
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

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

Canada’s First 2026 IEC Working Holiday Round Issues Over 10,000 Invitations
Canada has launched the 2026 season of the International Experience Canada (IEC) program, and the Working Holiday stream has already seen a large first wave of Invitations to Apply (ITAs). As of January 23, 2026, a total of 10,689 ITAs had been issued to participating countries and territories, out of a 2026 Working Holiday quota of 42,127. While 35,283 spots remain available, the candidate pool already stands at 34,539, suggesting a faster-moving and potentially more competitive season. For young travellers and early-career professionals, the Working Holiday work permit is often the quickest legal route to work in Canada without requiring a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) and typically without the need for a pre-arranged job offer—making the first round’s pace an important signal for how quickly quotas may shrink in 2026.
01/28/2026

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

Saskatchewan Announces 2026 Nomination Allocation and Major SINP Reforms
The Government of Saskatchewan has officially announced its provincial nomination plan for 2026, confirming that the Saskatchewan Immigrant Nominee Program (SINP) will have a total allocation of 4,761 nominations, unchanged from the end of 2025. To support the use of this allocation, the province will introduce a series of structural reforms in 2026, including clearly defined nomination shares for priority and capped sectors, greater flexibility for priority-sector applicants, and stricter eligibility rules for international students and certain open work permit holders.
12/25/2025

Saskatchewan Receives Increased Immigration Allocation, Creating New Opportunities for Priority Sectors
The Canadian province of Saskatchewan has announced that its 2025 Provincial Nominee Program (SINP) has received an additional 1,136 nominations from the federal government, bringing its total annual allocation to 4,761. This adjustment reopens application pathways for several sectors that were previously paused due to reaching their caps. Against a backdrop of diverging immigration allocation trends across Canada, this development in Saskatchewan, along with increases in several other provinces, highlights the complex and evolving landscape of federal and provincial immigration policies.
08/29/2025

2024 Canadian Immigration Policy Review — Changes to LMIA-Exempt Work Permits
In 2024, the Canadian federal government introduced several adjustments to its Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA)-exempt work permit policies. These changes encompass Spousal Open Work Permits (SOWP), New work permit for PNP nominee candidates, Updated instructions regarding ICTs under the IMP and more, aimed at optimizing immigration structures and managing the proportion of temporary residents. Below is a professional analysis of the key policy changes and their implications.
01/13/2025

Canada Tightens Intra-Company Transferee Work Permit Guidelines
On October 3, 2024, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) released updated guidelines concerning the Intra-Company Transferee (ICT) work permit category. These revisions introduce a more restrictive interpretation of the ICT category, significantly impacting foreign companies seeking to establish or expand operations in Canada.
10/18/2024