Immigration Announcement
Is Canada’s Temporary Immigration Target Achievable – A Closer Look at the 5% Goal
Canada’s ambition to reduce temporary residents to 5% of the population by the end of 2026 has sparked debate among experts and the public alike. As the numbers reveal, meeting this target is far more complex than it appears on paper, raising important questions about the future of Canada’s immigration system.
The federal government introduced this goal as a corrective measure, responding to what many saw as unsustainable growth in temporary residents, particularly among international students and temporary foreign workers. Yet, despite policy changes and new restrictions, the temporary resident population has continued to rise, growing from 2.73 million in early 2024 to nearly three million by the middle of 2025. This means that temporary residents still account for over 7% of the total population, with only a marginal decline since peaking in late 2024.
Temporary Immigration Still on the Rise in 2025
What’s driving these numbers? The reality is that Canada’s temporary resident population is sustained by several interconnected streams—work permit holders, international students, and asylum claimants—each with its own challenges. For example, while international student numbers have declined due to caps and new eligibility rules, many graduates remain in Canada by transitioning to work permits. As a result, the combined work-and-study permit holder population has surged, while the overall total remains stubbornly high.
Why the Target is Hard to Reach – The Challenges, Key Trends and More
Meanwhile, the number of asylum-linked temporary residents has tripled since 2021, now totaling almost half a million people. Most of these individuals have work permits, which adds to the complexity of managing and reducing the temporary resident population. Canada’s asylum system is also under significant strain, with long wait times, growing backlogs, and limited capacity for removals. Bill C-2, the proposed Strong Borders Act, aims to address some inefficiencies in the asylum process, but it is focused on a subset of temporary residents and is unlikely to make a substantial impact on the total.
The reality is that achieving the 5% target would require far more than tighter rules for admissions. It calls for a coordinated, cross-departmental strategy that includes reliable data tracking, effective enforcement, and thoughtful reforms that consider the unique role of each temporary resident group. For instance, temporary foreign workers fill essential gaps in the labour market, especially in sectors that depend on seasonal or specialized skills. International students are vital to Canada’s postsecondary sector and regional development, even as their numbers come under closer scrutiny.
Canada’s temporary immigration Target Needs Balancing
Reducing temporary immigration must be balanced with the need to attract and retain high-quality talent, address labour shortages, and ensure fairness in the asylum system. Canada’s reliance on temporary residents is not simply a numbers issue—it’s a reflection of economic needs and policy trade-offs that affect everything from higher education funding to the stability of the labour market.
In the absence of stronger data infrastructure and a more holistic approach, the 5% target is likely to remain aspirational for years to come. Broader reforms are needed to better manage temporary flows and align them with Canada’s long-term interests. Until then, pressures related to a large temporary population will persist, making clear that the solution lies in smarter, not just smaller, immigration strategies.