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For the large majority of travellers, the Canada eTA is approved within minutes of submitting the online form. The authorisation is electronic, linked to your passport, and confirmed by email. For a minority of applications, an automated check flags something that needs a human look: those go to manual review, and IRCC sends an email within 72 hours explaining the next steps. If supporting documents are requested, the total wait depends on how fast you provide them and can take several days to several weeks.
Note what is not on the list: applying at night, on a weekend, or close to your travel date does not by itself slow processing — the automated system runs continuously.
If your application is not approved within minutes, do not panic and do not reapply. IRCC commits to emailing you within 72 hours of submission. That email says one of two things: your application needs more time (nothing required from you yet), or you must submit specific documents through the link provided. From the moment documents are requested, the timeline is largely in your hands — respond the same day if you can. After you submit them, a decision typically follows within days, though complex cases take longer.
Apply the moment you book your trip. There is no downside: the eTA is valid for five years (or until your passport expires), so applying early never wastes validity. As a minimum safety margin, apply at least 72 hours before departure so a manual review has time to resolve. Booking non-refundable flights before your eTA is approved is a risk you do not need to take.
The wait, however long, only happens once per passport. An approved eTA is valid for five years or until your passport expires, whichever comes first, and covers unlimited entries for stays of up to six months each. Renew your passport, though, and you will need a fresh eTA — the authorisation is tied to the document, not to you.
Most applications are approved within minutes. A minority go to manual review: IRCC then emails you within 72 hours, and if documents are requested the process can take days to weeks depending on how quickly you respond.
Your application was likely flagged for manual review — usually because of a "yes" answer to a background question, details that could not be verified automatically, or previous immigration history. Check your email (including spam) for instructions from IRCC.
There is no official expedite option. The only levers you control are submitting a perfectly accurate application in the first place and, if documents are requested, providing them the same day.
First, search all email folders for a message from IRCC — it is easy to miss. Then check your status online with your application number. If a document request is sitting unanswered, the clock is stopped until you respond.
Ideally, yes — or at least book refundable fares. Since the eTA is valid for five years, the best habit is applying as soon as a trip becomes likely, long before you pay for anything non-refundable.
No. The automated approval system runs continuously, so most applications are approved within minutes regardless of the day or hour. Manual reviews involve officers and can be affected by business days, but you cannot influence that.