Work permit status in Canada refers to the real-time stage of your application or issued permit as tracked in your IRCC online account and related tools. To check it, sign in to your account, open your submitted work permit file, and review messages and status lines. Ask Era Immigration in Suite 403 Mississauga helps applicants interpret updates and resolve delays.
By Ask Era • Last updated: 2026-06-03
Overview: Quick Summary
You can check your Canada work permit status through your IRCC online account, the status tracker, or the web form. Read messages, review biometrics/medical stages, and watch for decisions. If updates stall, verify documents and consider a case-specific inquiry. Ask Era Immigration supports applicants end-to-end from Mississauga.
- What you’ll learn: Definitions, where to check, what each status means, timelines, and escalation options.
- Who this is for: Workers, students transitioning to PGWP, and employers needing clarity on employee status.
- How we help: Profile assessment, documentation reviews, and submission strategy to reduce avoidable delays.
- Fast navigation: Jump to How to check status, What statuses mean, Best practices, Tools, and FAQs.
Local considerations for Suite 403 Mississauga
- Plan in-person meetings around peak traffic near Hurontario St At Derry Rd; aim for late morning slots to avoid rush patterns.
- Seasonal notes: Winter weather can disrupt courier pickups for biometrics letters—build in buffer days for signatures and returns.
- Transit tip: The HWY 407 Park and Ride hub makes it easy to reach our office for document checks before you submit.
What Is “Work Permit Status” in Canada?
Work permit status is the current stage of your Canadian work authorization, from submission to decision and post-approval validity. It appears in your IRCC account and reflects biometrics, medicals, background checks, eligibility reviews, and final decision steps for employer-specific and open permits.
In simple terms, your status explains where your file sits in the decision process and what actions—if any—you should take. It also confirms whether your authorization to work is active, implied, or pending.
- Application status: Shows received, in progress, or final decision.
- Biometrics/medicals: Tracks if instructions were sent, completed, or reviewed.
- Eligibility/background: Indicates active review of job offer, LMIA (if required), and admissibility checks.
- Document validity: Confirms permit conditions (employer, occupation, location, dates).
For candidates navigating multiple pathways (for example, Express Entry plus a bridging work permit), keeping these streams distinct in your IRCC account prevents confusion and missed messages. If you need step-by-step guidance, our Canada work permit overview explains requirements and documentation.
Why Checking Your Status Matters
Frequent status checks help you act quickly on requests, avoid missing deadlines, and maintain legal work authorization. Timely responses reduce avoidable holds and support smooth transitions to PR or study-to-work pathways like PGWP.
Missing an IRCC message—even for a few days—can trigger delays, additional document requests, or file closure. Status awareness lets you coordinate with employers, plan travel, and manage study-to-work transitions.
- Avoid preventable delays: Upload requested documents within the stated window.
- Protect work authorization: Track implied status if you applied to extend before expiry.
- Plan PR strategy: Align work authorization with Canada PR application steps to avoid gaps.
- Coordinate study pathways: If you’re switching from study to work, see our study permit checklist to prevent overlaps.
In our experience supporting workers in the Regional Municipality of Peel, applicants who maintain a simple status log (date, update, action taken) resolve issues faster and communicate more clearly with employers and schools.
How to Check Your Work Permit Status (Step-by-Step)
Sign in to your IRCC account, open your work permit application, and review messages, status lines, biometrics/medical tabs, and attached letters. If you can’t find your application, link it using application number and details. Use the IRCC web form when updates stall or documents change.
- Sign in to your IRCC online account. Use the same credentials you used to submit the application.
- Open the application tile labeled with the correct permit type (employer-specific or open).
- Check messages: Look for new letters, instructions, or update notices.
- Review biometrics/medicals: Confirm if they’re requested, completed, or under review.
- Read status lines: “Application received,” “We are reviewing,” “We need additional documents,” or “Final decision.”
- Verify uploaded files: Ensure required documents are visible, legible, and correctly labeled.
- Link an existing file if needed: Use application number and personal details to connect a paper or portal submission.
- Escalate with the web form when updates stall or details (passport, address, employer) change.
- Document your actions: Keep a dated log of submission steps and IRCC replies.
