Back
Dec 28, 2025

IRCC Freezes Intake for Home-Care Worker Immigration Pilots Amid Backlog

IRCC Freezes Intake for Home-Care Worker Immigration Pilots Amid Backlog
In a surprise holiday-season move, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) on 26 December announced an immediate pause on new applications under its Home-Child-Care Provider and Home-Support Worker pilots, programs that offer foreign caregivers a direct pathway to permanent residence.

IRCC said applications already in the system far exceed the 9,000 places allotted in the 2026-28 Immigration Levels Plan. Processing times have stretched well beyond the advertised 12-month standard, creating uncertainty for Canadian families who rely on live-in childcare or elder-care services. By halting intake, officials hope to clear the backlog and “bring immigration back to sustainable levels.”

For families and caregivers now facing shifting requirements, VisaHQ can streamline the search for alternative Canadian entry options. Its dedicated portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) lets users compare work-permit categories, visitor visas, and status-extension possibilities, and delivers real-time guidance as IRCC policies evolve—saving time and reducing paperwork headaches during this pause.

IRCC Freezes Intake for Home-Care Worker Immigration Pilots Amid Backlog


Caregiver-industry associations welcomed the clarity but warned of short-term labour gaps, particularly in Ontario and British Columbia where demand is highest. Recruiters predict an uptick in temporary foreign worker (TFW) applications as families look for stop-gap solutions, but note that the LMIA process is costlier and slower than the suspended pilots.

For foreign nationals who planned to file in March 2026, the pause forces a strategic reassessment. Immigration lawyers advise exploring provincial nominee caregiver streams or accumulating Canadian work experience under open work permits to strengthen future applications. Meanwhile, mobility managers with assignees who depend on caregiving support should budget for higher agency fees and longer lead times.

The pause also signals Ottawa’s broader effort to curb the overall temporary-resident population after a record 2.5 million holders in 2025. Stakeholders expect further tweaks to niche economic-class programs in the run-up to the 2026 pilot revamp IRCC has hinted at.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
×