
On April 15, the Erickson Immigration Group highlighted new special measures, effective April 1, 2026, that expand support for foreign nationals caught in Canadian natural disasters. Under the policy, temporary residents—students, workers and visitors—now have up to six months to apply to restore status, quadrupling the usual 90-day deadline. Crucially, emergency-services personnel from visa-required countries who are coming to Canada to help with disaster response will be exempt from standard application and biometric fees, allowing faster deployment of international firefighting, medical and engineering teams. The initiative reflects lessons from the record wildfire seasons of 2023–25, when thousands of evacuated foreign workers lost status while fleeing danger zones.
For organizations and individuals navigating these immigration shifts, VisaHQ provides end-to-end visa and status-restoration assistance. Its dedicated Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) delivers up-to-date checklists, concierge review services, and rapid filing tools, helping workers, students and emergency responders make the most of the extended six-month window.
By extending restoration windows, IRCC aims to prevent vulnerable individuals from slipping into undocumented status and to reduce administrative backlogs triggered by sudden surges in late restoration filings. For employers, especially in resource and agricultural sectors prone to wildfire disruption, the policy provides welcome certainty. Companies can focus on safety and business-continuity planning without the immediate pressure of filing urgent restoration applications for displaced staff. Mobility managers should still document employees’ evacuation dates and maintain payroll records to support future applications. The measures run through November 30, 2028, giving provinces and industry time to integrate the new flexibilities into emergency-response protocols. IRCC will monitor uptake and may refine the programme following the 2026 wildfire season.
For organizations and individuals navigating these immigration shifts, VisaHQ provides end-to-end visa and status-restoration assistance. Its dedicated Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) delivers up-to-date checklists, concierge review services, and rapid filing tools, helping workers, students and emergency responders make the most of the extended six-month window.
By extending restoration windows, IRCC aims to prevent vulnerable individuals from slipping into undocumented status and to reduce administrative backlogs triggered by sudden surges in late restoration filings. For employers, especially in resource and agricultural sectors prone to wildfire disruption, the policy provides welcome certainty. Companies can focus on safety and business-continuity planning without the immediate pressure of filing urgent restoration applications for displaced staff. Mobility managers should still document employees’ evacuation dates and maintain payroll records to support future applications. The measures run through November 30, 2028, giving provinces and industry time to integrate the new flexibilities into emergency-response protocols. IRCC will monitor uptake and may refine the programme following the 2026 wildfire season.