
Ontario Issues Over 1,800 Immigration Invitations Across Four Targeted Draws, Healthcare Accounting for Nearly 90%
The Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) conducted four targeted draws on April 8, 2026, issuing a total of 1,828 invitations to apply (ITAs) across four categories: healthcare and early childhood education, Francophone candidates, the Regional Economic Development through Immigration (REDI) pilot, and physicians. The healthcare and early childhood education draw dominated with 1,635 invitations — nearly 90% of the total — while the Foreign Worker stream minimum score dropped to just 20, down sharply from 36 in the February 2 healthcare draw, signaling Ontario's intensified push to fill critical staffing gaps in these sectors. This marked the province's sixth set of draws in 2026, with all targeted candidates required to hold a valid work or study permit and currently reside in Canada. Notably, these draws come as Ontario prepares for a sweeping overhaul of its immigration system, with legal amendments to the Ontario Immigration Act set to take effect on May 30, 2026, revoking all existing nomination categories — including the Foreign Worker, International Student, and In-Demand Skills streams used in these draws.
04/10/2026

Ontario issues over 1,100 provincial nomination invitations on March 25, targeting foreign workers, international graduates, and in-demand professionals
On March 25, 2026, the Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) held five targeted invitation rounds, issuing a total of 1,112 Invitations to Apply (ITAs) to candidates currently in Canada who hold valid work or study permits and have qualifying job offers from eligible employers. The invitations covered the Foreign Worker, International Student, and In-Demand Skills categories under the Employer Job Offer streams, across the Greater Toronto Area, Southwestern Ontario, Central Ontario (excluding the GTA), Eastern Ontario, and Northern Ontario. At the same time, Ontario is moving ahead with a major restructuring of its provincial nomination system, with several existing categories expected to be repealed on May 30, 2026, when legislative changes come into force and new consolidated streams are introduced.
03/27/2026

Ontario Resumes Provincial Immigration Invitations for Master’s and PhD Graduates, with Over 1,100 Candidates Invited
On March 18, 2026, the Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) conducted its third round of invitations of the year and completed six targeted draws on the same day, issuing a total of 1,243 Invitations to Apply (ITAs). Among them, 1,107 ITAs were issued through the Master’s Graduate and PhD Graduate streams, marking the first invitations under these two streams since September 17, 2024. The draws mainly targeted international student graduates and foreign workers with Canadian work experience in specific National Occupational Classification (NOC) occupations. At the same time, Ontario also issued 136 ITAs through its Employer Job Offer streams. These invitations came as the province moves ahead with a major restructuring of its immigration system, with several current categories scheduled to be revoked on May 30, 2026, and replaced by a new framework.
03/20/2026

Ontario Announces Its 2026 Nomination Allocation, Higher Than Last Year
On February 6, 2026, Ontario published its 2026 nomination allocation for the Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP). The federal government has granted Ontario 14,119 nominations for 2026, an increase of roughly 31% from the 10,750 nominations allocated in 2025. The rise aligns with Ottawa’s expanded permanent residence (PR) admissions target for Provincial Nominee Programs in 2026. However, Ontario’s 2026 allocation remains well below its 2024 level of 21,500 nominations. Ontario has not yet announced priority sectors or occupations for 2026, nor has it released a stream-by-stream breakdown of how nominations will be distributed across its eight immigration streams. The update comes as the province continues a series of policy changes and prepares for a proposed stream consolidation expected to unfold in 2026 and beyond, subject to final regulatory approval.
02/11/2026

Ontario issues 1,825 invitations in its first OINP draws of 2026
On February 2, 2026, the Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) held its first selection round of the year, conducting six targeted draws and issuing a total of 1,825 Invitations to Apply (ITAs) for provincial nomination. The draws were held through Ontario’s Employer Job Offer streams and focused on physicians, Regional Economic Development through Immigration (REDI) candidates, health occupations, and early childhood educators and assistants. Across all six draws, Ontario considered candidate profiles created between July 2, 2025, and January 28, 2026.
02/03/2026

Ontario Eases Physician Immigration Rules: Specific Self-Employed Physicians No Longer Require Job Offer for Provincial Nomination
Ontario has recently made critical adjustments to its Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) aimed at lowering barriers for internationally trained physicians. Effective January 1, 2026, self-employed physicians working under specific National Occupation Classification (NOC) codes are no longer required to provide an employer job offer or a letter from a provincial health authority when applying for the OINP "Employer Job Offer: Foreign Worker stream." This move makes Ontario currently the only province in Canada with such a targeted physician immigration pathway that does not mandate a job offer. This update coincides with Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) announcing the addition of 5,000 extra Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) spaces outside of the 2026-2028 Immigration Levels Plan. The federal government aims to admit 91,500 new permanent residents through the PNP by the end of 2026 to help alleviate labor shortages across the provinces.
01/14/2026

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

Ontario Proposes Two-Phase Overhaul of Provincial Nominee Program for Permanent Residence
The Ontario government has unveiled a major two-phase plan to redesign the Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) and reshape how the province selects candidates for permanent residence. Phase one proposes consolidating the three existing Employer Job Offer streams into a single integrated framework with two pathways based on occupation level. Phase two would eliminate all remaining existing streams and replace them with three new ones: a Priority Healthcare Stream, an Entrepreneur Stream, and an Exceptional Talent Stream. The government is currently consulting stakeholders and has not yet clarified how in-progress applications will be handled once the reforms take effect.
12/05/2025