If you’re unsure whether to apply for an employer-specific or open permit, this side-by-side primer helps, and our team can tailor advice after a quick assessment at our Mississauga office.
| Permit type | Key feature | Typical documents | Common status notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Employer-specific | Tied to a single employer/role | Offer letter, LMIA or exemption | Eligibility often references LMIA/exemption check |
| Open work permit | Not tied to one employer | Program proof (e.g., PGWP, spousal) | Status may reference program-specific eligibility |
Need a second set of eyes? Our work permit application checklist outlines common document gaps that often cause “Review required” holds.
What Each Status Means (and What to Do Next)
Status lines communicate next actions. “Application received” requires patience and readiness. “We need additional documents” demands prompt uploads. “We are reviewing” means eligibility/security is underway. “Final decision” appears with an approval letter or refusal notice—read both carefully and respond appropriately.
- Application received: File is created. Action: verify that all uploads are legible and labeled.
- Biometrics/medical requested: Action: book appointments quickly; upload confirmations after completion.
- We are reviewing: Action: hold steady; update material changes (address, passport, employer) via web form.
- We need additional documents: Action: respond within the stated window; use clear filenames and concise cover notes.
- Final decision: Action: read terms, print letters, and confirm work conditions (employer, occupation, location, dates).
For bridging work permits tied to permanent residence, keep your PR timeline aligned. Our PR process overview explains how to maintain continuity if your current permit nears expiry.
Best Practices to Avoid Delays
Prepare complete, legible documents, label files clearly, and check your IRCC account weekly. Update material changes through the web form and track all actions in a simple log. When in doubt, seek a professional file review before you submit.
- File clarity: Combine multi-page PDFs; avoid blurry scans; use consistent filenames.
- Eligibility evidence: For employer-specific permits, show job duties that match TEER classification; for open permits, provide strong program proof.
- Communication discipline: Check messages on a schedule; note dates and next steps.
- Change management: Report new passports, addresses, or employers quickly through the web form.
- Backup plan: If your study status intersects, review our study vs. work permit guide to avoid gaps.
We routinely see small documentation fixes accelerate files: properly labeled proofs of funds, clear employer letters, and readable passport pages. A pre-submission review catches issues early and keeps your status moving.
Tools and Resources for Status Tracking
Use your IRCC online account for real-time messages, the status tracker for high-level milestones, and the web form for case-specific updates. Maintain a simple spreadsheet log to record dates, updates, and responses for clear communication with employers and schools.
| Method | What you need | Best for | Update pattern |
|---|---|---|---|
| IRCC online account | Login + application number | Reading letters, uploading docs | Event-driven (when actions occur) |
| Status tracker | Personal details | Quick milestone overview | Periodic milestone refresh |
| IRCC web form | Case details + reason | Material changes or inquiries | Response after internal review |
For broader immigration context beyond work permits, see these primers from established legal and business publishers. And a permit checklist for startups shows how structured checklists reduce oversights—an approach that also applies to immigration files. For PR alignment, Vikram Law’s PR overview outlines big-picture steps you can coordinate with your work authorization.
Types of Work Permits and How Status Updates Differ
Employer-specific permits usually reference LMIA or exemption reviews in status notes, while open permits (like PGWP or spousal) focus on program eligibility checks. Both show biometrics, medicals, and background stages before a final decision with permit conditions.
Employer-specific permits
- Who it fits: Candidates with a concrete offer tied to a specific role and employer.
- Status patterns: Eligibility notes often reference LMIA or exemption codes; work location/occupation may appear in letters.
- Action tips: Ensure job duties map to TEER classification and include a detailed employer letter.
Open work permits
- Who it fits: Graduates (PGWP), spouses/partners, or certain PR applicants (bridging).
- Status patterns: Program-specific eligibility checks; conditions appear in final letters.
- Action tips: Show strong program evidence (graduation proof, relationship documentation, or PR stage).
If you’re weighing work authorization against PR pathways, our primer on FSWP job categories can help align occupation plans with long-term goals.
Case Studies: Mississauga Scenarios and Practical Fixes
Small document improvements lead to faster, clearer status updates. In our Mississauga practice, we see wins from cleaner scans, precise filenames, and timely web-form updates when passports or addresses change. These steps reduce back-and-forth, especially during busy seasons.
