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Short Description: Complete guide to Canada’s IEC International Co-op (Internship) work permit: eligibility, pools, documents, fees, process, work rights, refusals, and PR options.
Last Verified On: 2026-03-22
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Canada |
| Visa name | International Experience Canada – International Co-op (Internship) |
| Visa short name | IEC-COOP |
| Category | Youth mobility / temporary work permit under International Experience Canada |
| Main purpose | To let eligible foreign youth complete a work placement or internship in Canada that is directly linked to their studies |
| Typical applicant | Post-secondary student with a signed internship or work placement offer in Canada |
| Validity | Usually tied to the approved IEC participation period and passport validity; varies by citizenship agreement |
| Stay duration | Usually up to 12 months, but depends on the applicant’s country/territory of citizenship and bilateral agreement |
| Entries allowed | Work permit holders may generally leave and re-enter Canada if they remain admissible and hold valid travel documents; entry is always at border officer discretion |
| Extension possible? | Limited. IEC work permits are generally not extendable beyond the maximum allowed under the agreement, but a shorter permit may sometimes be extended up to the agreement maximum in narrow cases such as passport expiry or insurance issues at entry |
| Work allowed? | Yes, limited. Employer-specific work for the employer listed on the work permit, for the internship/work placement approved under International Co-op |
| Study allowed? | Limited. This category is not meant for general study; short courses may be possible if they do not require a separate study permit |
| Family allowed? | No built-in dependent route. Spouse/partner or children do not receive status automatically and must qualify separately |
| PR path? | Possible indirectly. This permit itself is temporary, but Canadian work experience gained may help with later PR pathways if the work qualifies |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect. This permit does not itself lead to citizenship, but later PR and physical presence may eventually do so |
The International Experience Canada (IEC) International Co-op (Internship) category is a temporary work permit route for eligible young foreign citizens whose countries have a youth mobility agreement with Canada, or who apply through a recognized organization where permitted.
Its purpose is narrow and specific: it allows a foreign student to come to Canada to complete a work placement or internship that is directly related to their field of study.
This is not a general visitor visa and not an open work permit. It sits inside Canada’s broader International Experience Canada program, which includes three main categories:
- Working Holiday
- Young Professionals
- International Co-op (Internship)
For International Co-op, successful applicants normally receive an employer-specific work permit. That means the permit is tied to the approved Canadian employer named in the application.
Why this program exists
Canada uses IEC to support reciprocal youth mobility arrangements with partner countries and territories. The International Co-op stream is specifically designed to promote:
- cross-border educational exchange
- structured internships
- youth professional development
- practical training linked to formal studies
Who it is meant for
It is mainly meant for:
- post-secondary students
- young adults from IEC partner countries/territories
- people who already have a signed internship or work placement offer in Canada
- applicants whose internship is required for, or directly connected to, their academic program
Is it a visa or a permit?
This route is best understood as a program leading to a Canadian work permit.
In practice, an applicant may deal with multiple immigration documents:
- an IEC application through Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC)
- a port of entry (POE) letter of introduction if approved
- an employer-specific work permit issued at entry to Canada or, in limited cases, from inside Canada if eligible
- depending on nationality, also a temporary resident visa (TRV) or an electronic travel authorization (eTA) for travel to Canada
So it is a hybrid route, not just a “visa.”
Alternate official names
Official and commonly used names include:
- International Experience Canada
- IEC
- International Co-op (Internship)
- IEC International Co-op
- employer-specific work permit under IEC
Older naming can vary in informal use, but IRCC currently uses International Co-op (Internship).
2. Who should apply for this visa?
Best-fit applicants
Students
This is the ideal applicant group. You should consider IEC International Co-op if:
- you are enrolled at a post-secondary institution
- you need or want an internship in Canada
- the internship is directly linked to your studies
- you are from a country/territory eligible for this category, or otherwise qualify through an approved recognized organization if applicable
Researchers
Possibly suitable if the placement is truly an internship/work placement tied to your studies and the Canadian host is your employer for IEC purposes.
Artists/athletes
Only if they are students and the internship is directly related to their studies. Otherwise, usually not the right route.
Special category applicants
In some cases, applicants who do not have direct country eligibility may participate through a recognized organization, but this depends on the organization and the rules that apply at the time. This is an area to verify carefully on the official IEC pages.
