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Canada’s 2026 Immigration Pathways: Stable Intake, More Targeted Selection

Based on the 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan, Canada plans to keep its annual permanent resident target at 380,000 from 2026 to 2028, while directing more selection power toward economic immigration and “in-Canada” talent transitions (turning workers and residents already in Canada into permanent residents). In 2026, the overall economic class target is 239,800, including 109,000 for Federal High Skilled (Express Entry), 91,500 for the Provincial Nominee Program (PNP), and 4,000 for the Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP). Family admissions include 69,000 for spouses/partners/children and 15,000 for parents and grandparents. Humanitarian spaces include 49,300 for refugees and protected persons and 6,900 for humanitarian and compassionate and other admissions.

At a glance: 2026 targets by major category (permanent residents)

Category / Program2026 Target2027 Target2028 Target
Total permanent residents380,000380,000380,000
Economic class (total)239,800244,700244,700
Federal High Skilled (Express Entry scope)109,000111,000111,000
Provincial Nominee Program (PNP)91,50092,50092,500
Economic pilots (incl. caregiver, community pilots, EMPP)8,1758,7758,775
Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP)4,0004,0004,000
Federal business immigration500500500
Family: spouses/partners/children69,00066,00066,000
Family: parents & grandparents15,00015,00015,000
Refugees & protected persons49,30049,30049,300
Humanitarian & compassionate and other6,9005,0005,000

Twelve major ways to immigrate to Canada in 2026

I. Permanent residence — Economic programs

1) Express Entry: from broad draws to precision selection

Express Entry remains Canada’s primary selection system for skilled immigrants, managing applications through:

  • Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSW)
  • Canadian Experience Class (CEC)
  • Federal Skilled Trades Program (FST)

In 2026, the most reliable selection trends are expected to concentrate on:

  • Occupation-specific categories tied to shortages
  • Candidates with Canadian work experience
  • French-speaking applicants outside Quebec (see the francophone priority section below)

New for 2026: a physician category limited to candidates with Canadian work experience

A major Express Entry development is the creation of a physician-specific category focused on doctors already working in Canada. To qualify, candidates are expected to have accumulated within the past three years:

  • At least 12 months of full-time, continuous Canadian work experience (or an equivalent amount of part-time work)
  • Experience in one eligible physician occupation
  • Compliance with any draw-specific instructions issued by IRCC

Eligible occupations include general practitioners and family physicians, specialists in surgery, and specialists in clinical and laboratory medicine. This category runs alongside broader healthcare selections and reinforces the move toward increasingly specific pathways.

2) Provincial Nominee Program (PNP): one of the most dependable routes in 2026

With a 2026 target of 91,500, provincial and territorial nominee programs remain a highly practical option—especially for applicants who may not score competitively under Express Entry. In 2026, provinces are generally prioritizing:

  • Healthcare and social services
  • Skilled trades and construction
  • Settlement in regional and smaller communities
  • Francophone candidates outside Quebec

Many PNP streams align with Express Entry, while others operate independently and often support workers already in Canada.

3) Quebec immigration: more restrictive, more francophone, more region-focused

Quebec runs its own immigration system and has moved sharply to restrict intake in 2026. The province has confirmed it will cap permanent immigration at 45,000 admissions in 2026, citing limits on integration capacity and public services.

Quebec has also restructured skilled worker selection: the Quebec Experience Program (PEQ) ends on November 19, 2025, leaving the Programme de sélection des travailleurs qualifiés (PSTQ) as the primary skilled worker route. Candidates must declare interest through Arrima, with priority often leaning toward those already living in Quebec, holding Quebec credentials, or demonstrating strong French proficiency.

Quebec is still an option in 2026, but it is now tighter on intake, more francophone, and more focused on regional needs than in previous years.

4) Economic pilot programs: targeted, employer-driven, and under adjustment

Canada continues to use pilots to address regional and sector-specific shortages. The 2026 target for economic pilots is 8,175, including:

  • Caregiver-related pathways (currently suspended and under review)
  • Community immigration pilots
  • Economic Mobility Pathways Pilot (EMPP) for skilled refugees

Most pilots are employer-driven, meaning a qualifying job offer is often required.

5) Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP): practical with a job offer in Atlantic Canada

The AIP is now a permanent pathway, with a 2026 target of 4,000, covering Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Prince Edward Island. The program remains focused on long-term regional retention and is often a workable route for candidates who secure a designated job offer.

II. Business immigration

6) Federal business immigration: SUV paused, entrepreneur pilot expected

Canada has reduced federal business immigration sharply. Under the 2026–2028 plan, federal business admissions are capped at 500 per year, indicating a small, highly selective model rather than a large-volume pathway.

IRCC has confirmed the Start-Up Visa (SUV) is moving into a full pause for new Commitment Certificates at midnight on December 31, 2025. Applicants with valid 2025 commitments must apply for permanent residence by June 30, 2026, while new SUV work permit applications stopped on December 19, 2025.

A new Entrepreneur Pilot is expected in 2026. While details remain limited, IRCC has indicated it may prioritize entrepreneurs already in Canada and focus on ventures delivering significant economic benefit. Until the new pilot launches, provincial entrepreneur streams under PNP remain the most realistic route for many business owners.

7) Provincial entrepreneur programs: still viable, but costly and region-specific

Many provinces continue to run entrepreneur and business immigration streams through PNP. These typically require:

  • Significant personal net worth
  • Minimum investment thresholds
  • Active business management
  • Job creation and performance commitments

They remain options in 2026 but are selective, expensive, and closely tied to provincial priorities.

III. Family reunification

8) Spouses, partners, and children

Family sponsorship remains a core pillar. The 2026 target is 69,000. Sponsored spouses and partners often qualify for open work permits during processing, helping families settle together in Canada.

9) Parents and grandparents

The Parents and Grandparents Program continues with limited intake. The 2026 target is 15,000, and selection remains based on the existing interest-to-sponsor pool. Those not selected may consider the Super Visa as an alternative.

IV. Refugees and other humanitarian pathways

10) Refugees and protected persons

Canada’s humanitarian commitment remains stable. The 2026 target is 49,300, including government-assisted refugees, privately sponsored refugees, and protected persons already in Canada.

11) Humanitarian and compassionate (H&C) and other admissions

Canada also reserves space for discretionary and exceptional cases. The 2026 target is 6,900, with cases assessed individually.

V. A system-wide priority: Francophone immigration outside Quebec

12) French-speaking immigration outside Quebec: a major strategic advantage

Francophone immigration is not a standalone program, but it is a central priority across Canada’s system. Target shares for French-speaking admissions outside Quebec are:

  • 2026: 9% (30,267)
  • 2027: 9.5% (31,825)
  • 2028: 10.5% (35,175)

This priority is reflected in Express Entry category-based draws, PNP francophone streams, and community-focused pilots. For many applicants, French language ability is increasingly one of the strongest strategic advantages.

What this means for 2026

Canada’s 2026 immigration system is less about volume and more about fit. The strongest pathways increasingly reward applicants who align with labour shortages, regional needs, francophone priorities, and proven ability to integrate—especially those with Canadian experience. For applicants who plan strategically and target the right program, meaningful opportunities remain, even as general pathways narrow.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q1: How many permanent residents will Canada accept in 2026?

A: Canada plans to admit 380,000 permanent residents in 2026 under its Immigration Levels Plan.

Q2: What has changed in Express Entry for 2026?

A: Express Entry is becoming more targeted. Alongside occupation-based draws, 2026 introduces a physician category limited to candidates with recent Canadian work experience, while broad all-program draws are expected to remain limited.

Q3: Is Quebec still a good immigration option in 2026?

A: Quebec remains an option, but it is far more restrictive. The province has capped permanent immigration at 45,000, ended PEQ on November 19, 2025, and is tightening French-language and selection priorities.

Q4: Are business immigration programs still open?

A: Federal business immigration has been sharply reduced. The Start-Up Visa is paused for new commitments, the federal business cap is 500 per year, and a new Entrepreneur Pilot is expected in 2026—though competition will likely be intense.

Q5: What is the easiest way to immigrate to Canada in 2026?