- Study-to-work transition: A graduate in Peel linked a missing application by entering the correct number format; status refreshed within days, and a biometrics letter appeared promptly.
- Employer-specific clarity: An applicant’s vague job duties caused “Review required.” We mapped duties to TEER tasks; status advanced to eligibility review without further questions.
- Material change update: A client renewed a soon-to-expire passport. We submitted a web-form update; the file reflected the new details before decision, avoiding re-issue complications.
When we prepare files at 218 Export Blvd, we check scan quality, document order, and naming conventions. These basics—applied consistently—translate to smoother status progress across permit types.
Need hands-on help interpreting your status?
If your work permit status is unclear or stalled, a focused file review can surface the next best action. Ask Era Immigration provides RCIC-led guidance from Mississauga to help you clarify next steps and prevent avoidable delays.
Book a consult: Share your latest messages, uploads list, and any web-form receipts. We’ll outline a practical action plan and connect it to your PR or study goals. Explore our citizenship planning guide if you’re mapping a longer roadmap.
How Processing Works Behind the Scenes
Processing moves through intake, biometrics/medicals, eligibility and background checks, then a final decision. Your account updates when actions occur or milestones change. You can’t accelerate steps, but complete, consistent documentation reduces unnecessary back-and-forth.
- Intake: File creation and completeness review; missing items trigger requests.
- Biometrics/medicals: Identity and health checks; track appointment letters and results.
- Eligibility: Role match (for employer-specific) or program proof (for open permits).
- Background: Admissibility/security verifications.
- Decision: Approval letter and permit conditions or refusal with reasons.
While processing times vary, the most consistent success pattern we see is strong, legible evidence that aligns with your declared occupation and program rules.
Escalation and Triage: When to Take Action
Escalate when your account shows no movement after you’ve completed all requested actions, or when critical details change. Use the web form to report updates like new passports or employers. Keep messages professional and concise, with labeled attachments.
- No movement after actions: Send a brief, factual inquiry via the web form summarizing dates and completed steps.
- Material changes: Report new passports, address changes, or employer details right away.
- Refusal review: If refused, request notes where appropriate, then plan a stronger resubmission with corrected evidence.
Applicants who combine concise summaries with clear filenames (e.g., 01_Passport.pdf, 02_Employer_Letter.pdf) tend to resolve issues faster because officers can parse evidence quickly.
Key Takeaways
Check your status regularly, keep documents clear and current, and use the web form for changes or stalled updates. Align your work authorization with long-term PR or study goals, and consider a professional review when you’re unsure about next steps.
- IRCC account is your source of truth; read every letter end-to-end.
- Label uploads clearly; fix scan quality issues before submission.
- Report changes quickly; keep a dated action log.
- Map duties to TEER where employer-specific permits apply.
- Connect status planning to PR via our PR application guide.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
These short answers address common questions about Canada work permit status, from tracking tools to implied status and refused files. Each response is concise so you can act immediately.
How do I check my Canada work permit application status?
Sign in to your IRCC online account, open your application tile, and read all messages and status lines. Review biometrics and medicals tabs for milestones. If the file isn’t visible, link it with your application number and personal details.
What does “We need additional documents” mean?
IRCC requires more evidence to continue. Upload the requested files promptly, use clear filenames, and add a short cover note explaining the contents. Late or unclear responses can stall processing.
What is implied status for work permits?
If you submit a complete extension application before your current permit expires, you may continue working under the same conditions while a decision is pending. Always keep proof of timely submission and monitor your account for updates.
When should I use the IRCC web form?
Use it for stalled files or material changes like a new passport, address, or employer. Keep your message factual and concise, include identifiers, and attach labeled documents so officers can act without back-and-forth.
Conclusion and Next Steps
To manage your work permit status in Canada, rely on your IRCC account, act quickly on requests, and keep documents clear and current. Align status planning with PR or study goals, and seek a professional review if your file is complex or stalled.
- Start here: our Canada work permit overview and application checklist.
- Building toward PR? Review the PR steps and occupation planning via FSWP roles.
- Ready to talk? Book a session with our RCIC-led team at 218 Export Blvd, Suite 403 Mississauga.
