
Draw Details: 190 Invitations With NLPNP as the Dominant Channel
According to the latest figures from Newfoundland and Labrador's Office of Immigration and Multiculturalism (OIM), the May 1 draw issued 157 invitations through NLPNP and 33 through AIP, totalling 190.
Unlike most other provinces, Newfoundland and Labrador does not publicly disclose which NLPNP stream invited candidates were drawn from — only the overall numbers and program-level split. Notably, the AIP figure of 33 invitations matches the April 13 draw exactly, marking two consecutive rounds at the same level and suggesting the province is settling into a steady AIP cadence.
2026 Draw Cadence: Four Rounds Trending Downward, Yet 4.26 Times Larger Than the Same Period in 2025
Placed in the broader context of 2026, the May 1 round continues a clear downward trend in single-round invitation volumes. The four rounds held so far this year are summarized below:
| Draw date | Total invitations | NLPNP | AIP |
|---|---|---|---|
| March 6, 2026 | 445 | 362 | 83 |
| March 30, 2026 | 245 | 209 | 36 |
| April 13, 2026 | 210 | 177 | 33 |
| May 1, 2026 | 190 | 157 | 33 |
| Year-to-date | 1,090 | 905 | 185 |
Between January 1 and May 1, the province has issued a total of 1,090 invitations — 83% (905) under NLPNP and 17% (185) under AIP. By comparison, the province held only one draw during the same window in 2025 (on April 3), inviting 256 candidates (206 NLPNP, 50 AIP). The 2026 figure is therefore 4.26 times the 2025 same-period total — a 325.8% year-over-year increase — reflecting a dramatic step-up in both draw frequency and overall intake.
Policy Backdrop: Federal PNP Targets Rise Sharply, With Atlantic Canada Leading the Growth
The accelerated 2026 cadence in Newfoundland and Labrador is closely tied to federal allocation changes. In 2025, Ottawa's annual immigration levels plan initially halved the province's combined PNP and AIP cap from 3,050 to 1,525 spaces. The provincial government responded by negotiating directly with Ottawa, ultimately securing additional spaces in stages and bringing the 2025 total back up to roughly 2,525.
The picture for 2026 has reversed sharply. Under Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada's (IRCC) latest plan, the national PNP permanent resident admissions target has been raised from 55,000 in 2025 to 91,500 in 2026, restoring the program's role as a core economic immigration channel. Among provinces and territories, the four Atlantic provinces — Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland and Labrador — collectively received an allocation increase of more than 65%, the fastest relative growth in the country. That expansion is now showing up directly at the draw level, with Newfoundland and Labrador's elevated invitation pace serving as a local manifestation of the federal shift.
Adding to the dynamic, neighbouring New Brunswick paused new AIP employer designation applications as of February 3, 2026, leaving Newfoundland and Labrador as the Atlantic region's most accessible and consistently active AIP-and-PNP draw venue at this time.
EOI Selection Model: Fully Operational Since February 2025
Since February 2025, both NLPNP and the province's AIP have operated under an Expression of Interest (EOI) selection model. With the exception of NLPNP entrepreneur streams, both programs require candidates to hold a valid in-province job or job offer.
Prospective candidates must first submit an EOI form, providing key information including:
- Current occupation and work experience;
- Educational background;
- Language abilities; and
- Intention to settle in the province.
OIM reviews all submissions and selects the most competitive candidates for invitation. EOIs remain in the pool for up to 12 months before expiring. Once an invitation is issued, the candidate (NLPNP) or employer (AIP) has 60 days to submit a complete application, which then proceeds to standard assessment.
Who Stands Out: Health, Rural Employment, and Francophone Goals Continue to Be Prioritized
OIM publishes a list of factors it may prioritize when selecting EOIs. Together with the trend lines of this year's draws, the most influential categories can be summarized as follows:
- Health occupations: Consistently treated as the highest priority given persistent labour shortages and pressures on the provincial health system;
- Rural sales and service jobs: Roles outside St. John's, where employers face long-standing recruitment challenges, often receive higher priority;
- Rural and regional employment: Positions in smaller communities that support local economic and population sustainability;
- Underrepresented occupations: Fields such as business and finance, science and research, and trades and transport that bolster economic diversification and productivity;
- Reliable employers: EOIs from employers with strong compliance records, good retention rates, and clear operational needs are favoured;
- Long-term retention potential: Candidates showing community ties, family links, prior residence, or stable employment in the province;
- NL post-secondary graduates: Graduates whose skills align with priority sectors and who have established ties to the province;
- Francophone immigration goals: EOIs supporting the growth of French-speaking communities;
- Strong settlement support: EOIs may be elevated when employers or communities clearly commit to newcomer settlement (for example, by providing access to settlement services).
Industry observers note that, unlike the score-driven logic of Express Entry, Newfoundland and Labrador's EOI selection looks more like a "policy-fit" assessment — occupation type, employer reputation, location, Francophone contribution, and the likelihood of long-term retention often matter more than any single metric. That dynamic continues to favour healthcare, skilled-trade, and service roles distributed across smaller coastal towns and rural communities.
Looking Ahead: Cadence Likely to Become More Targeted
Across the four rounds held so far, the 2026 strategy in Newfoundland and Labrador has unfolded as a "front-loaded burst followed by gradual narrowing." Given the federal allocation expansion and the province's relative competitive standing within Atlantic Canada, observers broadly expect Newfoundland and Labrador to maintain a steady but increasingly targeted draw cadence for the remainder of the year, with continued emphasis on health, rural employment, Francophone communities, and local graduates — the structural shortage areas that have shaped 2026 invitations to date.