A: There is no single “easy” pathway. Strong options include Express Entry with Canadian work experience, Provincial Nominee Programs, family sponsorship, and francophone-oriented pathways outside Quebec. Success depends on aligning with labour market needs and program priorities.

Friendly reminder: There are many pathways to immigrate to Canada. We recommend first using UNA AI to generate an objective and neutral immigration plan, so you can gain an initial understanding of the possible immigration pathways and their requirements, and then choose to proceed with one-on-one consultations with a licensed Canadian immigration consultant partnered with UNA.
加拿大新版 TR 转 PR 通道将排除全部都会区,三大城市临时工无缘申请
Canada's New TR-to-PR Pathway Shuts Out Every Major Urban Centre as Minister Confirms Full CMA Exclusion
Canada's Immigration Minister Lena Diab has confirmed that the federal government's new Temporary Resident to Permanent Resident (TR to PR) Pathway will exclude every one of Canada's 41 Census Metropolitan Areas (CMAs), meaning temporary foreign workers currently employed in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, Calgary, Ottawa and other major urban centres will be shut out of the one-time program that is set to grant permanent residence to 33,000 rural and small-community workers over 2026 and 2027; speaking on the April 18, 2026 edition of the immigration show "I'm Canada," Diab said the full selection criteria — including work-experience duration and occupational scope — will be released "in the coming weeks," though she indicated applicants may need close to two years of Canadian work experience and that the pathway is unlikely to be sector-restricted; the CMA carve-out aligns with a broader federal push toward rural immigration, including temporary Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) flexibilities that took effect April 1, 2026 for rural employers outside CMAs and that have so far been adopted by Nova Scotia, Quebec, and Manitoba, together pointing to a coordinated policy shift that concentrates permanent-residence pipelines in smaller communities while tightening them in Canada's largest cities.
04/24/2026
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The Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) held its second draw of 2026 targeting international student graduates on April 22, issuing a total of 918 invitations to apply (ITAs) to candidates who completed a master's or doctoral degree at an Ontario university — 674 under the Master's Graduate Stream at a minimum score of 61, and 244 under the PhD Graduate Stream at a minimum score of 56. Compared with the program's March 18 draw, cut-off scores climbed sharply in both streams (up 31 points for master's and 7 points for PhD), a jump industry observers attribute not to a policy tightening but to a surge of high-scoring candidates entering the pool after the previous round. The April 22 draw was also notably broader in scope: unlike the NOC-targeted March 18 round, it imposed no specific National Occupational Classification experience requirement. All of this is unfolding against the backdrop of the deepest restructuring of the OINP in over a decade — the nine existing application categories are scheduled to be formally revoked on May 30, 2026, and replaced by four consolidated pathways (Employer: Job Offer, Priority Healthcare, Entrepreneur, and Exceptional Talent), giving eligible graduates a narrow closing window in which to act on an ITA.
04/23/2026
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The Government of Saskatchewan has released first-quarter data for the Saskatchewan Immigrant Nominee Program (SINP), showing that as of April 21, 2026, the province has issued 1,223 nominations — roughly 26 percent of its 4,761-nomination annual allocation — leaving 3,538 spots to be distributed over the remainder of the year; against the backdrop of Ottawa's sweeping 50 percent cut to all Provincial Nominee Programs (PNPs) in 2025, Saskatchewan's 2026 allocation sits at only about 60 percent of the roughly 8,000 nominations the province received in 2024, prompting a structural overhaul that slices the annual quota into "priority sectors," "capped sectors" and "other sectors," with capped trades such as accommodation and food services, retail and trucking now managed through a fixed-window intake schedule; Q1 figures show the seven priority sectors — healthcare, agriculture, skilled trades, mining, manufacturing, energy and technology — moving fastest, using up 29 percent of their internal allocation and accounting for more than half of all nominations issued so far, while the capped retail, trade and other services sector leads usage in its category at 31 percent, followed by accommodation and food services at 26 percent and trucking at 19 percent, with non-priority, non-capped "other sectors" sitting at 19 percent overall; the next capped-sector intake window opens on May 4, 2026, on a first-come, first-served basis.
04/22/2026
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04/21/2026
