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Eight Immigration Changes Take Effect in Canada as of April 1, 2026

Passport Fee Increase and the "30 Days or Free" Processing Guarantee

Starting March 31, 2026, Canadian passport and travel document fees have been adjusted for the first time in over a decade. A regular 10-year adult passport applied for within Canada now costs $163.50, up from $160, while a five-year adult passport has risen from $120 to $122.50. The increases reflect inflation and the growing cost of producing secure travel documents, and going forward, fees will be adjusted annually in line with the Consumer Price Index under the Service Fees Act.

One day later, on April 1, the federal government launched its "30 days or free" passport processing guarantee. Under this initiative, applicants will receive an automatic full refund of their passport or travel document fee if processing takes longer than 30 business days. The processing clock starts when Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) receives a complete application and stops when the passport is printed and verified — mailing time is not included. A complete application must include a fully filled-out form, all required documents including a passport photo, and payment of the applicable fees.

Citizenship Fee and Upcoming Permanent Residence Fee Increases

Also effective March 31, the right of citizenship fee for adults rose from $119.75 to $123 — an increase of $3.25. The adult citizenship grant application processing fee remains unchanged at $530, bringing the total cost for an adult citizenship application to $653. This annual adjustment is mandated under the Service Fees Act to keep pace with inflation and maintain sustainable service delivery.

Notably, permanent residence application fees across all categories are scheduled to increase on April 30, 2026. Applicants planning to submit PR applications should take note of this upcoming deadline.

Super Visa Income Requirements Eased

As of March 31, 2026, the Super Visa program has introduced two new ways for hosts to meet the minimum income threshold. The Super Visa is a long-term, multi-entry visa that allows parents and grandparents of Canadian citizens or permanent residents to stay in Canada for up to five consecutive years per visit, with a validity of up to 10 years.

Under the updated rules, hosts and their co-signers now have two additional pathways to qualify:

  • Extended income assessment period: Hosts may now qualify by meeting the income threshold in either of the two taxation years preceding the application date, rather than being limited to the most recent tax year alone.
  • Supplementing the host's income: Where a host and co-signer meet only part of the required threshold, the visiting parent's or grandparent's income can be added to bridge the shortfall.

These changes open new possibilities for families who previously fell short of the income requirement. It is important to note that the Super Visa remains a temporary visit pathway and is not a permanent residence program, though it can serve as an alternative for families unable to use the Parents and Grandparents Program.

Provinces Gain Greater Authority Over Nominee Assessments

Effective March 30, 2026, provinces and territories have assumed greater responsibility for assessing provincial nominee candidates on two key factors: the candidate's intention to reside in the nominating province or territory, and the candidate's ability to become economically established in Canada. Previously, IRCC officers conducted independent assessments on these factors; that responsibility has now been transferred to the provincial level.

Under the new framework, if an IRCC officer identifies information of concern during the review process, they must consult with the nominating province or territory. The province then has a set period to review the concerns and decide whether to maintain or revoke the nomination. In practice, this means provinces will scrutinize applicants' settlement intentions and economic prospects more closely before issuing nominations, and applicants should prepare accordingly at the provincial stage.

Settlement Service Access Now Time-Limited

Beginning April 1, 2026, economic-class immigrants may access federally funded settlement services for a maximum of six years after obtaining permanent resident status. Previously, economic immigrants could use these services at any time between becoming a permanent resident and obtaining Canadian citizenship, with no time restriction. The new limit applies to both current and newly approved economic-class permanent residents.

Starting April 1, 2027, the access window will tighten further to five years. Settlement services include language training, employment assistance, community integration support, and other federally funded programs. Refugees, protected persons, and family-class immigrants are not affected by this change and continue to have unrestricted access. The federal government has stated that this adjustment was made in support of its Budget 2025 commitments.

Expanded Rural Access to Temporary Foreign Workers

From April 1, 2026 through March 31, 2027, rural employers in participating provinces and territories may hire low-wage temporary foreign workers at up to 15% of their total workforce under the Temporary Foreign Worker Program, up from the previous cap of 10%. These employers may also maintain their current number of low-wage temporary foreign workers. Announced by Employment and Social Development Canada, this temporary measure is designed to help rural employers address labour market needs. It applies only to rural employers in provinces and territories that have opted in and does not extend to urban employers.

