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Oct 22, 2025

Canada extends TR-to-PR open work-permit option to December 2026

Canada extends TR-to-PR open work-permit option to December 2026
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) quietly released a new public policy on 22 October 2025 that pushes the expiry of the popular open work-permit option for Temporary-Resident-to-Permanent-Resident (TR-to-PR) applicants out to 31 December 2026. The change means thousands of essential workers, international graduates and French-speaking applicants who filed for permanent residence under the 2021 TR-to-PR pathway—and their accompanying family members—can now keep working in Canada without having to re-apply for status every 12 months.

The TR-to-PR pathway was originally devised in the pandemic recovery period to transition up to 90,000 workers and graduates already in Canada to permanent residence. IRCC introduced a one-year open work permit in 2022 so that applicants would not fall out of status while their files were processed. Extensions followed in 2023 and 2024, but the latest measure is the most far-reaching, giving applicants more than a year of additional breathing room.

For employers, the longer permit validity takes significant administrative pressure off HR departments that have been repeatedly filing renewals—and off IRCC processing capacity. Companies can now plan deployment of foreign talent with a clearer horizon and avoid costly disruptions linked to maintained status or implied-status work stoppages. The policy also explicitly allows overseas spouses and children to apply, widening the labour pool and supporting family stability.

Global-mobility managers should review assignee populations who hold TR-to-PR work permits and adjust compliance calendars accordingly. While the new deadline is 31 December 2026, applicants must still hold valid temporary status at the time of filing, maintain eligible language test results and respect biometrics and medical-exam timelines. Corporations are advised to update onboarding materials and ensure wage and NOC codes remain aligned with evolving employer-compliance rules.
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