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On April 15, 2026, the Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) held two back-to-back draws under its Employer Job Offer: In-Demand Skills stream, issuing a combined 1,334 invitations to apply (ITAs) to candidates with qualifying job offers in either agriculture-related occupations or other priority occupations, of which 315 invitations (minimum score 35) went to agriculture candidates and 1,024 (minimum score 36) went to non-agriculture priority occupation candidates — approximately 77% of the total; the two draws together targeted 39 National Occupational Classification (NOC) codes and required candidates to be residing in Canada with a valid work or study permit at the time of selection, with eligible profiles having been created and attested to no earlier than July 2, 2025 and no later than 11:59 p.m. on April 13, 2026, marking OINP's third round of selections in April; notably, OINP is expected to undergo a major program overhaul on May 30, 2026 that will revoke existing applicant categories and consolidate the three current Employer Job Offer streams into a single unified stream, though the province has yet to clarify how existing candidates will be transitioned.
04/20/2026
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Prince Edward Island's Office of Immigration held its fourth provincial nominee draw of 2026 on April 16, issuing 127 invitations — the largest single round of the year so far. The draw was conducted through the Labour Impact and PEI Express Entry pathways, the only two streams the province has used this year, and focused on candidates currently working in Prince Edward Island (PEI) in priority occupations and sectors deemed to have high economic impact. International graduates from three local post-secondary institutions — the University of Prince Edward Island (UPEI), Holland College and Collège de l'Île — were given further priority. With this round, PEI has now issued a total of 363 invitations under the Prince Edward Island Provincial Nominee Program (PEI PNP) in 2026. The draw took place on the exact date listed in the province's publicly released invitation schedule. Candidates who receive an invitation now have 30 calendar days — down from the previous 60-day window — to file a complete application for provincial nomination.
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Canada's population of international students holding only a study permit has dropped sharply over the past two years, signalling a clear structural shift in federal immigration policy. According to the latest data from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), the number of study-permit-only holders fell from 673,920 in December 2023 to 460,695 in January 2026, a net reduction of more than 210,000 people, or over 30 percent. The decline became visible from mid-2024, accelerated sharply between March and July 2025, and has remained consistently below 500,000 since late 2025. Analysts broadly attribute the drop to Ottawa's systematic effort to cap international student volumes — a policy first introduced under Justin Trudeau's government in January 2024 and since extended and tightened under Prime Minister Mark Carney, whose 2025 budget slashed the 2026 new study permit allocation from 305,900 to 155,000 (a 49 percent cut), alongside stricter eligibility rules, tougher scrutiny of designated learning institutions (DLIs) and explicit links between intake and housing and labour market capacity. Observers say this is not a short-term correction but a structural turning point that will reshape tuition revenues at Canadian post-secondary institutions, the future pool of permanent resident candidates and housing demand in major cities.
04/17/2026
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On April 15, 2026, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) held its fourth Express Entry draw of the year targeting candidates with French-language proficiency, issuing 4,000 invitations to apply (ITAs) with a Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) cut-off of 419 for candidates who had created their Express Entry profiles before 7:14 a.m. UTC on November 14, 2025; this was the second consecutive French-category draw with a reduced invitation count, and the twenty-third overall Express Entry draw of 2026, reinforcing the broader trend of IRCC prioritizing in-Canada candidates—particularly those holding provincial nominations or Canadian work experience—while year-to-date invitations across all categories have now reached 65,154.
04/16/2026
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Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) issued 2,000 Invitations to Apply (ITAs) for permanent residence to Canadian Experience Class (CEC) candidates in an Express Entry round held on April 14, 2026, with the Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) cut-off settling at 515 — six points higher than the previous CEC round on March 31 and the largest single jump in CRS thresholds between draws this year, which also makes it the smallest CEC round of 2026 and underscores IRCC's continued tilt toward in-Canada candidates with domestic work experience or provincial nominations even as the bar to receive an invitation continues to rise; year-to-date, IRCC has issued 61,154 ITAs across all Express Entry categories, with the CEC stream alone accounting for more than half of that total.
04/15/2026
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04/14/2026
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