Usually not the right visa for
Tourists
Do not use this route for tourism. Use a visitor visa or eTA route instead, if eligible.
Business visitors
If your trip is for meetings, conferences, or short business activities without entering the Canadian labour market, International Co-op is usually the wrong category. You may need business visitor status instead.
Job seekers
This is not a job-seeker visa. You generally need the internship offer first.
Employees seeking normal work
If you want a standard job in Canada unrelated to your studies, this is likely the wrong stream. Depending on the case, consider:
- IEC Young Professionals
- IEC Working Holiday
- Temporary Foreign Worker Program route
- International Mobility Program route
Spouses/partners
There is no automatic derivative status under IEC International Co-op. A spouse or partner must qualify separately.
Children/dependents
Children cannot simply be added as dependents to this IEC work permit application.
Digital nomads
This is not a digital nomad category. If you are not completing a study-related internship with the approved employer, it is likely not suitable.
Founders/entrepreneurs and investors
Not the right category unless you are also an eligible student doing a genuine internship directly related to your studies.
Retirees
Not suitable.
Religious workers
Not suitable unless another specific work authorization route applies.
Transit passengers
Not suitable.
Medical travelers
Not suitable.
Diplomatic/official travelers
Not suitable; diplomatic or official travel uses different legal channels.
3. What is this visa used for?
Permitted purposes
The main permitted purpose is:
- completing a work placement or internship in Canada that is directly related to your field of study
Other permitted activity may include:
- living temporarily in Canada during the authorized internship period
- ordinary tourism incidental to your stay
- travel in and out of Canada during the validity of your status, subject to admissibility and travel document rules
Prohibited or unsuitable purposes
Tourism as the main purpose
Not the intended use.
General employment
You cannot use this category for unrelated work or for work with an employer not listed on your permit.
Open-ended remote work
Not the purpose of this category. If you are in Canada on an IEC employer-specific permit, you must comply with its conditions.
Study as the main purpose
This route is not a general study permit. If your study program in Canada requires a study permit, this stream does not replace it.
Volunteering outside permit conditions
If the activity would normally be a job in Canada, calling it “volunteering” does not necessarily make it lawful.
Paid performance, journalism, religious activity
Only if clearly authorized under your work permit conditions and directly tied to the approved internship. Otherwise, not suitable.
Medical treatment
Not the purpose of the visa, though receiving medical care in Canada while lawfully present is a separate issue.
Transit
Not suitable.
Marriage
You may marry in Canada if otherwise legally able to do so, but this visa is not issued for the purpose of marriage.
Long-term residence
Not suitable as a long-term residence status by itself.
Family reunion
No. There are separate family sponsorship and temporary resident routes.
Investment/business setup
Not the intended purpose.
Grey areas and common misunderstandings
“Can I do any side job?”
Usually no. International Co-op work permits are generally employer-specific.
“Can I just intern informally without pay?”
Still risky if it is really work in the Canadian labour market. The permit must match the real activity.
“Can I switch internship employers after arrival?”
Not freely. A permit change is usually needed before working for a different employer.
4. Official visa classification and naming
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| International Experience Canada (IEC) | Umbrella youth mobility program |
| International Co-op (Internship) | One IEC category |
| Employer-specific work permit | The work permit usually issued under this category |
| Port of Entry Letter of Introduction | Approval letter used to seek permit issuance on entry |
| Temporary Resident Visa (TRV) / eTA | Travel document/authorization that may also be required depending on nationality |
Related IEC categories often confused with this one
Working Holiday
Usually an open work permit for broader work/travel flexibility.
Young Professionals
Usually an employer-specific work permit for professional work experience, not necessarily a student internship.
International Co-op
For students completing a study-related internship/work placement.
5. Eligibility criteria
Eligibility is one of the most important and most variable parts of IEC.
Core eligibility rules
1) Country/territory of citizenship
You must usually be a citizen of a country or territory that has a youth mobility agreement with Canada covering the International Co-op category.
Important: Not every IEC partner country offers every IEC category. Age limits, participation lengths, and repeat participation rules vary by country.
2) Age
You must be within the age range that applies to your country/territory of citizenship under the relevant agreement.
