Canada hikes permanent resident fees

author avatar
Asheesh Moosapeta
Published: April 30, 2026

As of April 30, 2026, Canada's permanent residence (PR) processing fees have increased across all streams and programs—including Express Entry, Provincial Nominee Programs (PNPs), and family sponsorship.

Here's what you need to know, whether you have a PR application in progress — or plan to submit one soon.

See how competitive your Express Entry profile is

The change affects processing fees across every PR category, and (where relevant) applies to principal applicants, spouses / common-law partners, and dependant children.

The Right of Permanent Residence Fee (RPRF), which applies to most kinds of PR applications and can be deferred when an applicant initially submits their PR application, will also go up.

The fees increased by approximately 4–5% across most categories, with the family sponsorship fee seeing the steepest jump at just under 6%, and fees for dependent children and protected persons on the lower end, having crept up just under 4%.

Which PR fees are increasing?

Program Applicant type Old fee New fee (April 30, 2026) 
Right of Permanent Residence Fee Principal applicant, accompanying spouse or common-law partner $575 $600 
Federal High Skilled (Express Entry, PNP, Quebec Skilled Workers Atlantic Immigration Class, most economic pilots) Principal applicant $950 $990 
Federal High Skilled Accompanying spouse or common-law partner $950 $990 
Federal High Skilled Accompanying dependent child $260 $270 
Business (Federal and Quebec) Principal applicant $1,810 $1,895 
Business Accompanying spouse or common-law partner $950 $990 
Business Accompanying dependent child $260 $270 
Family reunification Sponsorship fee $85 $90 
Family reunification Sponsored principal applicant $545 $570 
Family reunification Sponsored dependent child $85 $90 
Protected persons Principal applicant $635 $660 
Protected persons Accompanying spouse or common-law partner $635 $660 
Protected persons Accompanying dependent child $175 $180 
Humanitarian and compassionate or public policy Principal applicant $635 $660 
Humanitarian and compassionate or public policy Accompanying spouse or common-law partner $635 $660 
Humanitarian and compassionate or public policy Accompanying dependent child $175 $180 
Permit holders class Principal applicant $375 $390 

Important: if you deferred your RPRF payment

If you applied for PR before April 30 but chose to pay the RPRF later, you must pay the new amount of $600 — even if you already paid your processing fee at the old rate. 

The RPRF is based on the amount in effect when you pay it, not when you applied. 

Already applied with the old fees? Here's what to do

If you applied online before April 30, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) received your application and fees right away. You don't need to do anything.

If you mailed a paper application before the fee change, IRCC generally won't reject it as long as it was complete and sent before April 30. If you do need to pay the difference, IRCC will contact you with instructions.

To pay the difference:

  • Work out the gap between the old and new fees for each applicant in your application.
  • Go to IRCC's online payment tool and select "Make an additional payment or pay other fees."
  • Enter the total difference under "Quantity."
  • Submit your receipt following the instructions IRCC sent you.
  • You can confirm the exact fee for your application using IRCC's online fee tool.

See how competitive your Express Entry profile is

Share this article
Share your voice
Did you find this article helpful?
Thank you for your feedback.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Did you find this article helpful?
Please provide a response
Thank you for your helpful feedback
Please contact us if you would like to share additional feedback, have a question, or would like Canadian immigration assistance.
  • Do you need Canadian immigration assistance? Contact the Contact Cohen Immigration Law firm by completing our form
  • Send us your feedback or your non-legal assistance questions by emailing us at media@canadavisa.com
Related articles
Processing times ease for temporary residence applicants
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has released updated temporary resident application wait times.
Canada expands access to work permits for spouses of Quebec healthcare workers
A close up of a healthcare worker comforting a patient.
93% of Express Entry pool growth driven by candidates scoring in the 501–600 range
A crowd gathers at Place des Arts in Montreal
Work permit wait times are on the rise, latest IRCC data shows
people seating in a line against a wall, with documents in their hands.
Top Stories
11 Everyday Canadian English Phrases Every CELPIP Test Taker Should Know
LMIA wait times improve for select Temporary Foreign Worker Program streams
You’re Canadian under Bill C-3, but your future children might not be — here’s what you can do about it
Join our free newsletter. Get Canada's top immigration stories delivered to your inbox.
Subscribe
More in Citizenship
You’re Canadian under Bill C-3, but your future children might not be — here’s what you can do about it
A child raises the Canadian flag while sitting on his father's shoulders.
Canadian citizenship costs Americans less than a Caribbean vacation—and millions already qualify
A Canadian passport hel in the foreground, with multiple other passports in the background.
Little Canada in America: How Bill C-3 is restoring Canadian citizenship to descendants of Quebec’s great migration
Historic Clock Tower in New Hampshire
Josh Duhamel is among the millions of Americans who became Canadian citizens when Canada changed its citizenship law
American actor Josh Duhamel
Link copied to clipboard