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Oct 25, 2025

Ontario Imposes Canadian-Experience Rule and Visa Checks for Commercial Truck Licences

Ontario Imposes Canadian-Experience Rule and Visa Checks for Commercial Truck Licences
Commercial drivers hoping to obtain a Class A licence in Ontario—and thereby access North America’s lucrative long-haul trucking market—now face the toughest credential screen in the country. In regulatory amendments released on 25 October 2025 under the Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act, the province introduced four key changes: (1) applicants must prove at least one full year of prior driving experience in Canada; (2) all immigration documents will be electronically verified with IRCC before a road test is booked; (3) visitor-visa holders are barred from applying; and (4) automatic recognition of foreign licences from non-reciprocal countries is cancelled.

The policy follows a series of cross-border accidents—two of them fatal—linked to drivers holding newly issued Canadian licences but little domestic road experience. Ontario’s Ministry of Transportation says the rule will close a safety loophole that allowed newcomers to fast-track into tractor-trailers after minimal local practice. Employers must now rethink recruitment pipelines that relied on licensing newcomers quickly to fill driver shortages.

For foreign workers, the biggest hurdle is the one-year Canadian experience mandate. International recruits entering on employer-specific work permits will need an interim job driving straight trucks (Class D) or other vehicles before moving up to Class A, potentially extending assignment timelines. Companies accustomed to onboarding drivers within weeks will need parallel succession plans and may shift more loads to third-party carriers.

The new electronic document-verification system is also noteworthy. Ministry staff will cross-reference work-permit validity and visa category directly against IRCC databases, preventing applicants with lapsed or fraudulent status from progressing. Immigration lawyers anticipate a spike in refusals where status extensions are pending; they advise filing early and carrying proof of implied status to Service Ontario appointments.

While safety advocates applaud the changes, trucking associations warn of knock-on cost increases. “We already face a chronic shortage of 30,000 drivers nationally; adding a one-year waiting period risks choking supply chains,” the Ontario Trucking Association said in a statement. Companies engaged in cross-border trade should factor longer lead-times and higher wages into 2026 mobility budgets.
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