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Immigration
By Rebecca Major
Posted on February 10, 2026
Canada’s Open Work Permit for Vulnerable Workers is an LMIA exempt work permit. It is designed to protect temporary foreign workers who are experiencing abuse, or are at risk of abuse, at their employment in Canada. It allows eligible workers to leave unsafe jobs and obtain an open work permit, without needing a new employer-specific job offer or a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA).
On February 6, 2026, IRCC implemented a significant overhaul of its operational instructions and processing guidelines. These changes offer prospective applicants and decision-makers far greater clarity on eligibility, evidence, and how these applications are assessed. The timing of this overhaul is not accidental.
As this program becomes increasingly relied upon, clarity and consistency in how applications are processed are critical. In this article, we’ll explore what’s changed in the operational instructions and why it matters.
The most compelling reason behind IRCC’s recent overhaul is simple: usage of the vulnerable worker open work permit has surged to a rate that cannot be ignored.
Using IRCC open-source data compiled by Moving2Canada, the growth is exponential in recent years.
This trajectory makes it clear that what was once a relatively niche protection mechanism has become a widely relied-upon pathway for temporary foreign workers facing unsafe or exploitative employment conditions. With application volumes rising quickly, the need for clearer rules and more consistent decision-making were inevitable.
The Biggest Change: Clear Guidance on What Doesn’t Constitute Abuse
The single most significant operational shift is IRCC’s decision to explicitly outline examples of situations that may not constitute abuse for the purposes of a vulnerable worker open work permit.
For the first time, IRCC now lists scenarios that generally fall outside the scope of the program, including:
This clarification is important for two reasons.
First, it gives processing officers clearer boundaries, helping ensure more consistent and defensible decisions at a time when volumes are increasing rapidly. Second, it allows potentially eligible foreign workers to better assess their own situation before applying, reducing confusion and unnecessary refusals.
Crucially though, IRCC emphasizes that these examples are not exhaustive. Officers retain discretion to assess each case individually, and situations may still qualify even if they do not align perfectly with the examples listed. This preserves the program’s flexibility while providing much-needed structure.
The updated instructions expand and refine examples of abuse which were included previously, too.
IRCC also introduced several additional updates that significantly affect how vulnerable worker applications are processed:
The sharp rise in vulnerable worker open work permits does not exist in a vacuum. While it is not possible to attribute the increase to a single cause, it closely coincides with heightened scrutiny and sustained criticism of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) over the past year.
Public reporting and media investigations have increasingly highlighted systemic concerns, including:
As awareness of these issues grows, so too does awareness of the vulnerable worker open work permit. It is known to be a practical and lawful exit option for workers who feel trapped in harmful employment situations,resulting in more applications.
But it goes further. It highlights deeper, unresolved issues within the Temporary Foreign Worker Program, and employer-specific (closed) work permits more generally. As scrutiny of employer practices, recruitment models, and closed work permits continues to grow, the vulnerable worker permit is increasingly being used to fill gaps that existing enforcement and compliance mechanisms have struggled to address.
By its nature, the program remains largely reactive. It offers a pathway out only once abuse has occurred or risk has become acute, rather than preventing harm from happening in the first place. While the vulnerable worker open work permit is an important and necessary protection, it does not address the root causes that make workers vulnerable to exploitation.
In that sense, its rapid expansion should be read as a signal, not just of need to offer greater guidance, but of systemic abuse within Canada’s temporary worker system that remains unresolved.
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