Quick answer: If your post-graduation work permit expires before permanent residence is approved, you do not automatically become a permanent resident and you do not automatically keep working. You need a valid temporary resident status, a new work permit option, a bridging open work permit if eligible, visitor status, restoration if you already fell out of status, or a plan to leave Canada and apply from outside Canada.
First Rule: PR in Progress Is Not the Same as Work Authorization
A PR application can be important for your future status, but it does not by itself extend a PGWP. Work authorization depends on your current permit, a new work permit application, maintained status, or a specific bridge option such as a BOWP.
| Your situation | Can you keep working? | Immediate action |
|---|---|---|
| PGWP valid and eligible BOWP stage reached | Possibly, if you apply correctly before expiry | Prepare BOWP documents early |
| EE profile only, no PR application submitted | No automatic bridge | Find work permit, PNP, LMIA, study or visitor strategy |
| ITA received but PR not submitted | No automatic bridge | Submit complete PR application, then assess BOWP timing |
| PR submitted but BOWP not eligible yet | Depends on permit status and application type | Check exact BOWP criteria before relying on it |
| PGWP already expired | Usually no, unless maintained worker status applies | Stop working if required and assess restoration |
Can You Renew a PGWP?
In general, a PGWP is a one-time work permit. IRCC’s Help Centre says a PGWP may be extended only in limited cases, such as when it was shortened because the passport expired before the full eligible validity period. For most graduates, the real question is not how to renew the PGWP but what temporary or PR bridge can replace it.
BOWP: The Main Bridge for Many PR Applicants
A bridging open work permit can let eligible PR applicants keep working while waiting for a decision. It is commonly relevant for Express Entry applicants, certain PNP applicants and other listed PR categories. But eligibility depends on the PR program, where you live, current status, application stage and timing.
If You Are Not BOWP-Eligible
- Check whether your employer can support an LMIA-based work permit.
- Review LMIA-exempt options under the International Mobility Program.
- Check provincial nominee work permit support if you have a nomination or provincial support letter.
- Consider a new eligible study program only if it makes academic, financial and immigration sense.
- Apply for visitor status before expiry if the priority is legal stay rather than work.
Maintained Status and Restoration
If you apply to extend or change status before your PGWP expires, you may have maintained status while IRCC processes the application. Whether you can keep working depends on what you applied for and your previous conditions. If your status already expired, restoration may be possible within the allowed period, but restoration is not a work authorization by itself.
90-Day Countdown Plan
- 90 days before expiry: confirm exact expiry date, passport validity, PR stage and whether BOWP is realistic.
- 75 days before expiry: ask employer about LMIA, PNP support or LMIA-exempt routes.
- 60 days before expiry: prepare visitor status backup if no work option is ready.
- 45 days before expiry: finalize PR, BOWP or temporary status documents.
- Before expiry: submit the chosen application and save proof of submission.
Bottom Line
If your PGWP expires before PR, the problem is a status-timing problem first and a PR strategy problem second. Do not wait for a future draw or a rumoured policy. Build a bridge that actually exists under current IRCC instructions.
Sources Checked
- IRCC: Post-graduation work permit
- IRCC: How to apply for a PGWP
- IRCC: Bridging open work permit for PR applicants
- IRCC: Visitor record
This article is general information, not legal advice. Always confirm the current checklist and program instructions before applying.
