Applying for a Canada tourist visa (Temporary Resident Visa, or TRV) from India requires patience. Unlike some countries where visas are issued in days, Canada's Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) runs a thorough processing system that takes time. In 2026, Indian applicants face processing timelines of 8–12 weeks under normal conditions — and longer during peak periods. This guide explains exactly what that timeline looks like, what can speed it up or slow it down, and how to plan your application intelligently.
Current Processing Times in 2026
As of 2026, the IRCC's published processing time for a Canada tourist visa (TRV) application from India is approximately 8 to 12 weeks for online applications. Paper-based applications typically take 4–6 weeks longer. During peak travel seasons — particularly May through August — processing times can stretch to 14 weeks or beyond.
Important: IRCC's stated processing times are calculated from the date they receive a complete application (your AOR date — Acknowledgement of Receipt). If your initial submission has missing documents or errors, IRCC may request additional information, which resets or extends your effective processing time.
It is worth understanding that these are averages across all applicants in a given window. Individual applications vary significantly based on your personal profile, the complexity of your application, whether background checks are required, and the current workload at the Chandigarh and New Delhi IRCC offices that handle India-based applications.
In practical terms, if you are planning a Canada trip, you should ideally submit your application at least 16–20 weeks before your travel date. This gives you a buffer for delays, additional document requests, or a biometrics appointment.
Why Processing Times Vary So Much
A common question from Indian applicants is why one person gets their visa in 6 weeks while another waits 14 weeks for the same type of application. Several factors explain this variance:
- Application completeness: A complete, well-documented application moves through the system faster. Missing a single bank statement page or a photograph that does not meet IRCC specifications can stall your file.
- Background and security screening: Applicants who have travelled to certain countries, have previous visa refusals, or whose names require additional database screening face longer timelines.
- Medical examination requirements: If IRCC determines a medical exam is needed (usually for longer stays or certain occupational backgrounds), this adds 4–8 additional weeks.
- Officer discretion: Visa officers have the authority to request additional documents at any point during processing. This is normal but adds time.
- Application volume: IRCC processes millions of applications globally. When volumes surge — as they did post-pandemic and continue at elevated levels in 2026 — timelines extend.
Online vs. Paper Application — Which Is Faster?
IRCC strongly recommends online applications, and for good reason: they are significantly faster to process than paper applications. Here is a breakdown of why:
- Online applications are received instantly by IRCC, allow for faster document upload and retrieval by officers, and benefit from an automated initial completeness check that flags obvious errors before a human officer reviews the file.
- Paper applications must be mailed to the Visa Application Centre (VAC), physically transported, sorted, scanned, and then entered into the IRCC system. This alone can add 3–6 weeks before an officer even opens your file.
Our Recommendation: Always apply online through the IRCC portal (ircc.canada.ca) unless you have a specific reason you cannot. Online applicants in India have been reporting processing times 4–6 weeks shorter than paper applicants for the same visa category in 2025–2026.
To apply online, you need a scanner or a smartphone with a document scanning app to create clear digital copies of all your documents. All documents must be in PDF or JPEG format and must not exceed file size limits set by IRCC. If you are working with a visa consultant, they will handle the technical preparation and submission for you.
Biometrics and How It Affects Your Timeline
Biometrics (fingerprints and photograph) are mandatory for most Canadian visa applicants from India. If you have not previously given biometrics for Canada, or if your previous biometrics have expired (they are valid for 10 years), you will receive a Biometric Collection Instruction (BCI) letter after submitting your application.
Once you receive the BCI letter, you have 30 days to attend a biometrics appointment at an authorized Visa Application Centre (VAC). In India, biometrics can be given at VACs in major cities including Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Chandigarh, Bengaluru, Kochi, and Pune.
Timeline Impact: IRCC will not begin substantive processing of your application until your biometrics have been collected and transmitted to them. If there is a delay in your biometrics appointment — such as limited VAC slots in your city — this directly delays your overall visa processing timeline. Factor in 1–2 weeks for biometrics in your planning.
When Biometrics Are Not Required
If you gave biometrics for Canada within the last 10 years and they are still valid in IRCC's system, you do not need to give them again. This applies even if you apply for a different visa category. You can check your biometrics status through the IRCC online portal.
IRCC Processing Stages Explained
Understanding what happens to your application after submission helps you set realistic expectations and identify if something is wrong. The IRCC processing pipeline for a Canada tourist visa from India typically involves the following stages:
| Stage | What Happens | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Application Submitted | Your application and fee payment are received by IRCC through the online portal or VAC. | Day 0 |
| AOR Issued | IRCC confirms receipt. This is your official start date for processing time calculation. | 1–5 days after submission |
| Biometrics Collection | You attend VAC appointment. IRCC receives and verifies your biometrics data. | 1–2 weeks after BCI letter |
| Background & Security Check | IRCC checks databases for security, criminal, and immigration compliance issues. | 2–6 weeks (varies) |
| Document Review by Officer | A visa officer reviews your application, assesses financial strength, travel history, purpose, and ties to India. | 3–8 weeks |
| Medical Review (if required) | Some applicants are flagged for a medical examination by a designated IRCC physician. | 4–8 additional weeks |
| Decision Made | Officer makes an approval or refusal decision. For approvals, a Passport Request Letter is issued. | Cumulative 8–12 weeks |
| Visa Stamped & Returned | Your passport is returned to you via VAC or courier with the visa stamp. | 1–2 weeks after decision |
How to Track Your Canada Visa Application
IRCC provides an online application status tracker. Here is how to use it:
- Go to ircc.canada.ca and sign in with your GCKey or Sign-In Partner account.
