The Enrollment Crisis Gripping Canadian Colleges
Canadian colleges and polytechnics, known for their practical, career-oriented programs that bridge the gap between classroom learning and the workforce, are facing unprecedented challenges. Institutions like Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU), Camosun College, and Algonquin College have announced layoffs, budget cuts, and program suspensions in response to a dramatic decline in international student enrollment. This downturn stems primarily from federal study permit caps introduced in 2024 and tightened further in subsequent years, aimed at curbing unsustainable growth in temporary residents amid a national housing crisis.
International students have long been a financial lifeline for these public institutions. Unlike domestic students, who benefit from provincial subsidies, international learners pay full tuition fees—often three to four times higher—helping cross-subsidize programs and services. When enrollment plummeted by 50-60% at many colleges, the ripple effects were immediate: revenue shortfalls in the millions, forced workforce reductions, and tough decisions on program viability. As of early 2026, the situation continues to evolve, with more adjustments on the horizon.
This crisis highlights deeper structural issues in Canadian post-secondary education, where provincial funding has declined over decades—from around 68% of budgets in British Columbia in 2000 to about 40% today—leaving schools vulnerable to fluctuations in international revenue. For students, faculty, and communities, the implications are profound, affecting everything from course availability to local economies.
Understanding Canada's Study Permit Caps
The federal government's Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) implemented study permit caps to manage population growth pressures, including housing shortages and strained public services. Starting in 2024, new study permits were reduced by 35%, with further cuts: 437,000 targeted for 2025 and 408,000 for 2026—a 16% drop from 2024 levels. Master's and PhD students at public designated learning institutions (DLIs) are exempt from 2026 onward, but undergraduate and college programs bear the brunt.
Provinces receive allocations based on population; for example, Ontario gets 70,074 PAL/TAL-required permits, while British Columbia has 24,786. Colleges, which attract many international students seeking post-graduation work permits (PGWPs) in fields like business and hospitality, have seen sharper declines than universities—sometimes exceeding COVID-19-era drops. Statistics Canada reported a 61% plunge in new international students from 2024 to 2025.
These policies, while addressing macro issues, have created micro-level turmoil. Institutions must now secure Provincial Attestation Letters (PALs) or Territorial Attestation Letters (TALs) for most applications, adding bureaucracy and uncertainty. For a detailed breakdown, see the official IRCC 2026 allocations.
📊 Kwantlen Polytechnic University: Ongoing Layoffs and Budget Pressures
Kwantlen Polytechnic University, with campuses in Surrey, Richmond, Langley, and Cloverdale serving Greater Vancouver, exemplifies the crisis. Fall 2025 international enrollment was forecasted at just 2,360 students—down 60% from 2023 levels—resulting in a $49 million tuition revenue loss and a $12.1 million overall shortfall.
Layoffs began in early 2025 with approximately 70 faculty members receiving notices, followed by 45 full-time staff cuts in late August 2025. More are coming: the university targets a $5 million reduction for 2025-26, equivalent to 40-45 full-time equivalent (FTE) positions, with notices issued as recently as March 2026. The Kwantlen Faculty Association (KFA) estimates 10-20% of its 1,000+ faculty could be affected, calling it a "generational change" that erodes institutional knowledge and industry ties.
Acting President Diane Purvey described the measures as "necessary," while KFA President Mark Diotte warned of losses to community connections. Programs like those in the Melville School of Business, popular with internationals, face reductions. Additionally, provincial cuts to Adult Basic Education (ABE) and English Language Learning (ELL) funding by 43% for 2026-27 will eliminate courses in biology, chemistry, physics, and math starting September 2026.
- Revenue impact: $49M international tuition drop
- Total positions cut: ~115 so far, more planned
- Enrollment decline: 60% international, 3% domestic
Faculty facing layoffs should consider opportunities in higher education jobs across Canada and beyond.
Camosun College: Bracing for Deeper Cuts in a 'New Financial Reality'
Located in Victoria, British Columbia, Camosun College has seen its international student numbers plummet from 2,200 to 930—a nearly 60% drop—triggering multi-million-dollar deficits. In Fall 2024 alone, 400 fewer internationals than budgeted led to a $5 million shortfall for 2025-26, prompting initial layoffs across employee groups.
For 2026-27, the college must slash its budget by $7.2-9 million to avoid deficits, as required by the College and Institute Act. President Lane Trotter notified unions of potential workforce adjustments, prioritizing early retirements and attrition over outright layoffs, though the latter remains a last resort. Earlier measures affected about 90 positions (not all layoffs), with fewer than 50 terminations reported by mid-2025.
No program suspensions are planned yet, but offerings will align with demand. Trotter emphasized protecting the core mission amid uncertainty: "We need to adjust to a new financial reality, while supporting students and positioning the college for long-term sustainability." For context on early impacts, review Camosun's revenue decline announcement.
Algonquin College: Suspending 30 Programs Amid Funding Shifts
Ottawa's Algonquin College, with campuses in the capital and Pembroke, approved suspending 30 programs in March 2026 (7 immediate cancellations, 23 phased out), following 41 cuts the prior year. International enrollment fell 53% year-over-year (608-student shortfall, $4.7M loss), compounded by domestic declines (10%, 636 students) and provincial changes like Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP) reductions and ended tuition freezes.
The cuts target non-priority areas per ministry directives (health care, trades, STEM prioritized). Affected programs include:
| School | Examples of Suspended Programs |
|---|---|
| Algonquin Centre for Construction Excellence | Sustainable Architectural Design, Horticultural Industries |
| School of Business and Hospitality | Bachelor of Culinary Arts & Food Science, Law Clerk, Paralegal, Event Management |
| Faculty of Arts and Media Design | Journalism, Music Industry Arts, Applied Museum Studies |
| Others | Recreation and Leisure Services, Manufacturing Engineering Technician |
President Claude Brulé explained the moves address a structural imbalance, with new $6.4B provincial funding conditional on efficiencies. Current students can complete programs via teach-out plans. Full list at Algonquin's operational FAQs. Prospective students may want to rate my professor for remaining programs.
📈 Broader Impacts on Canadian Post-Secondary Institutions
The turmoil extends beyond these three: Ontario colleges suspended hundreds of programs, rural B.C. schools like Selkirk closed campuses, and polytechnics province-wide face deficits. International revenue, once filling funding gaps, vanished overnight, hitting hands-on programs hardest as PGWP restrictions curbed appeal in business and tourism.
- Economic: Rural areas lose graduates filling tourism/health jobs; housing markets cool but communities suffer.
- Students: Fewer options, disrupted studies; internationals navigate PAL requirements.
- Faculty/Staff: Job insecurity; unions push back on processes.
For more on enrollment drops, see this Macleans analysis.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Pathways Forward
Government views caps as essential for sustainability, but critics like faculty associations argue they punish ethical institutions without consultation. Colleges advocate diversifying revenue, boosting domestic recruitment, and policy stability.
Solutions include:
- Prioritizing high-demand programs (trades, health).
- Enhancing online/hybrid delivery.
- Lobbying for stable funding; B.C. added trades support April 2026.
- Career pivots: Explore Canadian university jobs or higher ed career advice.
Navigating Uncertainty: Advice for Students, Faculty, and Job Seekers
For prospective international students, research PGWP-eligible programs and PAL processes early. Domestic learners: Confirm program status before applying. Faculty in flux: Update resumes with our free resume template and browse faculty jobs.
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