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Oct 30, 2025

International student approvals plunge 62 % as Canada’s study-permit cap bites

International student approvals plunge 62 % as Canada’s study-permit cap bites
New data analysed by ed-tech platform ApplyBoard and reported on October 30 2025 reveal a dramatic 62 % drop in new post-secondary study-permit approvals this year, with only 80,000 permits expected— the lowest intake in a decade. Two-thirds of approvals in 2025 are now extensions for students already inside Canada, indicating that the federal cap introduced in 2024 and tightened in 2025 is drastically reshaping enrolment patterns.

Colleges are bearing the brunt: nearly 80 % of their 2025 permits are extensions, leaving fewer than 30,000 seats for incoming students. Universities have seen a modest summer rebound, but diversity is waning as approval rates for applicants from India, the Philippines and several African countries remain well below historic norms.

The contraction threatens a sector that contributed an estimated C$22 billion to GDP in 2023 and supports more than 170,000 Canadian jobs. Smaller communities that rely on college campuses to backfill demographic decline face particular risk. Housing markets around large metropolitan universities, however, may experience partial relief from rental-demand pressure—an explicit goal of the study-permit cap.

Institutions are scrambling to adapt. Strategies include expanding articulation agreements to attract on-shore transfer students, fast-tracking micro-credential programs that fit within existing permits, and lobbying provincial governments for larger allocations under the new cap-management formula expected in 2026.

Prospective students should prepare for tougher approval benchmarks—especially proof-of-funds and intent-to-return assessments—and consider alternative pathways such as the Atlantic Immigration Pilot’s study-to-settle streams or employer-sponsored training programs that align with provincial labour-market shortages.
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