Spanish
Official VisaVerge Logo Official VisaVerge Logo
  • Home
  • Airlines
  • H1B
  • Immigration
    • Knowledge
    • Questions
    • Documentation
  • News
  • Visa
    • Canada
    • F1Visa
    • Passport
    • Green Card
    • H1B
    • OPT
    • PERM
    • Travel
    • Travel Requirements
    • Visa Requirements
  • USCIS
  • Questions
    • Australia Immigration
    • Green Card
    • H1B
    • Immigration
    • Passport
    • PERM
    • UK Immigration
    • USCIS
    • Legal
    • India
    • NRI
  • Guides
    • Taxes
    • Legal
  • Tools
    • H-1B Maxout Calculator Online
    • REAL ID Requirements Checker tool
    • ROTH IRA Calculator Online
    • TSA Acceptable ID Checker Online Tool
    • H-1B Registration Checklist
    • Schengen Short-Stay Visa Calculator
    • H-1B Cost Calculator Online
    • USA Merit Based Points Calculator – Proposed
    • Canada Express Entry Points Calculator
    • New Zealand’s Skilled Migrant Points Calculator
    • Resources Hub
    • Visa Photo Requirements Checker Online
    • I-94 Expiration Calculator Online
    • CSPA Age-Out Calculator Online
    • OPT Timeline Calculator Online
    • B1/B2 Tourist Visa Stay Calculator online
  • Schengen
VisaVergeVisaVerge
Search
Follow US
  • Home
  • Airlines
  • H1B
  • Immigration
  • News
  • Visa
  • USCIS
  • Questions
  • Guides
  • Tools
  • Schengen
© 2025 VisaVerge Network. All Rights Reserved.
Canada

Canada’s Top Immigrants Are Leaving Faster Than Ever, Data Reveals

New 2025 research finds a rising share of highly skilled immigrants leave Canada within five years, including PhD holders and healthcare professionals. Causes include poor credential recognition, low earnings, high housing costs and policy uncertainty. Experts recommend faster credential processes, more research funding, tax incentives and licensing changes to retain top talent and support economic growth.

Last updated: November 18, 2025 3:00 pm
SHARE
VisaVerge.com
📋
Key takeaways
About one in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years, with departures peaking around five years.
PhD holders see 11% leave within five years; healthcare workers and scientists have 36% five-year exit rate.
Q1 2025 saw 27,086 citizens and permanent residents depart; non-permanent resident departures rose 54% to ~209,400.

(CANADA) Canada is losing many of the highly skilled immigrants it once counted on to drive growth, with fresh 2025 figures showing that more newcomers are now packing up and leaving the country after only a few years. The trend, known in policy circles as onward migration, is hitting doctors, scientists, senior executives, and other top professionals hardest, raising concerns about the country’s long-term economic strength and its reputation as a top destination for global talent.

Key findings from The Leaky Bucket 2025

Canada’s Top Immigrants Are Leaving Faster Than Ever, Data Reveals
Canada’s Top Immigrants Are Leaving Faster Than Ever, Data Reveals

New research from the Institute for Canadian Citizenship, published in its “The Leaky Bucket 2025” report, highlights several worrying patterns:

  • About one in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years of becoming a permanent resident, with departures peaking around the five-year mark.
  • The early window (around five years after arrival) is especially worrying because this is when many immigrants should be settling into careers, buying homes, and putting down roots.
  • Instead, a rising share are moving on to other countries or returning to their country of origin.

Who is leaving — and how fast?

The report shows that departures are concentrated among highly educated and high-skill groups:

Group Share leaving within 5 years
PhD holders 11%
Healthcare workers and scientists 36%
Senior executives and technology workers Higher than the overall immigrant average

These are precisely the people Canada’s points-based economic immigration system — usually managed through Express Entry — aims to attract. Yet they are now among the most likely to decide Canada does not offer the careers or living standards they expected.

Government strategy vs. reality

The federal government’s economic strategy has relied on bringing in educated workers to offset an aging population and labour shortages. Economic immigrants, selected mainly for skills and work experience, now form a large share of annual permanent resident admissions.

However, The Leaky Bucket 2025 finds that:

  • Economic immigrants are more likely to leave than refugees or family-sponsored immigrants.
  • Daniel Bernhard, CEO of the Institute for Canadian Citizenship, warned:
    > “The real problem is not how many immigrants arrive, but how many stay. Canada is failing to keep the very people the system claims to prioritize.”

Recent emigration numbers

Recent quarterly figures underline the shift:

  • In Q1 2025, 27,086 Canadian citizens and permanent residents left the country, a ~3% rise from Q1 2024.
  • Non-permanent residents (many of them international students and temporary foreign workers) saw an even sharper outflow: about 209,400 departed in that quarter, a 54% increase over Q1 2024.

