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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Roots of the International Student Cap Policy
In early 2024, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) introduced a cap on study permits for international students, aiming to reduce the rapid growth in temporary residents amid concerns over housing shortages, healthcare pressures, and unsustainable immigration levels.
Subsequent adjustments intensified the measures. For 2025, the cap was set at approximately 437,000 study permits, but actual new arrivals plummeted by 60 percent from January to September compared to 2024.
The policy's step-by-step implementation included Provincial Attestation Letters (PALs) required for applications, further tightened open work permit rules for family members, and post-graduation work permit (PGWP) restrictions excluding certain college diplomas in fields like business and hospitality. This multi-layered approach has created ongoing uncertainty, deterring applicants and agents who once viewed Canada as a reliable pathway to permanent residency.
Enrollment Plunge: Statistics Painting a Bleak Picture
Canadian colleges, particularly public ones offering diploma and certificate programs, have borne the brunt of these changes. International enrolments, which comprised up to 50 percent of students at some institutions, have collapsed. Nationwide, new student arrivals dropped nearly 60 percent in 2025, leaving approximately 802,425 international students by August, a net loss of over 200,000 from the prior year.
Provincially, Ontario—home to many large colleges—saw a 48 percent decrease in first-semester international enrolments at 23 of 24 public colleges.
- Overall sector risk: Total international populations could decline by 50 percent in 2026.
16 - Bachelor's level: 36 percent drop reported across Canadian institutions.
- Undergrad-heavy colleges: Worst hit, with some forecasting 92 percent reductions in new arrivals in key cities like Toronto.
This isn't a temporary dip; experts predict sustained low inflows due to 30-34 percent approval rates on applications, down from 50-60 percent pre-cap.
Financial Strain: Billions in Lost Revenue
Public colleges have long depended on international tuition—often three to five times domestic rates—to subsidize operations, as provincial funding declined by about 30 percent from 2006 to 2024 while domestic tuition freezes persisted.
Specific hits include Selkirk College's projected $9 million shortfall on a $73 million budget, Holland College's $4 million loss over two years, and Ontario colleges' cumulative $1.8 billion in cuts.
As one expert notes, 'Institutions are going to be forced into greater and longer-term cuts.'
First Casualty: MITT College Shuts Down
The Manitoba Institute of Trades and Technology (MITT), a public post-secondary institution in Winnipeg, became the first to announce closure due to the cap's fallout. A 55 percent international enrolment decline made its model unsustainable, prompting the provincial government to shutter it.
MITT President Neil Cooke stated, 'These changes have created uncertainty... and sent a message abroad that international students aren’t valued here.' Existing students can complete studies or transfer to Red River College Polytech. Higher education consultant Ken Steele warned, 'MITT is the first... but I suspect it won’t be the last,' predicting mergers for small, remote campuses.
This case exemplifies vulnerabilities: trades-focused colleges in smaller provinces like Manitoba (allocated just 6,534 new permits in 2026) struggle amid demographics and policy shocks.Similar challenges in other regions.
Ontario: Ground Zero for Layoffs and Suspensions
Ontario, allocated 70,074 new study permits (104,780 applications) in 2026, hosts the crisis's epicenter with massive colleges like Conestoga slashing over 2,500 positions in two years.
- Colleges Ontario CEO Maureen Adamson: '$1.8 billion cut, 600 programs suspended, 8,000 positions gone.'
- Further strain from 2026's halved cap (155,000 national new arrivals).
- Cities like Kitchener-Waterloo feel ripple effects, with Conestoga's downturn impacting local economies.
Explore academic opportunities in Canada amid these shifts or check higher ed jobs for affected professionals.
Stakeholder Perspectives: Frustration and Calls for Reform
College leaders express dismay. Selkirk's Maggie Matear highlighted policy whiplash: 'The uncertainty has taken a real toll... frustrating and disheartening.'
Government defends the cap: Finance Minister Champagne emphasized capacity limits for housing and services. Provinces criticize unilateral federal moves, with Ontario reviewing models but facing backlash for tuition freezes.
Students and agents report diverted applications to Australia and the UK, while domestic stakeholders worry about program access. Balanced views call for collaboration: more domestic tuition flexibility, targeted funding, and intl focus on high-skill areas.
PIE News on MITT closure2026 Allocations: Provincial Breakdown
IRCC's allocations underscore disparities, with larger provinces getting more but still facing shortfalls.Official IRCC page
| Province | New Permits Allocation | Application Spaces |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | 70,074 | 104,780 |
| Quebec | 39,474 | 93,069 |
| British Columbia | 24,786 | 32,596 |
| Alberta | 21,582 | 32,271 |
| Others (total) | 24,084 | 46,954 |
Provinces distribute to DLIs, prioritizing perhaps universities over colleges.
Adaptations, Challenges, and Paths Forward
Colleges pivot to domestic recruitment, high-demand fields (healthcare, trades, tech), and partnerships. Selkirk refocuses on workforce training; others seek mergers.
- Increase domestic tuition modestly.
- Leverage graduate exemptions.
- Advocate for stable policy, provincial bailouts.
Challenges persist: rural areas risk 8 percent workforce shrinkage by 2031 without immigration.
Professionals can find stability via higher ed career advice or university jobs.
Photo by Alexander Anderson on Unsplash
Broader Implications for Economy and Education
Beyond campuses, fallout hits local economies—Selkirk generates $450M annually, supporting tourism ($1.1B). Job losses exacerbate labor shortages in aging regions.
For domestic students: Fewer subsidies mean higher costs or cuts to arts/community programs. Positively, lower intl demand eases housing in some areas.
Solution-oriented: Policymakers must balance sustainability with education's economic role (intl students contribute billions pre-cap). Institutions adapt via diversification; job seekers explore faculty positions or admin roles.
In summary, the cap addresses real pressures but risks long-term damage to Canada's higher ed competitiveness. Monitor for policy tweaks.
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