If your PGWP expires this week, the only useful question is: what will your legal status be on the day after expiry, and what will you be authorized to do while IRCC processes your next application.
This is not a place for optimism or rumors. It is a decision problem with deadlines.
The legal anchor points you should know
Continuing work while an in-Canada work permit application is being processed is often discussed through IRPR 186(u), tied to an application under IRPR 201, with the person remaining in Canada and continuing to comply with the conditions of the expired work permit (other than the expiry date).
If you are unsure whether your situation fits those conditions, do not assume you can keep working.
If you keep working without authorization, you create a problem that can reach into future permits and PR processing. The risk is not theoretical.
The decision table (what you can do, legally)
| Path | What it protects | Work authorization while waiting | When it is usually used | Typical mistake |
| BOWP (bridging open work permit) | lawful stay and work authorization if eligible | yes, if eligible and filed properly | PR application and stage qualify | people apply too early or under the wrong PR lane |
| New employer-driven work permit path | lawful stay and work authorization if eligible | depends on the exact path | employer support exists (LMIA or exemption) | filing late and losing status first |
| Visitor record (change conditions to visitor) | lawful stay (if approved) | generally no | you need time to rebuild a plan | continuing to work after switching to visitor |
| Restoration (after expiry) | possible return to lawful stay | not automatic | you already lost status | treating restoration like maintained status |
Start with the BOWP reality check (do not guess)
If you think you qualify for a bridge, verify it carefully. Many people lose time by filing a BOWP application that cannot succeed.
BOWP Eligibility in Canada (2026): Who Actually Qualifies (And Who Usually Doesn’t)
If you cannot bridge into a work-authorized path
Your priority becomes preserving lawful stay.
That often means a visitor record, and that comes with a work pause. Plan for that, and document it properly.
Visitor Record After PGWP (2026): What It Protects, What It Doesn’t
Switching to visitor is a conditions change. Do not keep working unless you have separate authorization.
If you missed expiry
You are now in restoration territory.
Restoration of Status in Canada (2026): What Out-of-Status Workers and Students Can Do
48-hour checklist (use this when the deadline is close)
- Write down the exact PGWP expiry date.
- Write down your PR stage (profile, ITA, submitted PR, AOR) and do not confuse them.
- Decide which path you are actually eligible for today (bridge, new work permit, visitor record).
- Build a proof package:
- passport validity
- current permit
- application receipts
- If visitor record is likely, build the funds and housing story:
- 3 to 6 months statements
- a one-page budget and housing plan
- Lock your behavior to your authorization:
- if you are not clearly authorized to work, stop working until you are.
Document checklist (what to prepare before you submit)
- Status and identity:
- passport bio page
- PGWP copy
- any prior permits relevant to your current conditions
- Work and income:
- recent pay stubs
- employer confirmation letter (title, duties summary, start date)
- PR context (if you are claiming it):
- proof of PR stage clearly separated (profile, ITA, submitted PR, AOR)
- If you may need a visitor record:
- lease or housing plan evidence
- 3 to 6 months bank statements and a one-page budget
A short risk list (do not guess)
If you switch to a visitor record, you should assume you cannot work unless you have separate authorization.
If you are unsure whether your situation fits the worker scenario under IRPR 186(u) and an application under IRPR 201, pause and verify before you work.
A simple sequence (so you do something useful today)
- Check your eligibility and submit the correct application before expiry.
- Keep your permit conditions stable while waiting.
- Keep your documents organized so your employer can verify work authorization without delay.
If you want a deeper maintained status explanation (and the boundary where you must stop working), use:
Maintained Status in Canada (2026): When You Can Keep Working, and When You Absolutely Cannot
Next step checklist (7-day timeline)
If you have one week, use this simple timeline:
- Day 1: check your PR stage and your eligibility for BOWP or another work permit path.
- Day 2: check your documents and request any employer letters you need.
- Day 3: check your funds and housing plan if a visitor record is your backup.
- Day 4: submit the correct application if you are within the safe window.
- Day 5 to Day 7: keep your work conditions stable and avoid risky changes until you have clarity.
This is a status problem with a deadline. A clean sequence reduces risk.
Official references (source of truth)
- IRPR 186 (work without a permit, including paragraph 186(u))
- IRPR 201 (work permit applications)
- IRCC: PGWP overview
- IRCC: Restore your status
