
Program now live, details to follow
On March 6, 2026, Immigration Minister Lena Metlege Diab revealed in an interview with the Toronto Star that the federal government had already launched a one-time temporary residence to permanent residence (TR to PR) pathway. According to the government's website, the program will run over two years and is aimed at temporary foreign workers employed in specific in-demand sectors in Canada, with a particular focus on those living in rural areas. A total of 33,000 permanent residence spots are planned under the initiative.
The pathway was first proposed in the November 2025 federal budget and later confirmed in the government's annual Immigration Levels Plan. The minister indicated that more detailed information would be released publicly in April 2026.
Eligibility criteria not yet announced
As of the time of writing, the federal government has not released specific eligibility criteria or application instructions for the new pathway. Prospective applicants are advised to begin preparing supporting documents—such as official language test results and proof of education—so they are ready to apply once the full details are published.
A pathway amid mass status expiry
The launch of the TR to PR pathway comes as a large number of temporary residents in Canada face the expiry of their legal status. Most temporary residents hold work permits and/or study permits, both of which are issued for fixed durations. Permit holders may apply for extensions or renewals depending on their circumstances, but those who are ineligible or whose renewal applications are rejected are required to leave Canada when their authorized period of stay ends.
Federal government's campaign to reduce temporary resident numbers
Since January 2024, the Canadian federal government has pursued an aggressive course of action to reduce the overall temporary resident population, with a stated goal of bringing temporary resident levels below 5% of Canada's total population by the end of 2027. The government's plan relies on two levers: converting eligible temporary residents into permanent residents, and allowing those whose status expires to depart the country.
To that end, the government has introduced a rapid succession of restrictive measures between 2024 and 2025:
- January 2024: The government imposed the first-ever annual cap on study permit applications and eliminated post-graduation work permit (PGWP) eligibility for graduates of programs delivered through curriculum licensing agreements.
- September 2024: A moratorium was placed on the processing of labour market impact assessments (LMIAs) under the low-wage stream of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) in regions with high unemployment, effectively blocking employers and workers in those areas from applying for new or renewed permits through that stream. In the same month, the government announced major restrictions on the issuance of PGWPs and spousal open work permits (SOWPs), projected to reduce work permit issuance by hundreds of thousands over the following three years.
- October 2024: For the first time, the government included targets for temporary resident admissions in its annual Immigration Levels Plan, establishing quantitative benchmarks for temporary residents.
- November 2024 onward: PGWP eligibility was restricted to graduates of programs linked to in-demand fields such as healthcare and skilled trades, with an exemption for graduates of bachelor's, master's, and doctoral programs. PGWP applicants were also required to meet minimum language proficiency standards through official language tests.
- January 2025 onward: SOWPs for spouses of international students were limited to spouses of students enrolled in doctoral programs, master's programs of at least 16 months, or select professional programs including engineering, nursing, law, medicine, and dentistry. SOWPs for spouses of foreign workers were restricted to spouses of workers in the highest-skilled occupations (TEER 0 and 1), as well as spouses of medium-skilled workers (TEER 2 and 3) in select in-demand fields such as healthcare, construction, and natural resources.
Measures show clear results: population growth reverses
According to Statistics Canada's quarterly population estimates and figures published by the immigration department on temporary residents in Canada, the suite of measures has produced significant results.
In 2025, Canada's population growth first flatlined before recording slight declines—marking the first instances of population decrease since modern record-keeping began in 1971, apart from a brief COVID-driven dip in the fourth quarter of 2020.
The declines in admissions of international students and temporary foreign workers were particularly striking. Year over year, international student admissions fell by 60%, from 293,000 to 115,000. Annual admissions of temporary foreign workers dropped by 47%, from 393,000 to 184,000.