Saskatchewan Extends SINP Application Fees to All Worker Categories

Effective April 1, 2026, the Saskatchewan Immigrant Nominee Program (SINP) has extended its $500 application fee and $250 second review fee to all worker applicants across all categories. Applications submitted before April 1 are not subject to the new fees. A second review is a process available to applicants whose applications are deemed ineligible by the SINP, allowing them to request a reassessment if they believe an error was made during the processing or evaluation of their application based on the criteria in effect at the time.

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.
加拿大留学生规模两年锐减逾二十万,学习许可收紧政策成效显现
International Student Population in Canada Falls by More Than 200,000 Over Two Years as Study Permit Caps Take Effect
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
加拿大快速通道举行年内第四次法语类别抽签 单次发出4,000份邀请
Canada Holds Fourth French-Language Express Entry Draw of 2026, Issuing 4,000 Invitations
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
CEC 分数线创年内新高 加拿大发出 2,000 份快速通道邀请
CEC Cut-Off Climbs to New 2026 High as Canada Issues 2,000 Express Entry Invitations
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
加拿大4月13日快速通道再向省提名候选人发出324份邀请
Canada Issues 324 Invitations to Provincial Nominees in April 13 Express Entry Draw
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) held another targeted Express Entry draw on April 13, 2026, issuing 324 invitations to apply (ITAs) for permanent residence to candidates in the Provincial Nominee Program (PNP), with a minimum Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) cut-off of 786 and a profile-creation tie-breaker set at 6:53 p.m. UTC on November 19, 2025; this marks the 21st Express Entry round of 2026 and the eighth PNP-specific draw of the year, reinforcing the program's position as the most frequently used draw category in the current year's invitation calendar; year-to-date, IRCC has now issued 59,154 ITAs across all categories, led by the Canadian Experience Class (CEC) with 30,250 and followed by the French-Language Proficiency stream, confirming Ottawa's continued preference for candidates already working in Canada, holding provincial nominations, or able to serve French-speaking communities.
04/14/2026
加拿大拟全面改革快速通道:合并三大项目,高薪职业将成筛选核心
Canada Proposes Sweeping Express Entry Overhaul: Three Programs to Merge, High-Wage Occupations to Drive Selection
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has shared detailed proposals with immigration lawyers to overhaul the Express Entry system, Canada's primary pathway for selecting skilled permanent residents. The proposed reforms would merge the Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP), the Canadian Experience Class (CEC), and the Federal Skilled Trades Program (FSTP) into a single immigration stream with unified eligibility requirements — standardizing work experience at one year of cumulative experience within the past three years (Canadian or foreign), setting language proficiency at CLB 6 for all candidates, and eliminating the FSWP's 67-point selection grid. The most consequential change involves a fundamental restructuring of the Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS), introducing a "High Wage Occupation" factor that awards points based on whether a candidate's occupation earns above the national median wage, while proposing to remove or modify points currently awarded for Canadian education credentials, French proficiency, siblings in Canada, and spousal factors. These proposals remain at an early stage, with public consultations planned for Spring 2026 and no implementation timeline announced.
04/11/2026
安大略省四轮定向抽签发出逾1,800份移民邀请,医疗保健类占近九成
Ontario Issues Over 1,800 Immigration Invitations Across Four Targeted Draws, Healthcare Accounting for Nearly 90%
The Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) conducted four targeted draws on April 8, 2026, issuing a total of 1,828 invitations to apply (ITAs) across four categories: healthcare and early childhood education, Francophone candidates, the Regional Economic Development through Immigration (REDI) pilot, and physicians. The healthcare and early childhood education draw dominated with 1,635 invitations — nearly 90% of the total — while the Foreign Worker stream minimum score dropped to just 20, down sharply from 36 in the February 2 healthcare draw, signaling Ontario's intensified push to fill critical staffing gaps in these sectors. This marked the province's sixth set of draws in 2026, with all targeted candidates required to hold a valid work or study permit and currently reside in Canada. Notably, these draws come as Ontario prepares for a sweeping overhaul of its immigration system, with legal amendments to the Ontario Immigration Act set to take effect on May 30, 2026, revoking all existing nomination categories — including the Foreign Worker, International Student, and In-Demand Skills streams used in these draws.
04/10/2026
