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Immigration
By Stephanie Ford
Posted on October 2, 2025
After landing, many newcomers discover that the first Canadian job is rarely the last—and it’s not always a step up. Titles don’t map neatly across borders, licensing can take time, and spouses often face an even steeper climb to stable, full-time work. And there are some trends appearing in Canada’s PNP-alumni workforce.
We’re sharing some trends in career outcomes for those who took the PNP pathway. We hope it can help you decide if the PNP route, and possible career outcomes afterwards, are appealing to you.
Among provincial nominees who were 1-5 years into permanent residence, the picture is mixed but encouraging. Principal applicants—the person named on the nomination—were more likely to be working full-time than their spouses. That aligns with how most families ‘arrive’ (or land as PRs): the principal applicant has the job offer or profile that triggered the nomination, while the spouse is still making Canadian connections, finishing language training, juggling childcare, or a combination of all of these.
Across the Provincial Nominee population, full-time roles cluster at two ends of the skill spectrum. On one side sit professional jobs that typically require a university degree—think software engineers, financial analysts, and other knowledge workers. On the other side are “C and D” roles that don’t require a university credential—frontline service, logistics, manufacturing, and entry-level healthcare support.
Compared with Canadian-born workers, Provincial Nominees are just as likely to hold professional jobs overall. In fact, provincial nominees are more likely than Canadian-born workers to hold ‘level A-1 jobs’ (which are how StatsCan ranks professional jobs, typically requiring a university degree).
Interestingly, they are noticeably less represented in skilled trades (electricians, industrial mechanics, construction trades) and more represented in lower-skilled roles.
That imbalance in the trades surprises many. You’ll hear about shortages, and they’re real, but trades are heavily regulated. Unless you arrive with Canadian certification—or can quickly challenge exams and log supervised hours—you may need time to enter a trade at the level you held abroad.
The same is true in healthcare: Provincial Nominees show up strongly in nurse aide and patient support roles, but far fewer land directly in regulated professions like nursing or other licensed health occupations (unless they’re eligible for direct credential recognition, like for US-trained healthcare pros moving to BC or Ontario). Bridging into those roles is doable; it just isn’t instant for most newcomers.
Among Provincial Nominee principal applicants, computer and information systems roles take an outsized share, and that share has grown rapidly across cohorts – through to the end of 2024. In short: provinces have leaned into tech because that’s where demand was running hot.
However, this finding is likely bittersweet this year. With anecdotal evidence of a severe glut in tech workers and higher than usual unemployment in this sector, it’s likely that Provincial Nominees arriving through tech pathways (from last year) might struggle more than in the past. Plus, it’s also likely that we’ll see fewer tech-sector nominees in 2025, since many provinces have reduced their tech-specific draws.
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In Ontario, British Columbia, and New Brunswick (and to a degree Nova Scotia), a high proportion of Provincial Nominee principal applicants are in professional roles, with particularly strong representation in IT. These provinces have well-developed tech corridors and employer demand that aligned with PNP selection through to the end of 2024.
Across the Prairie provinces—Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta—you’ll still find professional roles, but you’ll also see a larger share of nominees in service, customer-facing, and entry-level production jobs. That doesn’t mean your career stalls there. Many newcomers use these roles as a quick on-ramp to the labour market while they finish a credential, strengthen language proficiency, or build a local network.
The practical takeaway is simple: province choice is a career choice. If your goal is to stay in a professional lane, target provinces and streams that nominate heavily into your occupation family. If you’re open to a “foot-in-the-door” approach and value affordability or speed, a Prairie province might offer a faster landing, with a plan to bridge upwards in your career over your first 12–24 months.
Alternatively, the Prairie provinces can offer a comfortable lifestyle for lower-skilled workers due to the lower cost of living. So, for those looking outside higher skilled positions, the Prairies might be a good choice.
Spouses and partners are more likely than principal applicants to start in part-time or lower-skilled roles. The reasons are human: childcare, licensing delays, and the time it takes to translate overseas experience into a Canadian résumé.
You can see this in the occupation mix. Spouses are more present in retail, customer service, hospitality, and patient support roles. Those jobs offer fast entry and flexible hours, but they don’t always reflect a spouse’s prior career. The shift from “any job” to “the right job” typically happens once childcare stabilizes, language training is complete, or the first Canadian employer reference opens doors.
If you’re immigrating as a couple, you might want to plan your landing as a two-career project. That might mean the principal applicant accepts a slightly less senior role to secure good hours and benefits, while the spouse pushes hard on licensing and networking. Or it could mean investing early in childcare to accelerate the spouse’s return to a professional path. Families that make these choices deliberately tend to climb faster, together.
On the surface, the parity in professional roles is reassuring: if you arrive through PNP with a professional background, your chances of landing in a professional job are decent. The gaps appear at the edges.
Canadian-born workers dominate in regulated trades—again, credentialing—and they are less concentrated in lower-skilled service roles. Provincial nominees, especially spouses, are more likely to spend time in those entry-level positions while they gather Canadian experience.
The lesson is not that PNP funnels newcomers into lower-skilled work. It’s that PNP serves two missions at once: it fills urgent local needs and brings in long-term contributors.
If you’re considering PNP now, think of it as choosing a place, an employer market, and a first move.
First, match your occupation to provincial reality. If you’re in finance, or other professional services, look closely at Ontario and BC, and don’t overlook the Atlantic provinces that are aggressively building their innovation economies. Those in IT might prioritize Alberta, which has continued tech-targeted draws through 2025.
If you’re angling for fast entry with lower living costs, the Prairies may offer a quicker nomination and an immediate paycheque, with room to move up once you’ve got local references.
Second, plan your bridge before you land. For regulated fields—nursing, allied health, engineering, the trades—start the licensing steps as soon as you receive your confirmation, not after arrival. Map the exact exams, fees, and supervised hours you’ll need, and identify interim roles that keep you close to your field (e.g., aide/assistant/technologist roles that count toward experience or sharpen your terminology).
Third, don’t forget to build out a career strategy for your spouse. Decide together whether childcare, language classes, or a short college certificate will produce the fastest lift. A six-month certificate that unlocks a professional title can be worth far more than a year of part-time work outside your field.
Finally, be tactical about your first Canadian job. It doesn’t have to be perfect; it does need to be purposeful. Aim for roles that add a Canadian reference, put you near decision-makers, or satisfy a licensing requirement. Set a 6–12 month review point with measurable goals—X projects shipped, Y certification completed, Z salary band—so you’re steering, not drifting.
Canada Abroad is a transparent Canadian immigration consultancy with advice you can trust. Led by Deanne Acres-Lans (RCIC #508363), the team delivers professional, regulated, and efficient service.
Led by Anthony Doherty (RCIC #510956) and Cassandra Fultz (#514356), the Doherty Fultz team uses their 40+ years of experience to empower you towards settling in Canada.
Led by Jenny Perez (RCIC #423103), Perez McKenzie Immigration is a Canadian immigration consultancy based in British Columbia, with offices in Vancouver and Whistler.
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