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Oct 24, 2025

International Student Arrivals to Canada Plunge Nearly 60 % as Ottawa Tightens Study-Permit Rules

International Student Arrivals to Canada Plunge Nearly 60 % as Ottawa Tightens Study-Permit Rules
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) data released on October 24 show that only 89,430 international students entered Canada between January and August 2025, down from 221,940 in the same period of 2024—a staggering 59.7 % drop. August, traditionally the peak intake month, recorded just 45,380 new arrivals, off 43 % year-on-year.

The collapse follows a raft of policies unveiled last autumn: a national cap on study-permit applications set 10 % below 2024 volumes; mandatory provincial attestation letters; proof-of-funds thresholds doubled to CAD 20,635; and narrowed eligibility for post-graduation work permits (PGWP). IRCC frames the measures as “re-balancing” international education to relieve housing and healthcare pressures, yet universities and colleges are sounding alarm bells. Tuition revenue from foreign students—worth an estimated CAD 9 billion annually—cross-subsidises research and domestic enrolments; some smaller institutions now face operating deficits.

The downturn is equally jarring for local economies. The Canadian Bureau for International Education calculates that every 10,000 fewer students translates into roughly 4,300 lost jobs and CAD 230 million in GDP. Private-sector employers who have turned to PGWP holders as an agile talent pool in IT, hospitality and healthcare are reporting early signs of vacancy upticks.

From a global-mobility standpoint, multinationals that use Canada’s education-to-work pathways to seed local talent pipelines—particularly from India (39 % of student stock) and Nigeria—must rethink workforce-planning assumptions. Firms may need to pivot more aggressively to the Express Entry Canadian Experience Class or provincial nominee streams, both of which now receive priority under Ottawa’s 2025 category-based draws.

Education agents abroad are already redirecting clients to Germany and Australia, where post-study options remain more predictable. Unless IRCC fine-tunes the cap by program quality rather than blunt volume, Canada risks eroding a brand advantage painstakingly built over the past decade.
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