- Navigate to "View my submitted applications or profiles."
- Your application(s) will be listed. Click on the relevant one to see the current status.
- Status messages include: We received your application, We need your biometrics, Your application is in process, We sent you a request for documents, We made a decision.
Note: The IRCC tracker does not show granular sub-stages (e.g., background check complete vs. officer review). The most common status for weeks at a time is simply "Your application is in process" — this is normal and does not indicate a problem. Only act if you receive an explicit request for additional documents.
Using the IRCC Processing Times Tool
IRCC maintains a live processing times tool at ircc.canada.ca/english/information/times/index.asp. You can filter by visa type (Visitor Visa) and country of application (India) to see the current published estimate. These numbers update weekly and are a useful reference, though individual experiences may differ.
Factors That Cause Processing Delays
Several specific issues are known to cause delays beyond the standard 8–12 weeks. Knowing these in advance allows you to proactively address them:
1. Missing or Incomplete Documents
The most common cause of delays is an incomplete application. IRCC will send you a "Request for Documents" (also called an ADR — Additional Document Request) letter if they need something more. Responding promptly and completely to this letter is critical. Any delay on your end pauses the clock on their side.
2. Background and Security Check Flags
If your name, date of birth, or passport number triggers a match against security databases, your file is referred for additional screening. This is not always indicative of a problem — common name similarities can cause false matches — but it adds 4–8 weeks to processing. There is no way to expedite this from the applicant's side.
3. Medical Examination Requirements
IRCC may require you to undergo a medical exam by a Designated Medical Practitioner (DMP) if your application profile raises certain flags — such as a very long proposed stay, employment in certain sectors, or travel to specific countries. Medical exams add 4–8 weeks and must be done by IRCC-approved physicians only.
4. Complex Travel or Immigration History
If you have previous visa refusals (Canada or other countries), overstays, deportation, or a complicated travel history, your application requires more careful review. Always disclose previous refusals honestly in your application — IRCC has access to visa refusal databases and a discrepancy will cause immediate rejection.
5. Application During Peak Season
May through August is the peak Canadian travel season for Indian applicants. IRCC receives the highest volume of applications during this period, and processing times consistently extend. Applications submitted in June for August travel are at high risk of not being processed in time.
Tips to Avoid Delays
Based on experience with hundreds of Canadian visa applications, here are the most effective ways to prevent your application from getting stuck:
- Submit a 100% complete application the first time. Use the IRCC document checklist precisely. Every box that says "if applicable" should be addressed — either with a document or a clear written explanation of why it does not apply to you.
- Ensure all documents are clear and legible. Blurry scans of bank statements or cropped passport pages are a common source of ADR requests. Scan at a minimum of 300 DPI. Use PDF where possible.
- Book your biometrics appointment immediately after receiving your BCI letter. Do not wait — slots at VACs in smaller cities book up quickly. The sooner biometrics are given, the sooner processing can move forward.
- Respond to any IRCC communications within 48 hours. If IRCC sends an ADR or any other request, treating it as urgent significantly prevents timeline extensions.
- Do not book non-refundable flights or hotels before your visa is approved. Always use flexible fare options or travel insurance that covers visa refusals.
- Include a strong cover letter. A well-written, concise cover letter that explains your trip purpose, financial standing, and ties to India can reduce the chance of an officer requesting additional clarification.
Pro Tip from Nirbhay: One of the biggest mistakes Indian applicants make is submitting bank statements that show a sudden large deposit just before the application date. Officers are trained to spot this pattern and it raises immediate red flags. Your financial documents should reflect a genuine, consistent financial history over 6 months — not a one-time influx of funds.
Best Time of Year to Apply
Timing your application strategically can make a meaningful difference in how quickly IRCC processes your file. Here is how the year breaks down from a processing-time perspective for Indian applicants:
- September to November — Best window. Application volumes drop after the summer rush. Processing times are at their shortest, typically 7–9 weeks. If you are planning a spring 2027 or summer 2027 Canada trip, applying in this window gives you the fastest turnaround with a long validity period.
- December to February — Good window. Holiday season sees some uptick but generally manageable timelines of 8–11 weeks. Good for applicants planning spring visits.
- March to April — Moderate. Processing times begin creeping up as summer travel demand builds. Apply immediately if you are planning a July–August trip.
- May to August — Avoid if possible. Peak season. Processing times regularly hit 12–16+ weeks. Applicants who apply in June for August travel frequently face serious timing issues. If you must travel in July or August, your application should ideally be submitted by February or March.
What to Do If Your Visa Takes Longer Than Expected
If your application has exceeded the published processing time on the IRCC website without any status update or communication, you have a few options:
- Submit a webform inquiry to IRCC. If your application has exceeded the published processing time by more than a few weeks, you can contact IRCC through their official webform (ircc.canada.ca/english/contacts/web-form.asp). Reference your application number and ask for a status update. IRCC typically responds within 30–60 days.
- Contact your MP's office. If you are a permanent resident of Canada or have a Canadian citizen family member, they can contact the Member of Parliament's (MP) office for the relevant riding on your behalf. MPs can make immigration inquiries to IRCC that sometimes result in faster responses.
- Consult a regulated immigration professional. In some cases, a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) or immigration lawyer can submit a more formal inquiry that carries more weight than a standard webform submission.
- Do not assume silence means refusal. The IRCC system takes time. Extended silences are frustrating but are not automatically a sign of a negative decision. Refusals are communicated formally in writing.
Never submit a second application while one is still in progress. IRCC flags duplicate applications and it can complicate both files, potentially resulting in both being refused. Wait for a final decision on your current application before reapplying.
Applying for a Canada Visa from India?
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