 156 days
Most CEC applicants in our tracker receive their eCoPR within two to three months of their Acknowledgement of Receipt (AOR). However, outliers exist on both ends. We have seen a small number of applicants receive approval in under a month, while others with additional document requests or background checks have waited over five months.
Federal Skilled Worker (FSW)
The Federal Skilled Worker program shows longer processing times compared to CEC. This is expected since FSW applicants are typically applying from outside Canada, requiring additional verification of foreign credentials and employment history.
Median AOR to eCoPR: 94 days
- 25th percentile: 67 days
- 75th percentile: 142 days
- Fastest reported: 38 days
- Slowest reported: 198 days
FSW applicants should plan for a three to five month processing window in most cases. Applications involving complex employment histories, multiple countries of residence, or additional family members tend to fall toward the longer end of this range.
Provincial Nominee Program (PNP)
PNP Express Entry applicants show the widest variance in processing times. This reflects the diversity of provincial programs and the additional documentation requirements that come with provincial nomination.
Median AOR to eCoPR: 78 days
- 25th percentile: 51 days
- 75th percentile: 118 days
- Fastest reported: 29 days
- Slowest reported: 183 days
Your specific province matters here. In our data, Ontario and British Columbia PNP applicants tend to process faster than applicants nominated by smaller provinces, though this could reflect sample size differences rather than actual processing speed variations.
Understanding the Full Express Entry Timeline
Processing time discussions often focus on the AOR to eCoPR window, but the complete Express Entry journey includes several stages. Here is the typical timeline for each step based on our community data.
Stage 1: Pool Entry to Invitation to Apply (ITA)
This stage is entirely dependent on your Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score and draw timing. If your score is above the cutoff for your target draw, you could receive an ITA within days. If you are below the cutoff, you may wait months while improving your score through language tests, education credential assessments, or provincial nominations.
Typical range: 1 week to 12+ months
Stage 2: ITA to Application Submission
Once you receive your Invitation to Apply, you have 60 days to submit your complete application. Most applicants who have their documents prepared submit within two to three weeks. Others take the full 60 days to gather police certificates, medical exams, and employment reference letters.
Typical range: 14 to 60 days
Stage 3: Submission to AOR
After submitting your application, IRCC issues an Acknowledgement of Receipt confirming they have received your package. This happens quickly for most applicants.
Typical range: 1 to 7 days
Stage 4: AOR to Biometrics Request
If you have not previously provided biometrics to IRCC, you will receive a Biometrics Instruction Letter (BIL) shortly after your AOR.
Typical range: 1 to 21 days
Stage 5: Biometrics to Medical Passed
After completing biometrics, your application moves through background checks. Many applicants see their medical exam marked as "passed" during this stage, which is generally a positive sign that processing is progressing.
Typical range: 7 to 60 days
Stage 6: AOR to eCoPR (Final Decision)
This is the complete processing window from acknowledgement to your electronic Confirmation of Permanent Residence. The numbers at the top of this article represent this full window.
Typical range: 42 to 150 days (varies by stream)
Stage 7: eCoPR to PR Card
After receiving your eCoPR, you are officially a permanent resident of Canada. Your physical PR card is mailed separately and typically takes 30 to 90 days to arrive.
Typical range: 30 to 90 days
Factors That Affect Your Processing Time
Our data reveals several patterns in what speeds up or slows down applications.
What tends to speed things up
Simple applications: Single applicants with straightforward employment histories and one country of residence process faster than complex family applications.
Canadian presence: Applicants already in Canada (particularly CEC applicants) generally see faster processing. This may be due to easier verification or IRCC prioritizing applicants who are already contributing to the Canadian economy.
Complete documentation: Applicants who submit complete applications with all requested documents from the start avoid delays from additional document requests.
What tends to slow things down
Additional document requests: If IRCC requests additional documents (known as an ADR), your processing time will extend by however long it takes you to respond plus the time for IRCC to review the new materials.
Background checks: Some countries of residence trigger extended background checks. While IRCC does not publish which countries this affects, our community data suggests applicants with significant time spent in certain regions experience longer waits.
Application complexity: Multiple family members, previous visa refusals, and complex employment histories all correlate with longer processing times in our dataset.
Peak processing periods: Following large Express Entry draws, processing times tend to increase slightly as IRCC handles higher volumes.
How Our Data Compares to IRCC Official Estimates
IRCC officially states that 80% of Express Entry applications are processed within six months (180 days). Based on our community data, this estimate appears accurate but incomplete.
Our data shows that the median processing time is significantly faster than 180 days across all streams. Most applicants receive their eCoPR in two to four months, not six. However, the 180-day estimate likely accounts for the long tail of complex applications, additional document requests, and background check delays that extend some applications well beyond the typical timeline.
If your application is straightforward, expect to process faster than the official estimate. If you have complicating factors, the six-month window is a reasonable planning horizon.
How to Use This Data
This information is meant to help you plan, not to create anxiety. Here is how to use these processing time estimates effectively.
For planning purposes: Use the median times to set realistic expectations for when you might receive your eCoPR. For CEC, plan for two months. For FSW, plan for three months. For PNP, plan for two to three months.
For tracking your application: If your application exceeds the 75th percentile for your stream without any document requests or obvious complications, it may be worth following up with IRCC through their web form.
For mental health: Processing times have natural variance. Being at day 70 when the median is 58 does not mean something is wrong. Many perfectly normal applications fall in the longer half of the distribution.
Track Your Own Timeline
Want to see how your processing time compares to others in your stream? Add your timeline to our Express Entry Tracker. You will be able to see where you stand relative to other applicants with similar submission dates and streams.
Every timeline submitted helps future applicants understand what to expect. The data in this article exists because hundreds of community members took a few minutes to share their experience.
This article is based on community-submitted data and is intended for informational purposes only. Processing times vary based on individual circumstances. This is not legal or immigration advice. For guidance specific to your situation, consult a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) or immigration lawyer. Data reflects timelines submitted to Soon To Be Canadian as of March 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does Express Entry take from start to finish in 2026?
The complete Express Entry process from pool entry to PR card receipt typically takes 4 to 10 months depending on your stream and how quickly you receive an ITA. The processing stage (AOR to eCoPR) takes 6 to 16 weeks for most applicants. CEC applicants average 58 days, FSW applicants average 94 days, and PNP applicants average 78 days based on 700+ community-submitted timelines.
What is the average AOR to eCoPR timeline in 2026?
Based on our community data, the median AOR to eCoPR timeline is 58 days for Canadian Experience Class, 94 days for Federal Skilled Worker, and 78 days for Provincial Nominee Program applications. However, these are medians. Individual timelines range from as fast as 21 days to as slow as 198 days depending on application complexity.
Why is my Express Entry application taking longer than expected?
Common reasons for extended processing include additional document requests, extended background checks for certain countries of residence, application complexity involving multiple family members, and peak processing periods following large Express Entry draws. If your application exceeds the 75th percentile for your stream (89 days for CEC, 142 days for FSW, 118 days for PNP) without any ADR, consider following up with IRCC.
Is the IRCC 6-month processing time estimate accurate?
The official IRCC estimate that 80% of applications process within six months appears accurate as an upper bound. However, our data shows most applicants receive decisions much faster. The median processing times are 2 to 3 months across all streams. The 6-month estimate likely accounts for the long tail of complex applications requiring additional review.
How can I track my Express Entry processing time?
You can track your application progress through the IRCC online portal, which updates when your application moves between processing stages. For comparison with other applicants, use the Express Entry Timeline Tracker at Soon To Be Canadian to see processing times from 700+ community members with similar streams and submission dates.