Common age bands are:
- 18 to 30 inclusive, or
- 18 to 35 inclusive
But this is nationality-specific and must be checked on the official IEC country page.
3) Valid passport
You need a valid passport for the full period you want to stay. If your passport expires earlier, your work permit may be shortened.
4) Student status
For International Co-op, you must be registered as a student at a post-secondary institution.
5) Internship/work placement offer
You must have a signed letter or contract for a work placement or internship in Canada.
6) Direct link to studies
The internship must be directly related to your field of study.
7) Participation through IEC process
You must create an IEC profile, enter the relevant pool if required, receive an invitation to apply, and then submit a complete work permit application.
8) Funds
IRCC requires IEC applicants to show they have enough money to support themselves on arrival. IEC guidance commonly refers to at least CAD 2,500 available to help cover initial expenses.
9) Return or onward travel funds
You may need to show a round-trip ticket or enough additional funds to buy a departure ticket.
10) Health insurance
You must have health insurance covering:
- medical care
- hospitalization
- repatriation
for the full authorized stay. If you present shorter insurance at the border, the officer may issue a shorter work permit.
11) Admissibility
You must be admissible to Canada, including:
- no serious criminal inadmissibility
- no security inadmissibility
- no unresolved medical inadmissibility where relevant
- no major immigration violations
12) Biometrics
Many applicants must give biometrics.
13) Police certificates
You may need police certificates from countries where you have lived for the required period under IRCC rules.
14) Medical exam
A medical exam may be required, especially if:
- you lived in certain countries for 6 months or more in the past year, or
- you intend to work in jobs requiring immigration medical clearance
15) Offer of employment compliance
For employer-specific IEC categories, the Canadian employer generally must submit an offer of employment through the Employer Portal and pay the employer compliance fee before you can complete the work permit process.
Possible recognized organization route
Some youth may participate in IEC through a recognized organization. This can affect who is eligible and how many participations are possible. Availability changes and is not universal, so verify current official rules before relying on it.
No general points system
There is no points test like Express Entry for this permit.
Invitation requirement
IEC commonly operates through pools and invitations to apply. Being eligible does not guarantee an invitation.
Intent and residence issues
This route is temporary. Canada recognizes the concept of dual intent in immigration law, but you must still satisfy officers that you meet the conditions of the temporary program.
Eligibility matrix
| Requirement | Usually required? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| IEC partner country citizenship | Yes | Country-specific rules apply |
| Valid passport | Yes | Passport length can limit permit length |
| Age within agreement range | Yes | Often 18–30 or 18–35 |
| Post-secondary student status | Yes | Core requirement for International Co-op |
| Internship/work placement offer | Yes | Must be signed |
| Internship linked to studies | Yes | Core requirement |
| IEC invitation to apply | Usually yes | Pool-based system |
| Proof of funds | Yes | IEC guidance commonly states CAD 2,500 minimum |
| Health insurance | Yes | Full stay coverage strongly important |
| Biometrics | Often | Depends on applicant |
| Police certificate | Sometimes | Depends on residence history and IRCC request |
| Medical exam | Sometimes | Depends on travel/residence/work type |
| Language test | No general rule | Not usually required for IEC Co-op |
| LMIA | No | Not part of this IEC category |
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
Ineligibility factors
You are generally not eligible if:
- your country does not participate in International Co-op
- you are outside the permitted age band
- you are not a post-secondary student
- your internship is not directly related to your studies
- you do not have the required internship/work placement offer
- you have already used the maximum number of IEC participations allowed for your nationality
- your passport is invalid or expires too soon
- you are inadmissible to Canada
Common refusal triggers
- incomplete IEC profile or work permit application
- missing employer compliance steps
- internship offer that looks like ordinary employment rather than a study-linked placement
- weak evidence that the internship relates to the applicant’s academic program
- insufficient proof of student enrollment
- inadequate funds
- no proper insurance plan for the intended stay
- police certificate issues
- medical inadmissibility concerns
- unverifiable or inconsistent documents
- errors in passport details, employer information, dates, or category selection
Warning
A major mismatch between your declared purpose and your documents can sink an application. For example, saying “internship” but uploading a normal job contract with no academic link is a serious problem.