加拿大拟全面重塑快速通道:三大联邦技术移民项目或将被单一新类别取代
Canada Moves to Overhaul Express Entry: Three Federal Skilled Immigration Programs May Be Merged Into a Single New Class
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has proposed a sweeping restructuring of its flagship Express Entry system in its newly released Forward Regulatory Plan: 2026–2028, under which the three federal economic immigration programs currently managed through Express Entry — the Federal Skilled Worker Class (FSWC), the Canadian Experience Class (CEC) and the Federal Skilled Trades Class (FSTC) — would be repealed and replaced by a single new class with streamlined eligibility requirements, which IRCC says would help support Canada's economy and businesses by building a more diverse pool of international talent while making the system easier for applicants, employers and partners to navigate; the department has indicated that the reform is still in the proposal phase and plans to consult partners, stakeholders and the public in spring 2026, and if implemented, the change would represent the most significant overhaul of Canada's federal high-skilled immigration framework since Express Entry was launched in 2015.
04/09/2026
阿尔伯塔省AAIP新增135加元意向书提交费用 4月7日起正式生效
Alberta Introduces $135 Fee for Worker Expression of Interest Submissions Under AAIP, Effective April 7
The Alberta Advantage Immigration Program (AAIP) has confirmed that, starting April 7, 2026, foreign nationals submitting a Worker Expression of Interest (WEOI) will be required to pay a new $135 fee, a step that ends the previously free submission process and applies across every worker stream and pathway — including the Alberta Opportunity Stream, the Alberta Express Entry Stream (covering the Accelerated Tech Pathway, the Law Enforcement Pathway and priority sector draws), the Dedicated Health Care Pathways, the Rural Renewal Stream and the Tourism and Hospitality Stream — while remaining entirely separate from the existing $1,500 application fee; the change follows the February 25, 2026 addition of new wage and hours-of-work fields to the WEOI form and comes as more than 44,000 WEOIs sit in the selection pool, with Alberta holding a 2026 allocation of 6,403 nominations from IRCC, of which 1,475 had been issued as of April 1 and 4,928 remain available, with upcoming draws expected to prioritize health care, technology, construction, manufacturing, aviation, agriculture and occupations tied to designated Rural Renewal communities.
04/08/2026
加拿大2026-27年度外国资质认证计划锁定58项协议,惠及逾三万名海外专业人才
Canada Targets 58 Funding Agreements Under Foreign Credential Recognition Program for 2026-27, Aiming to Support Over 32,000 Professionals
Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) has set a concrete annual target for its Foreign Credential Recognition (FCR) Program in its 2026-27 Departmental Plan: 58 funding agreements expected to benefit approximately 32,000 internationally trained professionals (ITPs) seeking to work in their fields in Canada. Alongside this target, the federal government has formally committed $97 million CAD over five years, beginning in 2026-27, to establish the FCR Action Fund — a dedicated funding stream designed to work with provinces and territories to improve the fairness, transparency, timeliness, and consistency of credential recognition processes, with a particular focus on the healthcare and construction sectors. These developments signal a shift in Ottawa's approach from project-level funding toward systemic reform of Canada's credential recognition framework.
04/06/2026
加拿大4月起实施八项移民新规:护照涨价、公民权费上调、超级签证门槛放宽
Eight Immigration Changes Take Effect in Canada as of April 1, 2026
Between March 31 and April 1, 2026, the Canadian federal and provincial governments rolled out eight immigration-related changes affecting a wide range of applicants and residents. Canadian passport fees have risen for the first time since 2013, with a 10-year adult passport now costing $163.50, up from $160. At the same time, a new "30 days or free" processing guarantee promises automatic full refunds when applications exceed the 30-business-day window. The right of citizenship fee increased by $3.25 to $123, and permanent residence application fees are set to rise on April 30. The Super Visa program now offers two additional ways for hosts to meet the minimum income threshold, giving more families the chance to bring parents and grandparents to Canada. Provinces and territories have gained greater authority over assessing nominees' intent to reside and economic establishment prospects. Economic-class permanent residents now face a six-year time limit on access to federally funded settlement services, tightening to five years in 2027. Rural employers can hire low-wage temporary foreign workers at up to 15% of their workforce under the TFWP, up from 10%. Saskatchewan has also extended its $500 application fee and $250 second review fee to all SINP worker categories.
04/04/2026
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