(METRO VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA) Metro Vancouver has lowered its population growth forecast for 2025–2027 after recent federal immigration policy changes, pointing to a direct link between fewer temporary residents and a slower pace of new arrivals.
Regional planners now expect an average of 42,500 net new residents per year over that period, and the long-range outlook has been trimmed to a projected 4.1 million residents by 2050, which is 50,000 fewer than last year’s projection. The revision reflects cuts to the intake of non-permanent residents and tighter rules in the Temporary Foreign Worker program—policies adopted in late 2024 and early 2025—that are already reshaping housing demand, local labor pools, and city planning across Metro Vancouver.

Officials’ perspective and immediate implications
Regional leaders stressed the region will keep growing, but at a slower speed, and that planning must adapt.
- “Metro Vancouver remains a region that is growing steadily, and our regularly updated projections ensure we continue to plan responsibly for housing, infrastructure, and services that support our growing and diverse communities,” said Mike Hurley, Chair of Metro Vancouver’s Board of Directors.
- Jonathan Cote, Deputy General Manager of Regional Planning and Housing Development, added: “The region is still growing but it is at a much slower rate and it does have planning implications and policy implications in the region.”
Those implications are already felt by developers, transit planners, and employers reliant on temporary labour, who now confront stricter hiring limits and a shorter maximum job duration for many roles.
What changed in federal policy
The immediate driver is federal immigration policy. Ottawa has reduced the intake of non-permanent residents—especially international students and temporary foreign workers—and introduced new controls on the low-wage stream of the Temporary Foreign Worker (TFW) program.
Key rule changes include:
- Refusal of low-wage TFW applications in regions with unemployment of 6% or higher
- Employer cap of 10% of workforce from the low-wage stream
- Maximum employment duration cut from two years to one
Together, these measures reduce short-term inflows and slow the pace of population growth that surged in earlier years. While long-term growth will still be driven mainly by immigration—accounting for 90% of population growth from 2024 to 2051—the next few years will bring a cooler trend line affecting housing, utilities, and transit planning.
Recent growth, the policy pivot, and planning effects
Before 2025, Metro Vancouver experienced strong growth powered by high immigration and many non-permanent residents. The federal policy pivot in late 2024 and early 2025 aimed in part at easing housing affordability concerns and recalibrating labour flows.
- The change explains the drop from last year’s long-term estimate and the slower annual increase expected through 2027.
- The debate intensifies around how immigration policy and population growth interact with housing supply, construction timelines, and transit service.
Housing market impacts (sales, prices, inventory)
Developers and homebuyers are seeing clear effects:
- Residential sales in Metro Vancouver: down 9.8% year-over-year in June 2025
- Average sale price for detached homes: fell 6.3% year-over-year (Jan–Jul 2025)
- Benchmark composite price: $1,634,550 in June 2025, a 2.8% decline vs. June 2024
- Active listings: 17,561 in June 2025, up 19% year-over-year and 43.7% above the 10-year average
These numbers point toward a shift in some segments to a buyer’s market, with more choices and longer sales cycles.
Rental market and developer response
The rental side is changing:
- Builders are pivoting to rental apartment construction as condo pre-sales soften and financing tightens.
- Many projects now prioritise long-term rental stability over launching new condo towers.
- The rising volume of rental housing is expected to ease pressure in a historically tight rental market, though easing will vary across neighbourhoods and price points.
Developers are responding with more cautious timelines and product mixes:
- Projects that might have launched as condos are reworked as rentals.
- Some launches are delayed until pre-sales or financing conditions improve.
- Lenders often prefer the steadier cash flows of purpose-built rentals, shaping design and material choices.
How planners adapt: data, models, and coordination
Local planning groups are aligning quickly with the revised forecast. Metro Vancouver and member municipalities, plus agencies such as TransLink, are adjusting near-term and long-range plans for housing, utilities, transit, and infrastructure.
The planning process is:
- Collect data on births, deaths, immigration, and interprovincial migration.
- Model high, medium, and low growth scenarios—immigration is the primary variable.
- Review federal policy changes and consult municipalities, transit agencies, and housing bodies.
- Publish and apply updated projections to capital plans, land-use strategies, and service schedules.
- Repeat regularly to maintain flexibility as conditions shift.
Important: Slower population growth touches everything from water and sewer capacity planning to transit service hours and the mix of housing types encouraged in local plans.
Sectors most affected by TFW rules
Tighter rules land at a sensitive time for many sectors:
- Rules in effect:
- Refused applications where unemployment ≥ 6%
- 10% cap on low-wage TFWs per employer
- One-year maximum employment duration for many roles
- Sectors impacted: restaurants, long-term care homes, farms, and some small manufacturers.
- Short-term effects: hiring pools shrink, some employers pause expansions or adjust operating hours.
