(CANADA) Canada will hold firm on immigration levels from 2026 while sharply cutting the size of its temporary population, a pivot officials say is meant to ease housing and service pressures without closing the door to newcomers.
In a plan unveiled with the 2025 federal budget and presented in the House of Commons, the government set a 2025 target of 395,000 permanent residents, followed by permanent residents 380,000 in 2026, and 365,000 in 2027. At the same time, it introduced for the first time an explicit policy to shrink the number of temporary residents, with a goal of bringing that share down to 5% of the total population by the end of 2026, from 7.3% in mid-2024. Officials said this implies a net drop of nearly 900,000 temporary residents over two years.

While the shift marks a major course change from previous expansion plans, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) stressed this is “not a freeze on immigration,” but a controlled adjustment. The plan directly affects students and workers on time-limited permits while still maintaining large annual admissions for permanent residents under the country’s points-based and family programs.
Why the change: balancing capacity and growth
The revised Canada immigration targets underscore a broader turn away from the post-pandemic surge that aimed to plug labor gaps quickly. The government says the policy now seeks a more measured pace that matches economic capacity and the ability of cities and provinces to host people.
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne presented the outline as part of the 2025–2027 Immigration Levels Plan, which for the first time puts temporary and permanent flows on the same page. The timing aligns with growing concern about housing costs and infrastructure strain across major metros, and pressure from local leaders who argued services were stretched.
By stabilizing admissions and starting a temporary residents reduction, Ottawa aims to avoid the stop-start cycles that can unsettle both employers and newcomers. Yet the change also means people who had been counting on study or work routes may now see fewer options, especially in sectors that had leaned on short-term labor.
Canada Recalibrates Immigration: Permanent Targets Stabilize, Temporary Population Set to Shrink
Source: Government of Canada — 2025 Federal Budget & IRCC Immigration Levels Plan 2025–2027
Immigration Targets: Permanent Residents (2025–2027)
Annual targets set in the 2025 federal budget. Year-over-year change shows modest downward adjustments while keeping admissions high.
| Year | Permanent Residents | Change vs prior year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 395,000 | — | Budget baseline; high admission level |
| 2026 | 380,000 | -15,000 (−3.8%) | Anchored target — described as stabilization |
| 2027 | 365,000 | -15,000 (−3.9%) | Gradual reduction to 365k |
| Average (2025–27) | 380,000 | — | Sustained high admissions across plan |
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Temporary Residents: Share & Implied Reductions
IRCC sets an explicit share goal for temporary residents — the first time temporary and permanent flows are managed together.
| Measure | Value | Change | Notes / Implied |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temporary resident share (mid‑2024) | 7.3% | — | Baseline reference for reduction goal |
| Target temporary share (end‑2026) | 5.0% | −2.3 pp | Policy sets an explicit ceiling for temporary flows |
| Implied net reduction (two years) | ~900,000 | ≈31.5% reduction | Officials: nearly 900k fewer temporary residents impl |
New targets: permanent and temporary flows
Key numerical targets in the plan:
– Permanent residents
– 2025: 395,000
– 2026: 380,000
– 2027: 365,000
– Temporary residents
– Reduce from 7.3% (mid-2024) to 5% of the total population by end-2026
– Implied net reduction: nearly 900,000 temporary residents over two years
IRCC framed these as a stabilization rather than a contraction. Even at 380,000 permanent residents in 2026, admissions remain high by international standards.
Who is most affected
The temporary residents reduction goes further, and faster, than many expected. Officials said this includes fewer permits for:
– International students
– Temporary foreign workers
Practical impacts:
– Colleges that expanded programs to serve overseas students will feel the impact first.
– Employers who filled hard-to-staff roles through short-term permits may need to adjust hiring plans.
– Communities and services that leaned on temporary inflows will face adjustments.
Ottawa argues a lower temporary share will reduce pressure on housing and public services while still keeping doors open for those selected for permanent residence.
Political and social context
The early signals of this reset appeared as housing affordability became a central political issue. Rents and home prices climbed in several urban centers, and anecdotal reports of students struggling to find suitable housing put a spotlight on local capacity.