7. Benefits of this visa
Key benefits
- legal authorization to work in Canada for the approved internship
- Canadian work experience in a structured setting
- possible support for academic credit or graduation requirements
- a relatively accessible youth mobility route compared with some employer-sponsored work permit pathways
- no Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) requirement under standard IEC processing
- possible travel in and out of Canada during valid status
- possible indirect help toward future permanent residence if the work experience qualifies
Family benefits
There is no automatic family package, but family members may separately apply for visitor, study, or work status if they independently qualify.
PR-related benefits
The permit itself is temporary, but Canadian work experience may later support:
- Express Entry in some cases
- provincial nominee pathways in some cases
- later employer-sponsored routes
8. Limitations and restrictions
Main restrictions
- employer-specific work permit in most cases
- internship must be linked to your studies
- time-limited participation
- nationality-specific age and duration restrictions
- no guarantee of extension
- no automatic right for spouse/children to join
- no access to public benefits simply because you hold this permit
- must maintain valid health insurance for the full stay
- permit duration can be cut short if passport or insurance is shorter than expected
Compliance restrictions
You must follow the exact permit conditions, including:
- employer listed on permit
- occupation/location if stated
- any medical-related conditions
- end date on permit
Common Mistake
Assuming IEC International Co-op works like Working Holiday. It usually does not. International Co-op is normally employer-specific and much less flexible.
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
Duration
The maximum period depends on your country’s youth mobility agreement with Canada. Many International Co-op participations are up to 12 months, but not always.
Validity vs stay
Two different things matter:
- your letter of introduction validity: the deadline by which you must travel to Canada and seek permit issuance
- your work permit validity: the period you may legally work and remain under that permit
When the clock starts
The permit period usually starts when the work permit is issued, often at the Canadian port of entry.
Entries
Canada does not frame work permits as “single-entry” or “multiple-entry” in the same way some countries do with visas. Re-entry depends on:
- valid passport
- valid TRV or eTA if required
- valid work permit/status
- ongoing admissibility
- officer discretion at the border
Overstay consequences
If you remain beyond status expiry, you can lose legal status and may need restoration if eligible. Overstays can harm future applications.
Extension rules
IEC permits are generally not extendable beyond the maximum allowed by the relevant agreement. Limited corrective extensions can happen in specific circumstances, such as when the permit was shortened because of passport expiry or insufficient insurance shown at entry.
10. Complete document checklist
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| IEC profile/application forms | Online application records | Starts and completes the process | Wrong category selected; inconsistent dates |
| Invitation to Apply records | IEC invitation evidence | Needed to proceed after pool invitation | Missing deadlines |
| Port of Entry letter of introduction | Approval letter from IRCC | Needed to obtain work permit on arrival | Thinking it is the work permit itself |
B. Identity/travel documents
- valid passport
- passport biographical page scan
- scans of pages with stamps/visas if requested
- digital photo
Why needed: identity, nationality, eligibility, travel document validity.
Common mistakes: – passport expiring too soon – damaged passport – mismatch of passport number across documents
C. Financial documents
- recent bank statements
- proof of available funds
- evidence of extra funds or return ticket if required
Why needed: to show settlement money on arrival.
Common mistakes: – unexplained large deposits – statements not showing account holder name – screenshots that do not look official
D. Employment/business documents
- internship offer letter or contract
- employer compliance information
- employer offer of employment number, where applicable
Why needed: to prove a genuine, approved internship.
Common mistakes: – vague job descriptions – no clear dates – no connection to studies – employer has not completed the compliance step
E. Education documents
- proof of enrollment at post-secondary institution
- student ID if useful
- transcript or registrar letter if needed
- evidence the internship relates to studies
Why needed: this category is specifically for students.
Common mistakes: – outdated enrollment letter – no explanation tying duties to academic program
F. Relationship/family documents
Not usually core for the principal applicant, unless accompanying family members apply separately or you must explain marital status.
