
In a surprise New-Year boost for employers, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) opened an additional 110,000 economic-class places on 6 January 2026. The one-off allocation sits outside the regular Immigration Levels Plan and is designed to clear backlogs while giving businesses faster access to engineers, technologists and skilled tradespeople.
Unlike a permanent increase in overall immigration, the measure merely shifts future quotas forward. Officials say total admissions for 2026-2028 will remain within previously announced ceilings, but processing capacity has been front-loaded to address acute labour shortages and prevent Express Entry pools from ballooning. Companies that submit complete Labour-Market Impact Assessments (LMIAs) or offer arranged employment to candidates can therefore expect lower CRS cut-offs and quicker invitations in the coming weeks.
For employers that lack in-house immigration teams, VisaHQ’s specialists can step in to coordinate LMIA filings, gather supporting documents and monitor Express Entry timelines. Their dedicated Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) streamlines paperwork for both HR departments and foreign workers, helping companies secure a share of the newly front-loaded quota before it closes.
Practical steps for mobility managers include pre-ordering language tests, ensuring Educational Credential Assessments are valid, and front-loading proof-of-funds so candidates can accept ITAs immediately. Employers should also review relocation budgets; the accelerated quota could see landings occur several months earlier than planned, affecting housing and settlement timelines.
IRCC stresses that the move will not increase temporary-resident numbers—an issue that has drawn political scrutiny—because most extra spots will be granted to workers already in Canada on employer-specific or postgraduate work permits. Nevertheless, global recruiters should act quickly: once the 110,000 places are filled, normal (and more competitive) selection rounds will resume.
Unlike a permanent increase in overall immigration, the measure merely shifts future quotas forward. Officials say total admissions for 2026-2028 will remain within previously announced ceilings, but processing capacity has been front-loaded to address acute labour shortages and prevent Express Entry pools from ballooning. Companies that submit complete Labour-Market Impact Assessments (LMIAs) or offer arranged employment to candidates can therefore expect lower CRS cut-offs and quicker invitations in the coming weeks.
For employers that lack in-house immigration teams, VisaHQ’s specialists can step in to coordinate LMIA filings, gather supporting documents and monitor Express Entry timelines. Their dedicated Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) streamlines paperwork for both HR departments and foreign workers, helping companies secure a share of the newly front-loaded quota before it closes.
Practical steps for mobility managers include pre-ordering language tests, ensuring Educational Credential Assessments are valid, and front-loading proof-of-funds so candidates can accept ITAs immediately. Employers should also review relocation budgets; the accelerated quota could see landings occur several months earlier than planned, affecting housing and settlement timelines.
IRCC stresses that the move will not increase temporary-resident numbers—an issue that has drawn political scrutiny—because most extra spots will be granted to workers already in Canada on employer-specific or postgraduate work permits. Nevertheless, global recruiters should act quickly: once the 110,000 places are filled, normal (and more competitive) selection rounds will resume.









