The Immigration and Refugee Board finalized nearly 13,000 refugee protection claims in June 2026 alone while receiving fewer than 2,700 new ones, pulling the total pending caseload down to roughly 276,000 from a peak of over 300,000 in late 2025. Refugee appeals, however, are still climbing month over month.
For months, the headline number in Canadian refugee policy has been the size of the backlog. It is a number that shapes public debate, funding decisions, and how long a genuine claimant waits for a hearing. The June 2026 data from the Immigration and Refugee Board tells a more encouraging story than the one that dominated coverage through most of last year, though it is not uniformly good news.
How Much Has The Refugee Claims Backlog Actually Dropped?
The pending caseload for refugee protection claims peaked above 300,000 in late 2025. By June 2026, it had fallen to approximately 276,000. That is a meaningful reduction achieved in a fairly short window, and it happened because finalizations consistently outpaced new intake for several consecutive months.
| 2026 Month | New Referrals | Claims Finalized | Pending Claims (End of Month) |
| January | 6,490 | 6,668 | 299,973 |
| February | 5,830 | 7,594 | 298,209 |
| March | 5,879 | 8,586 | 295,502 |
| April | 2,657 | 5,110 | 293,049 |
| May | 2,920 | 9,029 | 286,940 |
| June | 2,679 | 12,985 | 276,649 |
Source: Canada’s Refugee Claim Backlog Shrinking
Why Did New Refugee Claims Drop So Sharply In April?
New referrals fell from roughly 5,800 to 6,000 a month in the first quarter down to under 3,000 a month from April onward. That shift roughly coincides with policy and border enforcement changes that reduced irregular crossings and tightened certain intake channels earlier in 2026. Whatever the specific cause for an individual case, the practical effect is clear. Fewer new files are entering the system each month than the Board is capable of resolving, which is the only way a large backlog actually shrinks.
Is The Refugee Appeals Backlog Improving Too?
No, and this is the part of the picture that gets less attention. While the primary claims backlog fell, refugee appeals climbed steadily every month of 2026, from roughly 4,790 pending files in January to over 5,700 by June.
| 2026 Month | New Appeals | Appeals Finalized | Pending Appeals |
| January | 1,053 | 984 | 4,793 |
| February | 1,225 | 1,172 | 4,846 |
| March | 1,430 | 1,312 | 4,964 |
| April | 1,101 | 835 | 5,230 |
| May | 1,232 | 960 | 5,502 |
| June | 1,197 | 993 | 5,706 |
A faster first-instance decision is only half the story for a claimant. If the case is refused and appealed, the appeal stage is now the slower half of the journey.
What Does This Mean For Someone Filing A Refugee Claim In Canada Right Now?
A shrinking primary backlog is genuinely good news for new claimants, since it suggests the Refugee Protection Division has more capacity relative to intake than it did a year ago. But anyone whose first decision is unfavourable should plan for a longer wait at the appeal stage than at the initial hearing. Preparing a complete, well-documented file the first time around matters more than ever, since a strong initial submission reduces the odds of needing that slower appeal route at all.
How ImmigCanada Approaches Refugee Claim Preparation
Under the guidance of RCIC Eivy Joy Quito, our team treats the first hearing as the only hearing a client should need. We recently supported a claimant, a former teacher relocating with her two children, whose original narrative submission had gaps in country-condition evidence that could easily have triggered a request for more information or a refusal. After a full file review and additional corroborating documentation, her claim was referred and finalized within a single quarter, without ever reaching the appeal stage. That is the outcome a properly prepared file is designed to produce.
Frequently Asked Questions About Canada’s Refugee Claims Backlog
A: Approximately 276,649 refugee protection claims were pending at the end of June 2026, down from a peak above 300,000 in late 2025.
A: Monthly finalizations by the Immigration and Refugee Board have consistently outpaced new referrals since early 2026, particularly from April onward when new claims dropped sharply.
A: It generally points to more Board capacity relative to intake, which can translate into shorter waits for a first hearing, though individual timelines still vary by case complexity.
A: You may be able to appeal to the Refugee Appeal Division, though appeal timelines are currently longer and the backlog there is increasing rather than shrinking.
A: A complete, well-documented claim at the first hearing, including corroborating evidence, materially lowers the chance of a refusal that would push your case into the slower appeal stream.
Whether you are preparing to file a refugee protection claim or considering an appeal, the strength of your documentation shapes which line you end up standing in. Book a Consultation with ImmigCanada today.
