The Roots of the Crisis: Over-Reliance on International Tuition Revenue
Canadian colleges have long served as vital engines for workforce development, offering practical, career-focused programs in fields like health care, skilled trades, and technology. However, the sector's financial stability became precarious due to stagnant provincial funding and skyrocketing operational costs. Over the past decade, many institutions turned heavily to international students, who pay significantly higher tuition fees—often three to five times more than domestic students—to bridge budget shortfalls. In Ontario, for instance, international tuition accounted for up to 68 percent of total college revenue at some schools, allowing them to subsidize lower domestic fees and expand offerings.
This model worked until federal policy intervened. Starting in late 2023, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) imposed caps on study permits to address housing shortages and public concerns over rapid population growth driven by temporary residents. The initial 35 percent reduction in new permits for 2024 was followed by further cuts, including a 65 percent slash in targets for 2026. These measures triggered an avalanche of enrolment declines, with some colleges reporting drops of 40 to 80 percent in international applications and arrivals.
Federal Caps Explained: From Policy Shift to Enrolment Freefall
The federal government's cap system allocates study permits provincially based on population, prioritizing graduate programs and exemptions for certain institutions. For 2025, new permits were limited to 305,900 nationwide, plummeting to 155,000 in 2026—a 49 percent drop from prior targets. Colleges, which historically attracted more undergraduate and diploma-seeking internationals, bore the brunt. Statistics Canada data from 2023/2024 shows international students comprising 50.4 percent of college enrolments (288,801 students), up fivefold since 2014/2015, but post-cap figures reveal a reversal.
By early 2026, arrivals hit record lows, with only 2,485 new study permit holders in November 2025—a 97 percent plunge from peaks. Provinces like Ontario and British Columbia saw the sharpest impacts, as their colleges had aggressively recruited from India, Nigeria, and China. Domestic enrolment growth, at just 2.7 percent in colleges for 2023/2024, cannot offset these losses, especially amid a broader 'enrolment cliff' projected from demographic shifts.
Revenue Losses Mount: Deficits Projected to Hit $1.5 Billion
The fallout is stark. Colleges Ontario estimates a collective deficit of up to $1.5 billion by 2027-28, exacerbated by Ontario's lowest-in-Canada per-student operating grants—$7,700 below the national average. Domestic tuition, frozen or capped (e.g., two percent annual increases in B.C.), lags inflation and costs like collective bargaining and facilities maintenance. Institutions have already slashed $1.4 billion in annualized expenses, but more pain looms.
Selkirk College in British Columbia exemplifies the strain: international numbers fell from 800 to 450 in 2025 and 200 in 2026, erasing over $9 million from its $73 million budget. Rural colleges face amplified risks, as small domestic pools cannot sustain programs. For deeper insights into these projections, refer to Colleges Ontario's 2026 pre-budget submission.
Ontario Colleges on the Front Lines: 600 Programs Gone, 8,000 Jobs Lost
Ontario's 24 public colleges, training over half of the province's workers in shortage-hit sectors, have suspended more than 600 programs and eliminated 8,000 positions in the past year alone. Algonquin College in Ottawa unanimously voted to cut 30 programs in March 2026, including journalism, paralegal studies, financial services, and hotel management—67 suspensions in two years total. Cambrian College axed six programs, while others like Sault College and Fanshawe face similar reckonings.
These cuts target low-enrolment offerings reliant on internationals, shifting focus to high-demand areas like cybersecurity and advanced manufacturing. Yet, the ripple effects hit domestic students hardest: fewer course options, larger classes, and reduced support services. Colleges Ontario warns this threatens Ontario's need for nearly one million additional graduates by 2035 in trades, health, energy, and mining.
Photo by 𝕡𝕒𝕨𝕤 𝕒𝕟𝕕 𝕡𝕣𝕚𝕟𝕥𝕤 on Unsplash
Beyond Ontario: Western and Atlantic Provinces Grapple with Pain
British Columbia's polytechnics and colleges are reeling. Kwantlen Polytechnic University laid off 70 faculty in 2025, while Selkirk closed its Nelson arts campus and two community education centres, cutting ceramics, textile arts, and more. Lethbridge Polytechnic saw an 80 percent drop in international applications. In Alberta, Mount Royal University and SAIT reported multi-million hits, prompting hiring freezes.
Atlantic Canada experienced a 28 percent international decline by late 2025, straining Nova Scotia and New Brunswick institutions already facing demographic enrolment cliffs. Rural and northern colleges, like those in Ontario's far north, risk closure without targeted aid, as they serve remote communities with limited alternatives. Check Statistics Canada's latest data for enrolment breakdowns at Postsecondary enrolments, 2023/2024.
Layoffs and Human Toll: Faculty, Staff, and Communities Affected
Job losses are mounting nationwide. Over 10,000 positions vanished at Ontario colleges by end-2025, with more in 2026. Selkirk's president Maggie Matear described the emotional weight: "Nothing prepares you for sitting down with colleagues you respect... to tell them they’re losing their jobs." Unions like the Canadian Federation of Students and faculty associations decry the 'devastating' cuts, predicting larger classes and eroded quality.
- Ongoing hiring freezes and attrition to avoid formal layoffs.
- Faculty reductions impacting program delivery in trades and health.
- Administrative streamlining, but support services like career coaching suffer.
- Ripple to local economies: tourism, housing, and retail in college towns.
Voices from the Trenches: Stakeholders Weigh In
College leaders plead for stability. Maureen Adamson of Colleges Ontario stated: "Without sustainable funding, training capacity will shrink just as demand grows." Students lament lost opportunities; one Algonquin journalism hopeful said, "These programs were my path to a stable career." Governments respond mixed: Ontario pledged $6.4 billion long-term in February 2026, but critics call it insufficient amid a $13.8 billion provincial deficit. Federal reviews continue, but colleges urge provincial tuition reforms and targeted grants.
Experts highlight systemic flaws: a 2021 Ontario auditor general report flagged international reliance as 'risky,' yet low domestic funding persists.
Implications for Students, Graduates, and the Economy
Domestic students face consolidated programs, travel for courses, and delayed graduations. Rural access erodes, widening urban-rural divides. Economically, colleges supply half of shortage workers; cuts hobble growth in mining, health (needing 100,000+ by 2031), and green tech. International talent pipelines dry up, affecting innovation.
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| Sector | Projected Shortage by 2035 | College Role |
|---|---|---|
| Skilled Trades | 300,000+ | 70% of training |
| Health Care | 200,000+ | 50%+ graduates |
| Advanced Manufacturing | 100,000+ | Key diplomas |
Pathways Forward: Adaptation, Advocacy, and Innovation
Colleges pivot to domestic recruitment, micro-credentials, and industry partnerships. Examples include revamped continuing education at Selkirk for project management and safety training. Advocacy pushes for:
- Per-student funding alignment with national averages.
- Tuition formula updates post-decade freeze.
- Innovation funds for cybersecurity, AI skills.
- Support for northern/rural/French-language schools.
Optimism lies in workforce focus: by prioritizing high-demand fields, colleges can rebound, but sustained government investment is crucial. As Matear notes, policy must bolster rural resilience to retain youth and talent.
The crisis tests Canadian colleges' adaptability, but with balanced funding, they remain cornerstones of prosperity. For related career advice, explore resources on CBC's coverage of Ontario's pre-budget pleas.






