Quick Answer
You have up to 180 days from the date you complete your program — not your graduation ceremony — to apply for a Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP). Apply as soon as you receive your completion confirmation letter and before your study permit expires. After day 180, the PGWP option is permanently closed. This is a one-time, lifetime opportunity.
The Three Deadlines Every Graduate Must Track
| Deadline | What it means | What happens if you miss it |
|---|---|---|
| Study permit expiry | Date printed on your permit, or 90 days after program completion (whichever comes first) | You lose work authorization; need restoration |
| Day 90 after program completion | End of the unlimited post-completion work window | Without a submitted PGWP application, you lose work authorization |
| Day 180 after program completion | Final deadline to submit your PGWP application | PGWP is permanently unavailable after this day |
The 180-day clock starts when your school confirms your program completion in writing — typically the official transcript or completion letter, not your convocation ceremony.
This guide explains general rules and steps. It is not legal advice. Your individual situation may change what applies — particularly if your study permit expired before you received completion confirmation, if you studied part-time in your final semester, or if you completed part of your program outside Canada. Before acting on anything in this article, consider consulting a licensed RCIC registered with the CICC or a Canadian immigration lawyer.
Eligibility for PGWP in 2026
You qualify if:
- You completed a program at a Designated Learning Institution (DLI) of at least 8 months (or 900 hours in Quebec)
- Your program is on the PGWP-eligible field of study list — frozen for 2026, no new fields added
- You maintained full-time student status each semester (with limited final-semester exceptions)
- You completed at least 50% of your program physically in Canada (lock-in date rule from September 1, 2024 onward)
- You hold or held a valid study permit at some point during the 180-day application window
- You meet the language requirements introduced November 1, 2024
Language Test Requirements
For PGWP applications submitted on or after November 1, 2024:
- Bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral graduates: CLB/NCLC 7 in all four skills
- College, polytechnic, non-university programs: CLB/NCLC 5 in all four skills
Tests must be taken in person. Accepted tests include IELTS General Training, CELPIP General, PTE Core, TEF Canada, and TCF Canada. Flight school graduates remain exempt from the language requirement.
Timeline for a May or June 2026 Graduate
If you complete your program on June 1, 2026 and receive your completion letter on June 15, 2026, your timeline looks like this:
| Day | Date | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | June 15, 2026 | 180-day window opens; begin gathering documents |
| Day 1–30 | June 15 – July 15, 2026 | Book language test; gather transcripts; prepare digital photo |
| Day 31–60 | July 15 – Aug 14, 2026 | Submit PGWP application online through the IRCC portal |
| Day 90 | Sept 13, 2026 | End of 90-day post-completion unlimited work window |
| Day 180 | Dec 12, 2026 | Last possible day to submit; PGWP closed after this |
The earlier you submit, the longer your maintained-status work authorization protects you while you wait for processing.
Maintained Status: The Critical Concept
If you submit your PGWP application before your study permit expires, you can continue working full-time in Canada while waiting for a decision. This is called maintained status.
If you submit after your study permit has expired, you are out of status. You can still apply for the PGWP within the 180-day window, but:
- You cannot work while waiting
- You must apply for restoration alongside the PGWP (between day 91 and day 180)
- Restoration is a separate, riskier application — refusal leaves you with no legal recourse to remain in Canada
Documents You’ll Need
Core documents:
- Final transcript or program completion letter from your DLI
- Valid passport
- Current and previous study permits
- Proof of language test results (sent directly from test provider for some tests)
- Digital photo meeting IRCC specifications
- Payment of the application fee and the open work permit holder fee
Supporting documents (case-dependent):
- Proof that you completed at least 50% of the program in Canada
- Co-op or internship records, if applicable
- Letter of explanation for any program gaps or part-time semesters
Common Mistakes That Cause Refusals
- Submitting before receiving your formal completion letter — IRCC may return the application as incomplete
- Submitting after your study permit expired without including a restoration application
- Failing to send language test results directly from the test provider when required
- Working between program completion and PGWP submission without confirming the 90-day rule applies to you
- Continuing to work past day 90 if your PGWP has not been submitted yet
What If Your Program Was Not on the Eligible Field List?
The field of study list is frozen for 2026. If your program is not on the list:
- You cannot get a PGWP regardless of when you graduated
- You may apply for a different work permit (LMIA-based, intra-company transfer, or International Experience Canada) if eligible
- You should explore alternatives immediately — the 90-day post-completion unlimited work window expires fast
When to Hire an RCIC or Lawyer
Strongly consider professional help if:
- Your study permit expired before you received completion confirmation
- Your program was delivered in a hybrid or modified format that may affect the 50%-in-Canada calculation
- You studied at a private college operating under a public institution’s curriculum
- You are uncertain whether your program field qualifies
- You have a previous refusal or compliance issue
FAQ
My convocation is in October but I finished classes in April. When does my 180 days start?
When your school confirms in writing that you have met all degree requirements. Usually this is when final grades post, not the ceremony.
Can I apply for PGWP from outside Canada?
Yes. The 180-day rule applies regardless of your location. You may need to provide biometrics. After approval, you can return to Canada and present the approval letter at the port of entry.
Can the PGWP be extended later?
The PGWP cannot be renewed or extended in most cases. The 18-month extension policy that existed in 2023–2024 has expired. Once your PGWP expires, you need PR, a bridging open work permit, or an LMIA-based permit to continue working.
Canadianow is an independent publisher. We are not a licensed immigration consultancy or law firm. This article reflects publicly available IRCC information as of May 2026 and should not be taken as legal advice for your specific case.
Sources
- IRCC — Post-Graduation Work Permit overview
- IRCC — November 1, 2024 PGWP rule changes
- IRCC — PGWP eligible fields of study list (frozen for 2026)
- Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations
Written by Canadianow Editorial Team. Reviewed for accuracy and currency. Last reviewed: May 2026.