Many of these non-permanent residents hold graduate degrees or advanced skills and had hoped to transition to permanent status; instead, they chose to leave.

Population growth and wealth migration

  • Canada’s overall population growth has slowed to its lowest quarterly rate since 2020, despite still-high numbers of new arrivals.
  • Loss of top earners and highly trained specialists is particularly concerning because they tend to:
    • create companies,
    • pay higher taxes,
    • support research and development.
  • One indicator of this shift: Canada is expected to see a 69% drop in net millionaire inflow in 2025, suggesting high-net-worth newcomers are looking elsewhere.

Why immigrants are departing

Immigrants who leave cite a mix of financial, career, and quality-of-life reasons:

  • Stagnant or falling earnings after arrival, even for those with advanced degrees.
  • Difficulty getting foreign credentials recognized, leading to years in lower-paid roles or outside their field.
  • A perceived “glass ceiling” that restricts promotions and senior roles.
  • High housing costs in major cities, rising taxes, and long waits for services.

Healthcare workers exemplify this mismatch: hospitals and clinics warn of shortages, yet many internationally trained professionals face licensing barriers and limited residency spots.

  • The Canadian Medical Association has raised alarms that Canada is not using the skills of immigrant physicians and is losing trained people to countries with faster, clearer paths to full practice.
  • The association also noted that recent changes in United States 🇺🇸 policy could create an opportunity for Canada to attract more American doctors and scientists — but only if those professionals see a better long-term career track in Canada.

Policy changes and uncertainty

Policy shifts over the last two years have contributed to uncertainty:

  • The federal government imposed caps on some international student programs and limits on temporary foreign workers, saying the temporary population had grown too quickly and strained housing and services.
  • While many Canadians support tighter controls, some employers and international graduates say the new limits make future planning harder.
  • For some would-be permanent residents, the pathway now looks like a gamble, and onward migration becomes the backup plan.

Government response and expert recommendations

Ottawa has begun adjusting course:

  • Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada retooled its 2025 Express Entry category-based draws to give more weight to skills in healthcare, STEM, and other priority sectors.
  • Official guidance is available via Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, the main reference point for employers and applicants tracking changing selection rules.

Experts, however, say front-door targeting won’t fix the leak. Key recommendations from The Leaky Bucket 2025 include:

  • Boost research funding
  • Speed up foreign credential recognition
  • Consider tax incentives to retain highly skilled workers and attract new ones

Business groups support faster licensing and more support for immigrant entrepreneurs, arguing that long waits and red tape push talent to other countries promising quicker results.

Personal stories and political implications

For many immigrants, the decision to leave is personal. Examples include:

  • A scientist with a PhD who arrived in 2019 and later took a research role in Europe, citing better funding and clearer promotion tracks abroad.
  • Communities and online forums where people share success stories and exit plans have multiplied.

Politically, onward migration has not yet generated the same intensity of debate as immigration targets, but it is entering discussions in Ottawa and provincial capitals. Opinions differ:

  • Some lawmakers say Canada must improve wages, productivity, and housing supply to keep newcomers long-term.
  • Others argue that immigration cannot solve deep structural problems alone and call for better data to understand who leaves and why.

For now, the clearest evidence comes from The Leaky Bucket 2025 and recent emigration figures.

Bottom line

Attracting top global talent is no longer enough. With PhD holders, doctors, and technology leaders now leaving in greater numbers, Canada’s promise as a land of opportunity is being tested.

  • The choices policymakers make in the coming years — and how employers treat talent already in their offices and labs — will likely determine whether onward migration slows, or whether more of Canada’s most sought-after newcomers decide their future lies elsewhere.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1
What does ‘onward migration’ mean and why does it matter for Canada?
Onward migration means immigrants leave Canada to settle in another country or return home. It matters because losing highly skilled newcomers reduces innovation, tax revenue, and the workforce Canada expected to keep.

Q2
Which immigrant groups are leaving Canada fastest?
The fastest departures are among highly skilled groups: healthcare workers and scientists (36% leave within five years) and PhD holders (11% within five years), plus senior executives and tech workers at rates above the average.

Q3
What are the main reasons skilled immigrants decide to leave?
Common reasons include stagnant earnings, long delays or barriers in foreign credential recognition, limited promotion opportunities, high housing costs, and policy uncertainty around temporary programs.

Q4
What can policymakers and employers do to retain skilled immigrants?
Recommended actions include speeding up credential recognition, increasing research funding, streamlining licensing, offering tax incentives for retention, improving career pathways, and coordinating federal, provincial and employer efforts.

