For the 2025–2026 intakes, Canada remains an important destination, but one that is recalibrating its international education model around quality, labour demand, and system capacity. Students, agents, and universities who understand how PGWP reforms interact with the new caps will be better placed to make decisions in a more competitive, policy-driven global market says Sanjay Laul, Founder of MSM Unify
Canada’s new post-graduation work permit (PGWP) rules and multi-year intake caps are reshaping global study abroad demand in 2025 and 2026, as Ottawa links student numbers and work rights more tightly to housing capacity, labour shortages, and system integrity. The changes affect who can enter, which programs lead to work opportunities, and how long graduates can stay, with Indian students, agents, and higher education institutions watching the numbers closely.
Caps Move Canada From Expansion to Management
In early 2024, the federal government announced that it would cap new study permits for the year at about 360,000, which represented a sizable reduction from 2023 levels and a deliberate move to “stabilize growth” in the international student program.
Those volume controls have now been extended through 2026. The IRCC predicts that it will grant 437,000 study permits in the whole of 2025 and around 408,000 permits in 2026 with approximately 155,000 spots allocated for first-time students and 253,000 spots for continuing students. The 2026 target stands at 7% below 2025 levels and it represents a 16% decrease from 2024 levels.
The funding system bases its distribution on population numbers which results in major provinces serving numerous students to experience more significant changes in their enrollment numbers than their smaller counterparts.
Sector analysis from University Affairs notes that new international student arrivals in 2025 are projected to be dramatically lower than in 2024, with many applicants affected by the requirement to secure a provincial or territorial attestation letter as part of their study permit file.
Institutions that had built plans on rapid enrollment growth now face a slower, more managed pipeline.
PGWP Reforms Tie Work Rights to Skills
Alongside the caps, Canada has overhauled the PGWP framework. From May 2024, most graduates of public-private partnership or curriculum licensing programs are no longer eligible for a PGWP if they began their studies on or after 15 May, a change that was brought forward from a previously announced later date.
At the same time, Ottawa has improved the offer for many master’s students. Since 15 February 2024, graduates of most master’s programs can apply for a three-year PGWP even if their program lasted less than two years, as long as they meet standard eligibility rules.
That makes Canada’s postgraduate work horizon more attractive for high-skill graduate cohorts, while limiting open work options for shorter, less specialised pathways.
A new field of study requirement now applies to many non-degree and shorter programs. From November 2024, PGWP access for these students will depend on being in one of a set of eligible Classification of Instructional Programs codes aligned with long-term labour market needs. Updates in mid-2025 added 119 fields in areas such as health care, social services, education, and trades, while 178 fields not linked to persistent shortages were removed, leaving 920 eligible fields overall. The policy is designed to connect study choices more closely with Canada’s Express Entry priorities and skills strategy.
Indian Aspirants Confront Higher Barriers
The new environment presents special difficulties to Indian students who make up the biggest student group from Canada. The Reuters analysis of IRCC data showed that Indian students faced a 74% denial rate for post-secondary study permits during August 2025 compared to 32% in August 2023 while the worldwide denial rate remained at 40%.
The higher bar indicates three main concerns which include fraud issues and doubts about private offering quality and the strain that fast student population growth creates on housing infrastructure and public services and employment in local areas. The screening process has become more stringent while financial requirements have increased and PGWP eligibility has decreased which has made Canada a less accessible immigration choice for families from India and other countries.
The result shows agents report that some candidates have decided to postpone their enrollment while they pursue master’s degrees instead of diploma programs or they look for study options in Europe and the Gulf region and East Asia. Universities and colleges which used to get many Indian students now struggle to attract new students and keep their current students because they promote programs which follow rules but provide definite career and immigration paths.
Helping Decode the New Landscape
The pace of policy change has increased the information gap for students and their families. Agents and institutional partners now need to explain not only admission criteria, but also PGWP eligibility by program type, field of study rules, and shifting intake caps across provinces.
Online platforms are part of that response. MSM Grad, a skills-focused online learning and advisory platform under Laul Global, tracks major changes in PGWP rules, intake targets, and refusal trends, and uses this information to shape micro-credentials, guidance modules, and counselling tools for institutions, agents, and learners. Similar platforms role is not to replace official advice, but to help users read policy updates in context and align program choices with long-term employment and immigration goals.