In the House of Commons, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne tied the plan to responsible growth, acknowledging the need to align numbers with infrastructure and social services. IRCC stressed targets are being adjusted downward but Canada remains open to newcomers, pointing to the still-large totals.
Key takeaway: Canada immigration targets now aim for balance, not abrupt expansion — anchoring permanent levels around 380,000 in 2026 and shifting the mix away from short-term permits.
Planning and predictability
For prospective immigrants and jurisdictions, the year-by-year pathway is clearer on paper, even if competition for fewer spots could intensify in some categories. The trajectory gives provinces, cities, and service providers a planning curve, avoiding sudden jumps that complicate housing forecasts and program funding.
IRCC emphasized that the plan does not close channels; it recalibrates them. For temporary residents already in Canada on study or work permits, the aim to reduce the overall temporary share by 2026 raises questions about renewals and new entries, though the policy focuses on aggregate levels rather than immediate rule changes for individuals.
A structural shift: explicit temporary resident cap
Historically, planning focused on permanent levels, with temporary flows responding to demand. By setting a population share target of 5%, Ottawa is fixing a ceiling that departments and provinces can use when reviewing permits.
Implications:
– Colleges and universities may scale enrollments if national caps tighten student intakes.
– Employers will need to manage hiring plans anticipating less availability of temporary foreign workers.
– Provinces can use the 5% benchmark to calibrate local planning and infrastructure investments.
Supporters argue this prevents infrastructure overload; critics worry about potential labor shortages. The government’s position is that permanent admissions and productivity gains can offset reduced temporary inflows.
Fiscal alignment and long-term goals
The announcement accompanied the 2025 federal budget, linking immigration planning to investments in housing, transport, and healthcare. This pairing aims to:
1. Match arrivals with funded public capacity.
2. Give IRCC a framework to adjust program intake predictably.
3. Avoid mismatches observed during the post-pandemic surge.
The government says the goal is sustainable population growth that supports long-term economic health.
What this means for applicants and communities
- Immediate numbers to note: 395,000 (2025), 380,000 (2026), 365,000 (2027).
- Applications may face tighter competition, especially in temporary categories.
- Permanent streams remain large, and IRCC reiterates Canada still needs newcomers.
VisaVerge.com analysis suggests the new alignment formalizes a turn signaled earlier as provincial governments and agencies assessed capacity growth.
Monitoring the rollout
As the plan rolls out, attention will focus on:
– How quickly the temporary share drops from 7.3% to 5% by end-2026.
– The regional distribution of reductions and effects on local economies.
– Implementation details from IRCC on how aggregate targets translate into program-level intake.
Even with reduced temporary targets, Canada will continue to accept hundreds of thousands of permanent residents annually. The change is primarily in the shape of growth — shifting weight from short-term permits to permanent settlement.
Official resources
For the full details and official framework, IRCC published the levels plan on its site. Readers can review the government’s page here: IRCC Immigration Levels Plan 2025–2027.
Final framing
The government’s message is consistent: this is a recalibration, not a shutdown. By anchoring permanent admissions at high levels and bringing temporary residents down to 5% of the total population by the end of 2026, Ottawa aims to reduce pressure on housing, infrastructure, and public services while continuing to welcome large numbers of newcomers who will settle and contribute.
IRCC’s clarification that it is “not a freeze on immigration” is intended to steady applicants and employers. The inclusion of explicit temporary targets is a first for Canada and sets clear expectations for colleges, employers, and provinces as the country moves to a steadier course after the post-pandemic surge.
Frequently Asked Questions
This Article in a Nutshell
The 2025 federal budget unveils Canada’s 2025–2027 Immigration Levels Plan: permanent resident targets of 395,000 (2025), 380,000 (2026) and 365,000 (2027), and a new policy to reduce temporary residents from 7.3% to 5% of the population by end-2026, implying nearly 900,000 fewer temporary residents. Officials describe the change as a controlled recalibration to ease housing and service strain while preserving substantial permanent admissions and predictability for provinces, employers and applicants.