
On March 13, 2026, Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) announced a temporary policy adjustment for rural employers to help them meet labour needs through the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP). Under the measure, from April 1, 2026, to March 31, 2027, rural employers in participating provinces or territories will be permitted to maintain their current number of low-wage temporary foreign workers and raise the share of such workers in their total workforce to 15%, up from the previous 10% cap.
This adjustment reflects the federal government’s attempt to strike a new balance between limiting overreliance on the program and responding to local labour shortages, particularly in rural and sparsely populated areas where recruitment is often more difficult.
What new flexibility will rural employers receive?
Under the newly announced temporary measures, eligible rural employers will gain two main forms of policy relief over the one-year period:
- They will be allowed to maintain their current number of low-wage temporary foreign workers;
- The cap on low-wage temporary foreign workers as a share of the total workforce will rise from 10% to 15%.
This means that some rural businesses that were already close to, or had reached, the previous cap may have more room over the coming year to continue hiring foreign workers through the TFWP to fill labour shortages.
However, the policy will not automatically apply nationwide. The federal government has made clear that only rural employers in provinces and territories that choose to participate will be able to use this new arrangement. As of now, ESDC has not disclosed which provinces and territories will join.
Policy background: Why is Canada loosening the rules now?
In August 2024, the Canadian government tightened the rules for the low-wage stream of the TFWP by limiting employers to hiring no more than 10% of their total workforce through that stream. The main purpose of that restriction was to prevent employers from becoming overly dependent on the Temporary Foreign Worker Program while neglecting domestic recruitment and workforce development.
This latest temporary easing does not signal a full reversal of that regulatory direction. Rather, it appears to be a targeted adjustment in response to the practical difficulties faced by rural communities.
Compared with major urban centres, rural communities often face the following challenges:
- A smaller local labour pool;
- Chronic recruitment difficulties in specific industries;
- More pronounced population decline or aging pressures;
- Greater dependence on foreign labour.
The federal government says the temporary measure is intended to help rural communities address ongoing labour shortages and forms part of a broader effort to work with provinces and territories to better align immigration objectives with local workforce needs.
Existing restrictions remain in place: High-unemployment regions are still affected
It is important to note that this change does not mean the low-wage stream of the TFWP has been broadly deregulated.
Canada still maintains a major restriction: applications for low-wage TFWP work permits remain suspended in regions where the unemployment rate is above 6%. This rule continues to apply, and the list of affected regions is updated quarterly.
In other words, even if a province or territory chooses to participate in this rural temporary measure, employers may still be restricted from using the low-wage stream of the TFWP if their specific region falls within the high-unemployment threshold.
As a result, rural employers and prospective applicants will still need to assess eligibility based on two factors:
- Whether the province or territory participates in the new measure;
- Whether the specific region is subject to the unemployment-related processing suspension.
What is the TFWP?
The Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) is one of the main channels through which Canadian employers can hire foreign nationals when they are unable to find suitable workers locally. For many newcomers and overseas applicants, it is also a common pathway to enter the Canadian labour market and gain Canadian work experience.
Employers wishing to hire through the program generally must first submit a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) to ESDC. This assessment is used to determine whether hiring a foreign national would have a positive, neutral, or negative impact on Canada’s labour market and economy.
The TFWP has two main streams:
- High-wage stream
- Low-wage stream
A position is generally considered low-wage if the hourly wage offered is below the applicable wage threshold in the relevant province or territory.
Updated low-wage thresholds across provinces and territories
Below are the latest wage thresholds listed in the source material (CAD per hour):
| Province or Territory | New Wage Threshold (CAD) |
|---|---|
| Alberta | 36.00 |
| British Columbia | 36.60 |
| Manitoba | 30.16 |
| New Brunswick | 30.00 |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | 32.40 |
| Northwest Territories | 48.00 |
| Nova Scotia | 30.00 |
| Nunavut | 42.00 |
| Ontario | 36.00 |
| Prince Edward Island | 30.00 |
| Quebec | 34.62 |
| Saskatchewan | 33.60 |
| Yukon | 44.40 |
The thresholds vary significantly across jurisdictions. Northern regions and some higher-cost areas have relatively higher wage thresholds, which will directly affect job classification and determine which stream an employer may use.
What does this mean for employers and applicants?
For rural employers, the policy could provide short-term relief from recruitment pressure, especially in agriculture, food processing, hospitality, retail, and other sectors facing chronic labour shortages. Businesses in these industries may gain greater flexibility to supplement their workforce.
For overseas applicants, the change may have two main implications.
On one hand, job opportunities in low-wage rural positions may increase, and employers in these regions may become more active in overseas hiring over the coming year. On the other hand, applicants will still need to pay close attention to regional eligibility, LMIA requirements, and whether unemployment-related restrictions apply in their intended destination.
Overall, this adjustment is not a blanket relaxation of TFWP oversight, but rather a temporary and targeted response by the federal government to labour shortages in rural Canada. Whether provinces and territories decide to participate, and how the policy is implemented in practice, will be key factors in determining its real-world impact.