VisaVerge.com
Learn Today
Onward migration → When immigrants leave the country they settled in and move to another country or return to origin.
Express Entry → Canada’s points-based system used to select many economic-class permanent residents based on skills and experience.
Credential recognition → The process of assessing and accepting foreign qualifications for equivalent work or licensing in Canada.
The Leaky Bucket 2025 → A report by the Institute for Canadian Citizenship analyzing immigrant departures and retention trends through 2025.

This Article in a Nutshell

The Leaky Bucket 2025 shows Canada is losing high-skill immigrants early, with one in five leaving within 25 years and peaks near five years. PhD holders, healthcare workers, scientists and senior executives face high exit rates, harming innovation and tax revenue. Drivers include stagnant wages, barriers to foreign credential recognition, housing costs and policy changes limiting temporary programs. Recommendations include faster credential recognition, increased research funding, tax incentives and licensing reforms to retain talent and protect long-term growth.

— VisaVerge.com
Share This Article
Facebook Pinterest Whatsapp Whatsapp Reddit Email Copy Link Print
What do you think?
Happy0
Sad0
Angry0
Embarrass0
Surprise0
Oliver Mercer
ByOliver Mercer
Chief Editor
Follow:
As the Chief Editor at VisaVerge.com, Oliver Mercer is instrumental in steering the website's focus on immigration, visa, and travel news. His role encompasses curating and editing content, guiding a team of writers, and ensuring factual accuracy and relevance in every article. Under Oliver's leadership, VisaVerge.com has become a go-to source for clear, comprehensive, and up-to-date information, helping readers navigate the complexities of global immigration and travel with confidence and ease.
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest

guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Australia 2025-26 Skilled Migration: Nov 13 Subclass 189 Invitation
Australia Immigration

Australia 2025-26 Skilled Migration: Nov 13 Subclass 189 Invitation

DV-2027 Green Card Lottery: A Complete Step-by-Step Application Guide
Documentation

DV-2027 Green Card Lottery: A Complete Step-by-Step Application Guide

India’s E-Arrival Card Explained: OCI Holders, Exemptions, and Ground Realities for Returning Foregn
Airlines

India’s E-Arrival Card Explained: OCI Holders, Exemptions, and Ground Realities for Returning Foregn

Understanding Georgia’s On Arrival Visa: What Travelers Need to Know
Visa

Understanding Georgia’s On Arrival Visa: What Travelers Need to Know

U.S. Visa Invitation Letter Guide with Sample Letters
Visa

U.S. Visa Invitation Letter Guide with Sample Letters

US Birthright Citizenship Now Depends Primarily on Father’s Legal Status
Citizenship

US Birthright Citizenship Now Depends Primarily on Father’s Legal Status

Diversity Visa Start Date Still Unknown Amid DV-2027 Delays
Green Card

Diversity Visa Start Date Still Unknown Amid DV-2027 Delays

Guide to Reaching Air Canada Customer Service with Ease
Airlines

Guide to Reaching Air Canada Customer Service with Ease

You Might Also Like

Gay Rights Activist Tarun Godara Fights Deportation to India | Seeking LGBTQ+ Asylum in Sudbury
Canada

Gay Rights Activist Tarun Godara Fights Deportation to India | Seeking LGBTQ+ Asylum in Sudbury

By Shashank Singh
Canada Lacks Strategy for Millions With Permits Expiring in 2025
Canada

Canada Lacks Strategy for Millions With Permits Expiring in 2025

By Oliver Mercer
Canadian Advocates Rally Against Bill C-2 for Immigration Reform
Canada

Canadian Advocates Rally Against Bill C-2 for Immigration Reform

By Oliver Mercer
Canada’s New Pilot Program Grants Permanent Residence to Caregivers on Arrival
Canada

Canada’s New Pilot Program Grants Permanent Residence to Caregivers on Arrival

By Oliver Mercer
Show More
Official VisaVerge Logo Official VisaVerge Logo
Facebook Twitter Youtube Rss Instagram Android

About US


At VisaVerge, we understand that the journey of immigration and travel is more than just a process; it’s a deeply personal experience that shapes futures and fulfills dreams. Our mission is to demystify the intricacies of immigration laws, visa procedures, and travel information, making them accessible and understandable for everyone.

Trending
  • Canada
  • F1Visa
  • Guides
  • Legal
  • NRI
  • Questions
  • Situations
  • USCIS
Useful Links
  • History
  • Holidays 2025
  • LinkInBio
  • My Feed
  • My Saves
  • My Interests
  • Resources Hub
  • Contact USCIS
web-app-manifest-512x512 web-app-manifest-512x512

2025 © VisaVerge. All Rights Reserved.

  • About US
  • Community Guidelines
  • Contact US
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Ethics Statement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
wpDiscuz
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?