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Immigration
By Freya Devlin
Posted on November 27, 2025
If you’re planning a move to Canada, already living here, or trying to make sense of the noise around immigration levels, these changing attitudes might feel unsettling. Totally understandable. So, let’s walk through what’s happening, why it matters, and what it actually means for your future in Canada.
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Several major polls from late 2024 and 2025 point toward the same trend, Canadians are more divided about immigration than they’ve been in decades.
The Environics Institute for Survey Research, 2025
Here are the big numbers that keep coming up:
This isn’t just a small wobble in public opinion. Researchers say it’s the widest political gap on immigration recorded in more than 25 years.
That might sound dramatic, but it doesn’t mean Canada is becoming hostile. It means the conversation is changing. And many of the concerns that Canadians raise – housing, healthcare access, cost of living are things newcomers feel too.
Public sentiment isn’t changing evenly across Canada. The Focus Canada 2025 survey shows some striking regional patterns in how people view immigration levels:
In short, while the national mood has intensified in some places, it has actually softened in others – a reminder that immigration debates look very different depending on where you live, the local economy, and the pressure people feel on housing or public services.
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Immigration attitudes tend to reflect what people are experiencing in their daily lives.
Lately, Canadians have been feeling squeezed:
An OMNI–Leger poll of recent immigrants found that 67% want Canada to admit fewer than 300,000 newcomers a year, and four in ten prefer fewer than 100,000. Many say rising costs, long processing times, and shifting policies make the system feel harder to navigate than before.
These frustrations create the backdrop. But the data shows something more specific:
What Canadians Think About Immigrants Overall
So while Canadians feel the pressure of affordability, infrastructure, and cost-of-living challenges, the data shows the core frustration isn’t newcomers themselves – it’s how the system is being run.
Political narratives amplify this. Parties portray immigration as either essential for future growth or as a strain on resources, and those messages shape public opinion. Over time, views on immigration become less about personal experience and more about political identity.
Not too long ago, Canada stood out for its cross-party agreement on immigration. In 2002, 58% of respondents agreed that immigrants from many different cultures make Canada stronger.
Back then:
Now it’s almost the opposite. Opinions are more intense and clearly tied to political affiliation. It doesn’t mean Canadians are closing their doors; it just means they’re focusing more on how immigration interacts with housing, services, and planning.
But it’s also important to note that opinions have stabilized since 2024 (the share saying immigration levels are “too high” is actually down 2%), and support for immigration’s economic value remains strong.
Here’s where things get practical. First, your pathway to Canada isn’t disappearing. Programs like Express Entry, the PNPs, work permits, and pathways for international students are still active, and the government continues to frame immigration as essential.
But you might notice a few changes in the coming months or years:
The takeaway is to stay informed, stay flexible, and don’t let headlines shake your confidence. Canada still needs immigrants, and Canadians still recognize the value newcomers bring even when they disagree on the numbers.
Political debates come and go. Housing markets rise and fall. But immigration and the people behind it remain a core part of Canada’s story.
If you’re planning to move, or you’re already here navigating the system, this moment of debate doesn’t change your worth or your prospects. Understanding public sentiment simply helps you read the landscape with clearer eyes.
And if you want to stay ahead of policy changes or find the best pathway for your situation, stick with trusted resources and guides.
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