
Fresh arrival statistics released by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada reveal that Canada admitted 53 % fewer new international students and temporary foreign workers between January and September 2025 than during the same period in 2024. Only 11,390 study-permit holders arrived in September—down from 45,200 in August—marking the steepest single-month drop since comparable records began.
The sharp decline was anticipated after Ottawa imposed a national cap on new study-permit issuances in late 2024 and tightened proof-of-funds requirements, letter-of-acceptance verification and compliance audits for designated learning institutions. At the same time, the government curtailed open-work-permit eligibility for spouses of most students and announced a phased reduction of Canada’s overall temporary-resident population.
For applicants who still hope to secure a study or work permit amid these tougher rules, VisaHQ offers step-by-step assistance with form preparation, document uploads and application tracking through its Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/). The platform’s up-to-date guidance on proof-of-funds thresholds, biometric bookings and institutional compliance checks can help reduce avoidable delays and rejections in a tightening regulatory environment.
For universities and colleges, the numbers translate into a multimillion-dollar revenue hit and renewed pressure to diversify recruitment markets. Some institutions have begun fast-tracking articulation agreements with U.S. community colleges and European universities to backfill seats. Employers that rely on post-graduation work-permit holders—particularly in hospitality, retail and entry-level tech support—should brace for labour-supply tightness through at least mid-2026.
Immigration consultants note that processing times for study permits have not improved despite the lower intake, suggesting that IRCC is using the breathing room to step up fraud detection and overhaul its digital workflows ahead of the 2026 academic cycle.
The figures will feed into a broader political debate about the role of temporary residents in Canada’s housing-supply crunch. Federal ministers have hinted that further caps or occupation-specific restrictions could be on the table if enrolment rebounds too quickly.
The sharp decline was anticipated after Ottawa imposed a national cap on new study-permit issuances in late 2024 and tightened proof-of-funds requirements, letter-of-acceptance verification and compliance audits for designated learning institutions. At the same time, the government curtailed open-work-permit eligibility for spouses of most students and announced a phased reduction of Canada’s overall temporary-resident population.
For applicants who still hope to secure a study or work permit amid these tougher rules, VisaHQ offers step-by-step assistance with form preparation, document uploads and application tracking through its Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/). The platform’s up-to-date guidance on proof-of-funds thresholds, biometric bookings and institutional compliance checks can help reduce avoidable delays and rejections in a tightening regulatory environment.
For universities and colleges, the numbers translate into a multimillion-dollar revenue hit and renewed pressure to diversify recruitment markets. Some institutions have begun fast-tracking articulation agreements with U.S. community colleges and European universities to backfill seats. Employers that rely on post-graduation work-permit holders—particularly in hospitality, retail and entry-level tech support—should brace for labour-supply tightness through at least mid-2026.
Immigration consultants note that processing times for study permits have not improved despite the lower intake, suggesting that IRCC is using the breathing room to step up fraud detection and overhaul its digital workflows ahead of the 2026 academic cycle.
The figures will feed into a broader political debate about the role of temporary residents in Canada’s housing-supply crunch. Federal ministers have hinted that further caps or occupation-specific restrictions could be on the table if enrolment rebounds too quickly.









