
Canada Introduces Two New Facilitated Work Permit Pathways for Youths from Taiwan and Portugal
Canada has recently introduced two new facilitated work permit pathways under the International Experience Canada (International Experience Canada, or IEC) program for young people from Taiwan and Portugal. These are the TGPI program for Taiwanese youth and the Inov Contacto program for Portuguese youth. Both new pathways offer employer-specific work permits and include tailored arrangements in terms of program structure, financial support, and eligibility requirements. At the same time, applicants from Taiwan and Portugal may still continue to apply under the regular criteria for the IEC Young Professionals category. The new policy suggests that Canada is further expanding youth talent exchange and short-term employment cooperation with specific countries and regions through bilateral youth mobility arrangements.
03/10/2026

Five Immigration-Related Changes Took Effect Across Canada on January 1, 2026
As of January 1, 2026, several immigration and labour-market measures took effect across Canada. Graduate (master’s and PhD) students at public designated learning institutions (DLIs) no longer need a Provincial or Territorial Attestation Letter (PAL/TAL) for study permits and are no longer counted under the study permit cap, with PhD applicants eligible for expedited processing (as little as two weeks). The federal Start-Up Visa (SUV) program stopped accepting new applications at 11:59 p.m. on December 31, 2025, with a limited exception allowing applicants holding a designated organization commitment made in 2025 to apply until June 30, 2026; new SUV work permits are also no longer accepted, though current permit holders may be able to extend. Ontario introduced an “As of Right” framework enabling out-of-province credentialed professionals in regulated occupations to begin working in Ontario within 10 business days (for up to six months) after credential validation, and it implemented new job-posting rules prohibiting employers from requiring “Canadian work experience,” alongside additional disclosure measures such as whether AI is used in hiring. Alberta, meanwhile, tightened eligibility requirements for its AAIP Rural Renewal Stream, including stricter work-permit rules, residency requirements for lower-skilled occupations, caps on community endorsements, and a 12-month validity period for endorsement letters.
01/04/2026

Canada Announces Pause on Home Care Worker Pilot Applications; Will Not Reopen in March 2026
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) released a statement on December 19, 2025, announcing an immediate pause on new applications for the Home Care Worker Pilots until further notice. The federal government explicitly stated that the programs will not reopen in March 2026 as originally planned, a decision that effectively cuts off a key immigration pathway that many prospective applicants had expected to utilize next year. This pause is part of the federal government's broader effort to recalibrate immigration quotas under the 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan, aiming to prevent further growth in application backlogs, ensure existing cases are prioritized, and make the immigration system more responsive to actual labour market needs.
12/27/2025

Canada Suspends Entrepreneur Immigration Programs, Plans New Permanent Residence Pilot
Canada’s federal immigration department has announced major adjustments to its business immigration programs, including the suspension of new applications under the Start-up Visa Program and the continued pause of the Self-Employed Persons Program. The measures are intended to reduce application backlogs and prepare for a more targeted entrepreneur immigration pilot, details of which are expected to be released in 2026.
12/20/2025

Overview of Canada’s Business Immigration Pathways: Federal and Provincial Options for Investors and Entrepreneurs
Canada offers multiple immigration pathways for individuals who wish to immigrate through entrepreneurship or business investment, including the federal Start-Up Visa (SUV), several federal work permit categories, provincial entrepreneur programs, and the Quebec Immigrant Investor Program. Each pathway carries distinct requirements related to investment amounts, business experience, language proficiency, and documentation. With frequent policy changes and complex due-diligence procedures, many applicants work with immigration lawyers or licensed consultants to select the right program, prepare documentation, and maintain compliance to improve approval outcomes and protect their investment.
12/01/2025

Canada Proposes Bill C-12 to Overhaul Immigration Processing, Potentially Affecting Start-Up Visa Applications
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has introduced Bill C-12, aiming to modernize and strengthen the management of Canada’s immigration system while addressing long-standing backlogs. If passed, the bill would grant the Minister expanded authority to pause or terminate the processing of certain immigration categories. Analysts suggest that the Start-Up Visa (SUV) program — already facing significant application backlogs — could be among the most directly affected, particularly for applicants supported by designated business incubators that fail to comply with Ministerial Instructions (MI72).
10/23/2025

Canada Closes Permanent Residence Pathway for Overseas Caregivers
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) recently updated its official website to indicate that the "applicants not working in Canada" stream under the Home Care Worker Immigration Pilots (HCWP) has been officially closed. This stream was marked as "closed" on September 29, 2025, without ever having opened to accept applications since the program's launch. Despite this closure, overseas caregivers still have alternative pathways to immigrate to Canada through Express Entry, Provincial Nominee Programs, and other routes. Industry analysts suggest this decision may be linked to severe application backlogs and the federal government's policy shift toward prioritizing the transition of temporary residents already in Canada to permanent residence status.
10/02/2025

Major Overhaul of Canada's "Maintained Status" Immigration Rules Affects Multiple Applicants
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) recently announced significant revisions to the "Maintained Status" provisions for temporary residents, effective May 28, 2025. The new rules specify that if a temporary resident's initial extension application, submitted while on maintained status, is refused, a subsequent application filed after the expiry of their original permit will no longer automatically allow them to maintain legal status in Canada. This change has profound implications for temporary residents submitting multiple extension applications and requires close attention.
06/05/2025

Canada Lacks Direct "Gold Card": A Comprehensive Guide to Investor and Entrepreneur Immigration Pathways
Recent news of the U.S. planning a high-threshold "Gold Card" visa has sparked interest in whether Canada offers a similar pathway for directly purchasing permanent residency. Canada does not have such a "Gold Card"; its economic immigration programs primarily focus on attracting skilled talent rather than pure investment. However, Canada does provide several immigration streams for entrepreneurs and investors intending to establish or operate businesses within the country, leading to permanent residence. These include the federal Start-Up Visa Program, the unique Quebec Immigrant Investor Program, and various Provincial Nominee Programs for entrepreneurs.
04/04/2025

Start up Visa has encouraged immigrants in the US to move to Canada
New research highlights how Canada's Start-up Visa policy has become an attractive option for immigrants in the United States, particularly those holding H-1B visas.
12/20/2023