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Work
By Freya Devlin
Posted on November 12, 2025
A new study by Statistics Canada shows that immigrant women educated as nurses are far more likely to be working in unrelated or lower-skilled jobs compared to their Canadian-trained peers. It’s a striking mismatch, Canada needs nurses, but many qualified newcomers can’t get through the door.
In this article, we’ll unpack why that’s happening, what’s being done to fix it, and what it means for newcomers, especially women with nursing backgrounds hoping to build a future here.
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The study highlights a clear mismatch between Canada’s need for nurses and its use of immigrant talent.
These figures come at a time when healthcare systems nationwide are stretched thin. In the first quarter of 2025 alone, Statistics Canada reported 21,000 registered nurse vacancies and 10,000 licensed practical nurse vacancies.
Despite the urgent need, many internationally educated nurses (IENs) remain under-employed because of the licensing, credential, and language requirements that differ across provinces. However, those trained in Canada? Their outcomes nearly mirror those of Canadian-born nurses, proof that the barrier isn’t skill, but paperwork and policy.
You’d think a country with chronic nursing shortages would fast-track international talent. But Canada’s system isn’t built that way. Nursing is regulated by provinces and territories, meaning there’s no single national standard or timeline.
Here’s the short version of the long process:
Add those layers together, and it’s no wonder many skilled women take jobs far below their qualifications while waiting sometimes years for approval.
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There’s finally some movement, though it’s uneven across provinces.
In March 2024, the federal government committed $86 million to help more than 6,600 internationally educated health professionals move through credential recognition faster. The plan is to fund programs that shorten assessment times and expand bridging opportunities.
Some provinces are going further. Ontario’s Supervised Practice Experience Partnership (SPEP) lets nurses demonstrate their skills on the job instead of repeating costly exams. Nova Scotia has begun recognizing nursing licenses from the U.S., U.K., Australia, and New Zealand, eliminating months of red tape.
The Foreign Credential Recognition (FCR) program now offers loans of up to $30,000 to cover fees for exams, bridging courses, and licensing. That’s a lifeline for newcomers juggling family, rent, and study costs while waiting for approval.
If you’re an internationally educated nurse thinking about working in Canada, here’s how to get ahead of the process:
It’s not easy, but thousands of nurses manage to get licensed every year. Knowing the steps and tackling them one at a time, makes it far more manageable.
Canada’s healthcare system needs immigrant nurses just as much as immigrant nurses need fair access to work.
Still, momentum is building. Governments are listening, regulators are slowly modernizing, and public awareness of under-employed professionals is growing louder.
If you’re one of those nurses waiting on credentials, don’t lose heart. The path may feel long, but it’s getting clearer and every year, more internationally educated nurses are finally stepping into the roles they trained for. And when they do, everyone wins: patients get care, hospitals get relief, and newcomers finally get to do the work they came here to do.
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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