
Saskatchewan Burns Through a Quarter of Its 2026 PNP Allocation in Q1, With Priority Sectors Leading the Pack
The Government of Saskatchewan has released first-quarter data for the Saskatchewan Immigrant Nominee Program (SINP), showing that as of April 21, 2026, the province has issued 1,223 nominations — roughly 26 percent of its 4,761-nomination annual allocation — leaving 3,538 spots to be distributed over the remainder of the year; against the backdrop of Ottawa's sweeping 50 percent cut to all Provincial Nominee Programs (PNPs) in 2025, Saskatchewan's 2026 allocation sits at only about 60 percent of the roughly 8,000 nominations the province received in 2024, prompting a structural overhaul that slices the annual quota into "priority sectors," "capped sectors" and "other sectors," with capped trades such as accommodation and food services, retail and trucking now managed through a fixed-window intake schedule; Q1 figures show the seven priority sectors — healthcare, agriculture, skilled trades, mining, manufacturing, energy and technology — moving fastest, using up 29 percent of their internal allocation and accounting for more than half of all nominations issued so far, while the capped retail, trade and other services sector leads usage in its category at 31 percent, followed by accommodation and food services at 26 percent and trucking at 19 percent, with non-priority, non-capped "other sectors" sitting at 19 percent overall; the next capped-sector intake window opens on May 4, 2026, on a first-come, first-served basis.
04/22/2026

BC Issues 14 Invitations in April Entrepreneur Draw as Base Stream Cut-Off Slips to 115
British Columbia held its latest Entrepreneur Immigration (EI) selection round on April 14, 2026, issuing 14 Invitations to Apply (ITAs) through the Base stream of the BC Provincial Nominee Program (BC PNP) with a minimum qualifying score of 115 — two points lower than the March 10, 2026 Base-stream draw and the largest standalone EI round the province has run so far this year. With six entrepreneur draws and at least 41 ITAs now issued in 2026 under a federal 2026 allocation of 5,254 nomination spaces (up roughly 31% from BC's initial 4,000-spot allotment in 2025 but still below what the province requested), BC PNP continues to focus on business candidates expected to generate high economic impact in the province.
04/21/2026

Canada Expands Open Work Permit Eligibility for Spouses of Foreign Workers at Two B.C. Companies
Canada has further expanded work permit access for family members of foreign workers employed by selected companies. As of March 23, 2026, foreign workers employed in British Columbia by Lululemon Athletica or Microsoft Vancouver can support an open work permit application for their spouse or common-law partner, without the usual restrictions based on the principal applicant’s skill level, salary, or seniority. The new measure applies to applications received on or after that date and represents a targeted exemption for companies tied to significant investment projects, even as Canada continues tightening spousal open work permit rules more broadly.
03/25/2026

British Columbia Invites Two Types of Entrepreneur Immigration Candidates in Latest Draw, Issuing Invitations Under Both Base and Regional Streams
British Columbia recently held a new draw under the Entrepreneur Immigration (EI) program of the British Columbia Provincial Nominee Program (BC PNP), issuing invitations to eligible candidates under both the Base and Regional streams. Those invited were mainly business applicants planning to establish a new business in British Columbia or acquire and expand an existing one. In this round, the minimum invitation score was 117 for the Base stream, with 7 invitations issued, while the minimum score for the Regional stream was 129, with fewer than 5 invitations issued. Since the start of 2026, British Columbia has completed five entrepreneur-category draws, reflecting the province’s continued steady pace in attracting business immigrants and supporting regional economic development.
03/16/2026

British Columbia Issues 429 Invitations in First Skills Immigration Draw of the Year
On February 4, 2026, the British Columbia Provincial Nominee Program (BC PNP) held its first Skills Immigration draw of the year, issuing 429 Invitations to Apply (ITAs). The draw focused on candidates deemed to have a “high economic impact” in BC, issuing invitations through a high-wage job offer stream ($70/hour for NOC TEER 0–3) and a score-based stream requiring a minimum registration score of 138 points. As of January 6, 2026, the Skills Immigration registration pool contained 11,210 registrations, while BC has been allocated 5,254 nomination spaces for 2026—indicating continued strong competition.
02/06/2026

British Columbia Provincial Nominee Program (BC PNP) Raises Application Fees for Skills Immigration Streams
The British Columbia Provincial Nominee Program (BC PNP) office officially announced on January 22, 2026, an immediate increase in nomination application fees for its Skills Immigration category. Under the new policy, the application fee for this category has risen from the previous $1,475 CAD to $1,750 CAD. This fee adjustment applies only to applications submitted on or after January 22, 2026; applicants who submitted prior to this date are not required to pay the difference. It is important to note that this adjustment targets only the Skills Immigration category, while fees for the Entrepreneur Immigration streams and other related costs, such as request for review fees, remain at their original price.
01/27/2026

BC PNP Holds First Draw of 2026: Entrepreneur Immigration Base Stream Issues New Invitations
On January 13, 2026, British Columbia held its first Provincial Nominee Program (BC PNP) selection of the year, specifically targeting the "Base Stream" of its Entrepreneur Immigration Program. Marking the start of the 2026 selection cycle, the province issued invitations to seven candidates, with a minimum required score of 115. This draw underscores the province's continued policy focus on attracting experienced business professionals capable of establishing new ventures or taking over existing operations to stimulate local employment and economic development. Data from 2025 indicates that this stream remains one of the most frequently drawn categories, highlighting sustained demand for business immigration.
01/18/2026

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

Saskatchewan Unveils 2026 SINP Allocation and Strategic Overhaul: Nomination Cap Maintained at 4,761 with New Sector-Based Tiers
The Saskatchewan Immigrant Nominee Program (SINP) has officially announced its nomination allocation and a series of significant policy changes for 2026. The province has received an initial allocation of 4,761 nomination spaces, matching the total at the end of 2025. In a major shift, the federal government has removed the 2025 requirement that 75% of nominees must already be in Canada, granting Saskatchewan greater flexibility to select overseas candidates. For the upcoming year, the SINP is implementing a new three-tier distribution strategy: "Priority Sectors" (such as healthcare and agriculture) will be allocated at least 50% of nominations with open intake, while "Capped Sectors" (including hospitality and retail) will face strict percentage limits and scheduled application windows. Furthermore, the province has introduced tighter eligibility criteria for open work permit holders and Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) holders, specifically affecting out-of-province graduates.
12/31/2025

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