
In 2025, Canada admitted 393,750 new permanent residents. This figure was not only lower than the 483,655 admitted in 2024 and the 471,820 admitted in 2023, but also signalled that Canada’s immigration system, after operating at elevated levels for two consecutive years, had formally entered a new phase that places greater emphasis on control and sustainability. Taken together with the federal government’s 2025–2027 Immigration Levels Plan, the shift suggests that Canada is gradually moving from an expansion-driven immigration model to one centred on stable management.
A decline in 2025 points to a transitional phase in immigration policy
Over the past decade, Canada’s immigration levels generally trended upward, with only a temporary interruption during the pandemic. In particular, in the post-pandemic period, Canada relied on large-scale immigration intake to address labour shortages, support economic recovery, and stabilize long-term population growth.
However, the 2025 total of 393,750 was clearly below the historic highs seen in the previous two years. This suggests that Canada is not shutting down immigration, but rather adjusting the overall pace while still maintaining admissions at historically high levels. In other words, this is better understood as a policy slowdown than a retreat.

A comparison of the recent data shows:
- 2023: 471,820;
- 2024: 483,655;
- 2025: 393,750.
Compared with 2024, the 2025 total declined by about 89,905 admissions, a significant drop. Even so, relative to pre-pandemic levels, Canada’s 2025 intake remained high.
Policy logic is changing: from expansion to sustainable management
Under Mark Carney, the federal government has begun shifting the focus of immigration management from increasing intake to controlling the pace of admissions. The policy rationale behind this transition is concentrated around several key pressures:
- Continued housing affordability challenges;
- Growing strain on healthcare and other public services;
- Increasing pressure on settlement and integration capacity in major cities;
- Rising public concern about the speed of population growth.
Against this backdrop, Ottawa has not chosen to cut immigration dramatically. Instead, it has adopted a more measured, phased adjustment strategy: maintaining admissions at a high level by historical standards, but below recent peaks, while placing more emphasis on system capacity and real-world outcomes.
2025 admissions came very close to the planned target
From an implementation standpoint, the 393,750 new permanent residents admitted in 2025 came very close to the federal target of 395,000 set out in the 2025–2027 Immigration Levels Plan. The small gap suggests that Canada’s immigration management has become more deliberate and more predictable.
Over the next several years, Canada’s permanent resident targets are expected to remain stable:
- 2026 target: 380,000;
- 2027 target: 380,000;
- 2028 target: 380,000.
This means that after 2025, Canada plans to reduce permanent resident admissions by a further 13,750 and then keep the annual target flat for three consecutive years, rather than pursuing continued short-term growth.
The structure of permanent immigration remains unchanged, with economic immigration still at the core
Although the overall intake has moderated, the structure of Canada’s permanent immigration system has not fundamentally changed. At present, the main categories remain broadly stable:
- Economic immigration continues to dominate, accounting for about 60% to 65% of admissions;
- Family reunification remains at roughly 20% to 22%;
- Refugees and protected persons account for about 13%.
This shows that Canada has not moved away from its long-standing strategy of making economic immigration the core of its immigration system. What has changed is the policy focus: away from quantity and toward outcomes. In the coming years, the system is expected to place greater importance on:
- Closer alignment with labour market needs;
- More balanced regional distribution through the Provincial Nominee Program (PNP);
- Encouraging in-Canada transitions from temporary to permanent status.
These adjustments indicate that Canada wants immigration to generate stronger practical benefits for the labour market, regional development, and social integration, rather than simply boosting headline intake numbers.
Temporary residents are facing a much larger adjustment
Compared with the relatively moderate decline in permanent immigration, Canada’s policy shift on temporary residents is much more significant.
In 2025, Canada admitted approximately 673,650 temporary residents. Under the new plan, however, this figure is set to drop sharply over the coming years:
- 2026: 385,000;
- 2027: 370,000;
- 2028: 370,000.
If implemented as planned, the temporary resident total would fall by more than 40% compared with 2025. This reflects the federal government’s effort to address the real-world pressures created by the rapid growth in temporary resident numbers, especially in housing, education, healthcare, and local public resource allocation.
At the same time, the government has made clear that it wants temporary residents to account for less than 5% of Canada’s total population. This suggests that the main “reset” in immigration policy will occur in the temporary resident system, rather than in permanent immigration.
What this means for prospective immigrants: competition may intensify
For those planning to immigrate to Canada, the 2025 figure of 393,750 sends an important signal: Canada remains one of the world’s most open immigration systems, but the logic behind how opportunities are allocated is changing.
The key trends going forward may include:
- Slower growth replacing the earlier phase of rapid expansion;
- Greater emphasis on applicants’ economic contribution and labour market fit;
- More refined quota management across immigration categories;
- Intensifying competition in economic immigration programs.
This is especially relevant in programs such as Express Entry and provincial nominations. As total intake stabilizes and selection becomes more targeted, competition among applicants may increase. Candidates with Canadian work experience, profiles aligned with priority occupations, provincial nomination points, or strong language ability are likely to remain in a stronger position.
This is a recalibration, not a retreat
Overall, Canada’s immigration system is not entering a contraction phase. Rather, it is undergoing a measured recalibration.
The move from nearly 484,000 newcomers in 2024 to 393,750 in 2025, followed by a stable annual target of 380,000 in the years ahead, appears to reflect a long-term strategy: preserving the economic benefits of immigration while easing the real pressures faced in housing, infrastructure, and public services.
Whether this strategy succeeds will ultimately depend on whether Canada can truly balance several competing realities: on one hand, the economy’s need for talent; on the other, the practical limits of housing supply, urban capacity, and public service delivery. For the federal government, this will determine whether “sustainable immigration” becomes more than a policy slogan and can instead translate into real governance outcomes.









