
The Government of Saskatchewan launched the third 2026 capped-sector intake window for Employer Position Assessment (EPA) submissions on May 4. Retail, Trade, and Other Services and Trucking opened first at 8:30 a.m. CST, while Accommodation and Food Services opened later in the day at 12:30 p.m. CST. Within hours of opening, the retail/trade and accommodation categories had absorbed all available spots; only the trucking sector remained open, with 28 positions still up for grabs at the time of writing. Each position an employer lists on its EPA counts toward the window's overall sector cap.
Why the three sectors are capped in the first place
Saskatchewan introduced annual caps on accommodation and food services, retail trade, and trucking starting in 2025—a direct response to the federal government's decision to halve provincial nominee allocations across Canada. The cut sent Saskatchewan's nomination total tumbling to just 3,625 at the start of 2025, the lowest level since 2009, before a federal top-up of 1,136 spots in August lifted the year-end total back to 4,761. Faced with a sharply diminished allocation, the province pivoted toward a sector-based, strategic distribution model, capping the three sectors that had historically absorbed a disproportionate share of nominations so the remaining capacity could be steered toward higher-priority occupations.
Under the 2026 framework, the province's 4,761 nominations are split as follows:
- Priority sectors (seven total: healthcare, agriculture, skilled trades, mining, manufacturing, energy, and technology): a minimum of 50%, or roughly 2,380 nominations.
- Capped sectors: a combined 25%, or roughly 1,190 nominations—broken down into 15% (714) for accommodation and food services, and 5% each (238) for retail/trade and trucking.
- Other sectors: the remaining 25%, or roughly 1,190 nominations.
In 2025, only three priority sectors received that designation: healthcare, agriculture, and skilled trades. The 2026 list expands to seven by adding mining, manufacturing, energy, and technology—a clear signal that Saskatchewan is shifting from a service-sector-friendly stance toward a more deliberate focus on strategically important industries. Within the priority allocation, 750 spots are also specifically reserved for SINP candidates who graduated from a Saskatchewan post-secondary institution and are now working in a priority sector.
Window-by-window performance: hospitality demand stays high, trucking lags
The May 4 intake retained the same 400-position cap and the same sector breakdown used for the March 2 (second) intake: 240 for accommodation and food services, and 80 each for retail/trade and trucking. During the second window, the non-trucking categories filled within hours of opening, while the trucking sector ultimately used only 67 of its 80 spots, an 83.75% utilization rate.
Looking back further, the first 2026 intake (January 13) had a smaller overall ceiling of 300 positions—180 for accommodation and food services, and 60 each for retail/trade and trucking. Non-trucking sectors filled the same day, but the trucking sector did not reach its limit until January 20.
| Intake | Open date | Total positions | Accommodation & food | Retail/trade | Trucking |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 2026-01-13 | 300 | 180 | 60 | 60 |
| 2nd | 2026-03-02 | 400 | 240 | 80 | 80 |
| 3rd | 2026-05-04 | 400 | 240 | 80 | 80 |
The pattern across the three windows is consistent: accommodation and food services has been the most heavily contested capped sector, retail and other services follows close behind, and trucking has so far been the only category where employers have meaningful breathing room beyond the opening hours of each window. The province has signaled that, after each intake, SINP will reassess actual usage and may redistribute unused nominations among capped sectors if demand justifies it.
Quarterly update: 26% of nominations issued, three windows still ahead
According to the province's most recent quarterly update, SINP has issued 1,233 nominations so far in 2026—about 26% of the 4,761 spots available for the year. Sector-by-sector usage looks like this:
| Sector | 2026 allocation | % used |
|---|---|---|
| Priority sectors | 2,380 | 29% |
| Capped: Accommodation and food services | 714 | 26% |
| Capped: Retail, trade, and other services | 238 | 31% |
| Capped: Trucking | 238 | 19% |
| Other sectors | 1,190 | 19% |
Because the data is only refreshed quarterly, the figures may not fully reflect nominations issued at the time of writing. Even so, retail, trade, and other services stands out as the fastest-burning of the three capped categories, while trucking continues to trail meaningfully behind.
Three intake windows remain in 2026—July 6, September 7, and November 2—but the province has not yet released either an overall position cap or sector-level limits for any of them. Saskatchewan has previously stated that each window will remain open "for several days." Given the trajectory of the first three intakes, observers in the immigration sector widely expect accommodation and food services to remain the most fiercely contested category in the windows still to come.
Who can apply? The six-month work-permit rule and EPA process essentials
Employers and candidates pursuing a SINP nomination through a capped-sector pathway should keep the following in mind:
- For capped sectors, the candidate's current work permit must have six months or less of validity remaining before an employer can submit an EPA on their behalf during a window. The rule does not apply to candidates in priority sectors.
- Priority-sector candidates can apply at any time of year and are not tied to scheduled intake windows; they may also apply from overseas.
- Employers must first identify a candidate and extend a job offer before submitting an EPA. Once the EPA is reviewed, a successful application receives conditional approval.
- Employers in capped sectors may submit EPAs only during an active intake window—a constraint that does not apply to non-capped sectors.
- After conditional approval, the candidate has 10 days to verify the job-offer details before the approval is finalized.
On processing times, SINP's stated service standard is to assess EPA applications within six weeks of submission, provided required information and documentation are complete. Between January 1 and March 31, 2026, EPAs were processed in roughly four weeks on average—comfortably ahead of standard.
The six-month rule also reflects another piece of federal guidance: that 75% of provincial nominations should go to temporary residents already inside Canada. That requirement leaves little room for overseas applicants in the three capped sectors, and it is part of the reason Saskatchewan has steered employers in accommodation and food services, retail trade, and trucking into a tightly windowed, six-months-to-expiry funnel since 2025. Several Canadian immigration firms have noted that, for capped-sector workers in Saskatchewan whose permits are nearing expiry, the remaining three intakes this year will be critical—while applicants hoping to apply from outside Canada should look first to the province's priority-sector pathways.









