If your PGWP application has been sitting for a year, the problem is no longer just impatience. The real question is: are you still allowed to work today, and do you have a clean paper trail proving it?
A 12-month PGWP delay can put several things under pressure at once: your employer wants proof, your SIN may be expired, your PR plan may depend on Canadian work experience, and you may be scared to travel or change jobs. This guide is written for that exact situation. It is not a promise that one webform will speed up the file. It is a practical way to organize the case so you stop guessing and start controlling the risks you can control.
Who Is This For?
Who is this for: this guide is for graduates whose PGWP application has been pending so long that the delay is now affecting work, SIN renewal, employer trust, travel plans, or PR timing. It is not for someone who applied last week and simply wants a faster answer.
IRCC silence creates more panic than refusal. At least a refusal tells you what to respond to. Silence leaves people trying to manage HR, SIN renewal, rent, family plans and PR timing with no clear answer.
First Answer: Do Not Start by Asking “Why Is IRCC So Slow?”
That question is understandable, but it does not help you make a decision today. Start with three yes-or-no questions instead:
| Question | If yes | If no or unsure |
|---|---|---|
| Did you apply for the PGWP before your study permit expired? | You may have a stronger maintained-status story. | Check restoration or status-risk advice immediately. |
| Were you eligible to work after applying for the PGWP? | Prepare proof for your employer and future PR file. | Do not keep working until the rule is confirmed. |
| Is the application far outside the current posted processing time? | Use webform, MP inquiry or GCMS in a structured way. | Monitor, but avoid noisy duplicate requests. |
What Users Misunderstand
What users misunderstand is that a pending PGWP and permission to work are not the same sentence. The pending application matters only if your facts match IRCC’s after-apply work rules. That is why the timeline and proof file come before any webform.
The Work Authorization Question Comes First
IRCC’s PGWP after-apply instructions matter more than a Reddit timeline. If you applied from inside Canada and meet the conditions to work while waiting, you may be able to work full-time while IRCC processes the PGWP. But the rule is fact-specific. Your employer, Service Canada, and later a PR officer may all care about the exact dates and documents.
Build a one-page work authorization file with:
- study permit expiry date;
- PGWP online submission date and time;
- payment receipt;
- completion letter and final transcript date;
- proof you met the work conditions before applying;
- IRCC account screenshot showing the PGWP application is still in progress;
- a copy or link to IRCC’s after-apply PGWP instructions.
What to Say to an Employer
Do not send your employer a long emotional explanation. HR usually needs something shorter and document-based. A useful message looks like this:
Sample wording:
I applied for my post-graduation work permit on [date], before my previous status expired. The application remains in process in my IRCC account. I am attaching the submission confirmation, receipt, current application screenshot, and the IRCC page explaining work authorization after applying for a PGWP. Please let me know if you need these documents in a different format for HR review.
If your employer still refuses to let you work, do not argue from memory. Ask what document they need, then respond with dated proof. Keep every email. It may later explain a work gap.
A surprising number of applicants wait too long before creating a clean follow-up trail. Then, when the employer finally pushes, they have emotion but no file history.
When to Submit a Webform
IRCC says processing times are estimates, not guarantees. A webform also does not automatically speed up processing. Use it when there is a real reason: the file is outside normal time, you have a new document, your contact information changed, or the delay is causing concrete harm.
| Webform reason | Good evidence | Weak evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Outside posted processing time | Application date, current processing-time screenshot, receipt | “Others got approved faster” |
| Employer issue | HR email, job-loss deadline, proof of work authorization concern | General stress only |
| Missing update | IRCC account screenshot, no messages, prior webform date | Repeated daily messages |
| Document correction | Clear replacement document and explanation | Unlabelled uploads |
Webform Template That Sounds Like a Human
Subject: PGWP application outside posted processing time – request for status update
I submitted my PGWP application online on [date]. My application number is [number] and my UCI is [UCI]. As of today, the application has been in process for [number] days. The current IRCC processing-time page shows [time shown on page] for this application type, and my file is now significantly beyond that estimate.
I am attaching my submission confirmation, receipt, current account screenshot and [employer/SIN/PR deadline evidence if relevant]. Please confirm whether any document or action is required from me, or whether the file is awaiting review.
Keep it short. The goal is to make the file easy to understand, not to prove how anxious you are.
When an MP Inquiry Makes Sense
An MP office cannot approve your PGWP. What it can sometimes do is ask IRCC for a status update. Use this when the case is far outside normal times and there is a real consequence: job loss, payroll stoppage, inability to renew SIN, family hardship, or a PR deadline connected to work experience.
Prepare this package before contacting the office:
- one-page timeline;
- UCI and application number;
- proof of residence in the MP’s riding, if requested;
- IRCC account screenshot;
- webform dates and responses;
- employer or SIN evidence showing the harm;
- signed consent form if the MP office asks for one.
When to Request GCMS Notes
GCMS notes are useful when the delay is long and you need to know whether the file is waiting for eligibility review, a document, background processing, or officer action. They are not instant, and they are not a magic button. But they can help you stop guessing.
Consider GCMS when:
- the file is many months outside normal processing;
- webforms produce only generic replies;
- you suspect a document mismatch;
- you need to understand the delay before choosing mandamus, reapplication, or status strategy.
This is where panic decisions often begin.
Should You Reapply?
Usually, do not file a second PGWP application just because the first one is slow. A second filing can create confusion unless there is a specific reason, such as a serious error that cannot be corrected by webform. If you think the original application had a real defect, get qualified advice before adding another application to the system.
Can You Travel While PGWP Is Pending?
IRCC’s PGWP after-apply page discusses leaving and re-entering Canada after applying, but travel is still a separate risk question. Re-entry depends on having the required visa or eTA and satisfying the officer at the border. If your employer, work authorization or PR plan is already fragile, travel can add another variable. Before booking anything, write down: what document lets you return, what document lets you work, and what happens if re-entry is delayed.
Decision Tree
| Your situation | Do this first | Do not do this |
|---|---|---|
| Applied before study permit expiry and still working | Build work authorization proof file | Rely only on verbal HR approval |
| Employer questions your right to work | Send concise proof package and IRCC page | Argue without documents |
| Outside processing time with no update | Submit structured webform | Send repeated vague webforms |
| Extreme delay with real harm | Prepare MP inquiry and GCMS plan | Assume delay means refusal |
| Not sure if you can work | Pause and verify status | Keep working and hope it is fine |
Common Mistakes
- Sending webforms that do not include application number, submission date or evidence.
- Assuming a pending PGWP always proves work authorization.
- Letting the employer conversation happen verbally with no document trail.
- Travelling without checking re-entry and work-continuation risk.
- Waiting for IRCC while ignoring PR and status backup planning.
Editor’s Take
The delay itself is not always the biggest danger. The bigger danger is letting the delay scatter your evidence. Keep the timeline boring, dated and provable.
Next Step
The next step is not to read another generic policy summary. Build the timeline first, then decide which official route matches the facts you can actually prove.
Bottom Line
A delayed PGWP is frustrating, but the file becomes manageable when you separate it into four tracks: work authorization, IRCC follow-up, employer evidence, and PR/status backup. If you cannot prove all four, fix the proof before the delay turns into a bigger immigration problem.
Sources Checked
- IRCC: PGWP after you apply
- IRCC: Check current processing times
- IRCC web form
- IRCC: Check application status
- IRCC: Post-graduation work permit
This article is general information and not a legal opinion. Confirm your exact facts against current IRCC instructions before applying.
