
On the evening of March 12, 2026, the Canadian Senate passed Bill C-12 at third reading. The full title of the bill is An Act respecting certain measures relating to the security of Canada’s borders and the integrity of the Canadian immigration system and respecting other related security measures, commonly referred to as the Strong Borders Act. According to the Canadian Parliament’s official LEGISinfo page, as of March 13, 2026, the latest status of Bill C-12 is listed as “Awaiting royal assent,” indicating that the legislative process has advanced further.
Core of the bill: Three major immigration system changes
From an immigration perspective, the key elements of Bill C-12 are concentrated in three broad areas:
- Expanded executive authority over immigration applications and documents;
- Changes to the intake and eligibility rules of Canada’s asylum system;
- Broader powers for the immigration department to share personal information.
When the Canadian government introduced the bill in October 2025, it also clearly framed it as a package of legislative measures designed to “strengthen border security, combat organized crime, and modernize immigration controls.” This included stronger authority to cancel, suspend, or amend immigration documents, as well as improved information sharing between IRCC and federal, provincial, and territorial partners.
1. Expanded executive powers: work permits, study permits, visitor visas, and permanent resident visas may all be affected
Under the bill, if Bill C-12 becomes law, the Governor in Council would be granted broader authority to take immigration-related action in situations deemed to be in the “public interest.” These powers would include:
- Stopping the acceptance of certain categories of immigration applications;
- Pausing the processing of certain applications;
- Terminating the processing of applications that have already been submitted;
- Cancelling, suspending, or varying already-issued immigration documents;
- Imposing or changing conditions on temporary residents.
The range of documents that could be adjusted or affected is broad, including:
- Work permits;
- Study permits;
- Visitor visas;
- Permanent resident visas.
The bill defines “public interest” grounds to include administrative errors, fraud, public health, public safety, or national security. At the same time, it also requires that once such powers are exercised, the immigration minister must explain to Parliament why the order was made and identify the groups affected. In other words, the bill does not merely adjust individual case processing. It effectively creates a stronger tool for broad, systemic government intervention. This has been viewed as one of the most consequential changes to Canada’s immigration framework in decades.
2. Asylum reform: two new categories of claims ineligible for referral to the IRB
Bill C-12 would also make significant changes to Canada’s asylum system, particularly regarding whether a claim can be referred to the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) for adjudication.
The bill creates two new grounds on which refugee claims would be ineligible for referral to the IRB:
- Individuals who first entered Canada after June 24, 2020, but made their asylum claim more than one year after their first date of entry;
- Individuals who entered Canada from the Canada–U.S. land border outside an official port of entry.
This is especially noteworthy. Under the current system, people who entered Canada through a non-port-of-entry location along the Canada–U.S. land border could still, in some circumstances, make an asylum claim if they waited at least 14 days after entering Canada. The new bill would clearly tighten that route. At the same time, these two new ineligibility rules would also apply retroactively to June 3, 2025, the date on which its predecessor, Bill C-2, was first introduced.
That said, the bill does not mean that affected individuals would lose all forms of protection. Claimants who are ineligible for referral to the IRB may still be able to apply for a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA).
In addition, under an amendment introduced by Senator Tony Dean, five years after the bill comes into force, the immigration department would be required to submit annual reports to Parliament disclosing the number of “post-one-year” ineligible claimants, as well as the number and outcomes of related PRRAs. This means that although the bill tightens access to the asylum system, Parliament would still continue monitoring its long-term effects.
The bill also includes other asylum-related reforms:
- Claimants who voluntarily return to the country from which they sought protection may be deemed to have abandoned their claim;
- Claims made by individuals who are outside Canada would not be considered.
Taken together, these changes show that Canada is further reinforcing a policy direction that prioritizes border control and tighter management of the asylum system.
3. Expanded information sharing, but Senate amendment excludes citizens and permanent residents
Information sharing is another highly watched aspect of Bill C-12.
Under the bill, the immigration department would be allowed to disclose personal information to other government agencies and to government-controlled corporations. With the permission of the immigration minister, those recipients could then further share the information with foreign entities. The information that could be shared includes:
- Personal identity information;
- A person’s immigration or legal status in Canada;
- Relevant documents issued under the authority of the immigration minister.
This means immigration management would no longer be limited to internal IRCC data use, but could extend into broader domestic and international government coordination. For visa matters, status verification, and compliance reviews, this could improve cross-agency verification and risk management. At the same time, it is also likely to raise public debate over privacy protections and the boundaries of data use.
Importantly, an amendment introduced by Senator Paulette Senior and adopted by the Senate on March 10, 2026, explicitly states that these information-sharing provisions would not apply to Canadian citizens or permanent residents. This narrows the scope of the bill to some extent and provides a clearer line of protection for certain status holders.
4. Parliamentary review to begin five years later, with long-term effects to be assessed
Beyond the immediate policy changes, Bill C-12 also includes a follow-up review mechanism.
Under another amendment introduced by Senator Tony Dean, five years after the bill comes into force, a Parliamentary committee must review how the law has operated and what effects it has had in practice, and then submit a report to Parliament setting out its findings and any recommended legislative changes. This means that even if Bill C-12 formally becomes law, it will not necessarily be the final word. Its implementation, scope of impact, and any unintended consequences may still be revisited in a future policy review.
5. What does this mean for international students, work permit holders, and applicants?
In practical terms, what has drawn the most attention is not only the bill’s border security framing, but also the increased uncertainty it may create for ordinary immigration applicants, international students, and temporary residents.
The following groups should pay particularly close attention:
- Study permit applicants and holders: if the government invokes public interest grounds, study permit processing, issuance, or the conditions attached to issued documents could change;
- Work permit applicants and holders: permit categories, processing procedures, or document validity could in certain circumstances be paused, altered, or cancelled;
- Permanent resident visa applicants: the bill more explicitly brings permanent resident visas into the category of documents that may be cancelled, suspended, or varied;
- Asylum claimants: eligibility thresholds would become stricter, especially for claims involving “more than one year after entry” and “entry from the Canada–U.S. land border outside a port of entry”;
- People concerned about privacy and data security: immigration-related information may face greater transparency demands and more complex compliance risks when shared across agencies or with foreign entities.
Still, based on the current official status, Bill C-12 is no longer merely at the “passed Senate, waiting to return to the House” stage. The latest Parliamentary page shows that it is now listed as “Awaiting royal assent.” That means the bill is only one final procedural step away from becoming law. The next issues applicants and observers should watch are when royal assent will be granted, when specific provisions will take effect, and how the government will use orders to implement these new powers in practice.
Conclusion
Overall, Bill C-12 is not merely a technical amendment. It is an important signal that the Canadian federal government is consolidating authority at the same time across immigration administration, asylum screening, and border governance. On one hand, it strengthens the government’s tools for responding quickly to fraud, administrative errors, public safety concerns, and national security risks. On the other hand, it also significantly expands administrative discretion within the immigration system. For people planning to study, work, or apply for permanent residence in Canada, the central question going forward will no longer be only “Do I meet the program requirements?” It will also be “Could policy be temporarily adjusted on public interest grounds?”
If Bill C-12 ultimately receives royal assent and comes into force, the operating logic of Canada’s immigration system, especially with respect to document stability, asylum admissibility boundaries, and information-sharing mechanisms, may enter a new phase.









