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Immigration
By Stephanie Ford
Posted on August 29, 2025
In this breakdown, we’ll highlight the most important trends in the data and what they mean for newcomers.
Use our resources to be one of them.
The figures come directly from official Canadian government reports, which were published later than usual this year. After Prime Minister Mark Carney faced criticism for the delay, the numbers were quickly released.
The government’s reports are lengthy spreadsheets full of figures, so we’ve simplified them here to explain the trends, why they matter, and how they might affect your immigration journey.
Before we dig in, the approved work permits comparison to the immigration levels plan is not a perfect comparison. This is because the targets measure arrivals, not approvals. And approved permits received within Canada would be activations within Canada, not arrivals. Keep this in mind when reviewing the comparisons, since it’s an approximation, not an exact science.
Do you learn better by video? Watch our team members Rachel and Stephanie discuss these numbers:
The 2025 plan targeted 305,900 international students. As of June 2025, Canada has approved nearly 150,000 study permits, which puts approvals close to target for the year. The last few years show that Q3 (July-September) tends to see the most approvals, so we may see international student approvals ‘catch up’ or exceed targets if that trend holds.
Indian students accounted for about one-third of these approvals, with strong representation from China, Nigeria, and the Philippines.
Approvals under the IMP already stand at 302,000 in the first half of 2025—well above the yearly target of 285,000. Unless processing slows in the second half of the year, Canada may significantly surpass its planned intake. (In fact, it may either way.)
The IMP includes the IEC program, PGWP, SOWP, intra-company transfers and other LMIA-exempt temporary work permits. We know that around 92,073 invitations have been issued through the IEC program so far in 2025, and we would predict that around 50,000 of the approved work permits could relate to the IEC program.
Similarly, the TFWP has exceeded its target. By June 2025, there were already 105,000 approvals, compared to the annual target of 82,000.
This is striking, given that restrictions were placed on employers last year. These restrictions included caps on low-wage workers per workplace and limits in regions with higher unemployment rates. Despite that, intake remains comparable to 2024 levels.
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Canada’s Immigration Levels Plan for 2025 set a target of 395,000 new permanent residents. By mid-year, nearly 208,000 admissions had already been recorded. This falls within the official range of up to 435,000, so it’s not considered an overage.
Here’s how some key categories are tracking:
Overall, the data shows Canada is ahead of schedule for refugee admissions and PNPs, while CEC admissions lag behind expectations.
From January to June 2025, the leading countries for PR applications and approvals were:
For comparison, the top five in the same period of 2024 were India, the Philippines, China, Cameroon, and Nigeria—with slightly higher totals across the board.
For temporary residents, Canada is moving toward reduced numbers, especially for international students. Still, worker programs like IMP and TFWP are already over target, which suggests adjustments or slower processing may come later in the year.
For permanent residents, Canada remains on track to meet its overall goals, though the pace differs across programs. The slower Canadian Experience Class admissions, in particular, may be frustrating for candidates with strong CRS scores waiting in the Express Entry pool.
Looking ahead, current draw patterns, processing timelines, and levels plan targets could hold steady through late 2026 or even into 2027. That stability may be reassuring for some, but for many others, it will continue to feel like a difficult wait.
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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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