- Long-term watchpoints: turnover, training costs, and service levels.
Human impacts and community services
The human side is complex:
- International students (who rent near campuses and work part-time) face tighter numbers, lowering demand for student housing and nearby rentals.
- Families hoping to reunite through temporary visas may face longer waits.
- Workers used to one- to two-year stints now often face a one-year maximum, disrupting continuity with employers.
At street level, fewer newcomers reduce immediate pressure on English-language classes, primary care clinics, and credential assessment programs—but the long-term reliance on immigration means services must be ready to scale up again.
Market outlook and expert views
Analysts note policy swings rarely move in straight lines:
- Current signals: softer sales, higher listings, lower prices = cooling period.
- Some expect a rebound by 2026 as economic conditions improve and admission mixes possibly rise again.
- For now, the official forecast takes a cautious near-term view aligned with federal targets and hiring limits.
Short-, medium-, and long-term outlook
- Short term (2025–2027): subdued growth consistent with current policy.
- Medium term (2026–2027): some analysts expect housing demand to pick up with economic improvement.
- Long term (2028–2051): immigration expected to account for 90% of Metro Vancouver’s growth.
Planners will continue monitoring federal moves and local conditions, updating projections to keep capital plans and services on track.
Effects on employers, workers, and labour strategies
Employers must revise staffing plans under the new TFW rules:
- Some businesses may invest more in local training and retention.
- Others may face gaps if they can’t recruit quickly enough.
- For workers, shorter stays may mean higher turnover and harder paths to longer-term careers in certain roles.
- Community groups will track impacts on settlement services, language classes, and employment supports.
Finance, approvals, and infrastructure timing
Project financing and approvals adapt to the cooling demand:
- Lenders prefer purpose-built rentals due to steadier cash flows.
- Utility and transit teams may phase capital projects differently while retaining key upgrades to avoid future bottlenecks.
- Municipal councils use updated projections to set zoning targets, land releases, and utility planning.
What this means for households
- Homebuyers: more listings and somewhat better prices in some segments—more time to consider options.
- Renters: increased purpose-built rental supply could ease bidding wars, location and price mix will vary.
- Newcomers: smaller intake numbers mean reduced short-term pressure on services and markets, but long-term growth still leans heavily on immigration.
Coordination and the role of data
Regional authorities highlight the need for strong coordination:
- Metro Vancouver’s standing process reviews demographic inputs and policy settings and tests multiple growth scenarios.
- Transit agencies, housing agencies, non-profits, and municipalities translate those numbers into routes, projects, and funding timelines.
- Frequent checkpoints help adjust plans as Ottawa updates targets or refines rules.
VisaVerge.com analysis suggests local forecast adjustments are most effective when paired with frequent checkpoints so housing and transit plans can change with federal targets.
Historical context and recent evidence
- The earlier surge in Metro Vancouver relied heavily on newcomers, especially non-permanent residents who arrived faster than permanent streams.
- Federal cuts to short-term entries and TFW controls in 2024–2025 produced swift effects.
- In early 2025, British Columbia recorded its first population decline in 74 years, offsetting some prior record gains.
- The recalibrated forecast acknowledges both this pullback and immigration’s enduring role in long-term growth.
Practical takeaways and actions
For different groups, practical steps include:
- Students: watch admission rules and housing options early.
- Employers: review hiring strategies against the 10% cap and one-year maximum.
- Households: buyers may find more negotiating room; renters should track new rental projects.
- Community groups: prepare for steadier, slightly lower caseloads while keeping capacity for long-term growth.
Metro Vancouver’s choice to update its numbers promptly shows how regional planning can respond to national policies without losing sight of local needs. The slower path over the next few years creates space to align infrastructure and services, but requires careful timing so the region doesn’t fall behind when growth accelerates again.
For official federal policy details and updates, consult Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada: Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada 🇨🇦.
Key takeaway: Slower now, strong later—immigration policy choices in Ottawa continue to ripple quickly through housing, labour, and services across Metro Vancouver.
This Article in a Nutshell
Metro Vancouver lowered its 2025–2027 population growth forecast to an average of 42,500 net new residents per year and trimmed its long-range outlook to 4.1 million residents by 2050, 50,000 fewer than last year. The revision responds to federal policy changes that reduced non-permanent resident intake and tightened the Temporary Foreign Worker program—measures include refusals for low-wage TFWs in regions with unemployment of 6% or higher, a 10% employer cap, and a one-year maximum employment period. Immediate impacts include weaker residential sales, lower detached-home prices, and higher active listings, prompting developers to shift toward rental construction and lenders to favour purpose-built rentals. Regional planners, municipalities and agencies like TransLink are updating housing, utilities and transit plans to reflect slower near-term growth while keeping long-term flexibility, since immigration is expected to drive roughly 90% of growth from 2024 to 2051.