G. Accommodation/travel documents
- tentative travel itinerary if available
- address of intended accommodation, if known
- return or onward ticket, or funds to purchase one
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
- employer letter
- internship agreement
- school support letter, if available
I. Health/insurance documents
- proof of health insurance covering medical care, hospitalization, and repatriation for the full stay
- immigration medical exam confirmation, if applicable
Common mistakes: – insurance valid for only part of the stay – policy excludes repatriation – policy dates do not align with travel dates
J. Country-specific extras
Depending on where you have lived and your nationality, IRCC may request:
- police certificates
- military records
- civil status records
- country-specific forms
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
Not generally applicable for the principal IEC International Co-op applicant, because this route is aimed at adult youth participants. If a minor child seeks separate status, extra custody/consent documents may be needed.
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
If a document is not in English or French, IRCC generally requires:
- a translation by a certified translator, and
- in some cases, an affidavit or supporting certification, depending on who translated it
Check IRCC’s current translation rules carefully.
M. Photo specifications
Use IRCC’s current digital photo specifications for online applications. Do not assume ordinary passport photo settings are acceptable.
11. Financial requirements
Minimum funds
IEC guidance generally requires proof of at least CAD 2,500 to help cover initial expenses.
You may also need:
- a return ticket, or
- additional funds to buy one
Acceptable proof
Usually:
- bank statements
- official bank letters
- account statements showing your name and available balance
Sponsorship
Official IEC guidance focuses on the applicant showing their own available funds. Third-party support is less straightforward than in some visitor categories, so do not assume a sponsor letter alone is enough unless IRCC specifically allows it in your context.
Hidden costs to plan for
- travel to Canada
- first month’s accommodation
- transport
- food
- deposit for housing
- local SIM and setup costs
- winter clothing if arriving in cold season
- mandatory insurance
- biometrics and document procurement
Pro Tip
If your account recently received a large deposit, include a short explanation and supporting evidence. Unexplained funds can create doubts.
12. Fees and total cost
IEC fees change from time to time. Always check the current official fee pages before payment.
Usual fee structure
| Cost item | Official status |
|---|---|
| IEC participation fee | Usually required |
| Work permit holder fee | Often required for open work permits, but not generally the same way for employer-specific International Co-op; check current IRCC fee structure carefully |
| Employer compliance fee | Usually paid by the employer for employer-specific IEC categories |
| Biometrics fee | May apply |
| Medical exam fee | If required, paid separately to panel physician |
| Police certificate cost | Varies by issuing country |
| Translation/notarization cost | Varies |
| Insurance cost | Varies by provider and length of stay |
| Travel/relocation costs | Varies |
Warning
Do not rely on old blog posts for fee amounts. IEC fees are updated periodically.
13. Step-by-step application process
1. Confirm this is the correct visa
Check:
- your nationality is eligible for International Co-op
- your age fits the agreement
- you are a post-secondary student
- your internship is directly linked to your studies
2. Gather key documents
Start collecting:
- passport
- enrollment proof
- internship offer
- funds proof
- police certificates if needed
3. Create an online IRCC account and IEC profile
You typically create a profile and enter the IEC pool for International Co-op.
4. Wait for an invitation to apply
If invited, strict deadlines apply.
5. Employer submits offer of employment
For employer-specific IEC categories, the employer normally submits the offer through the Employer Portal and pays the compliance fee.
6. Complete work permit application
You submit the full application online, including documents and fee payment.
7. Pay fees
Pay the required IRCC fees in the online system.
8. Give biometrics if instructed
You will receive a biometrics instruction letter if required.
9. Complete medical/police steps if required
Do this promptly to avoid delays.
10. Respond to additional document requests
IRCC may ask for more evidence.
11. Receive decision
If approved, you usually receive a Port of Entry Letter of Introduction.
12. Travel to Canada before the deadline
Carry your full document set.
13. Seek work permit issuance at entry
A border services officer reviews your documents and, if satisfied, issues the work permit.
14. Check the permit immediately
Make sure:
- your name is correct
- employer name is correct
- dates are correct
- any conditions are accurate
15. Post-arrival setup
Apply for a Social Insurance Number (SIN), arrange housing, and follow employer onboarding steps.
14. Processing time
Processing times vary significantly.
Official standard
IRCC provides a processing time tool. IEC processing can vary by:
- season
- application volume
- biometrics timing
- country-specific demand
- completeness of application
- security/background checks
Practical reality
Expect variability. Peak IEC seasons can slow invitation and processing timelines.
Pro Tip
The total timeline is not just “IRCC processing time.” It also includes:
- waiting in the IEC pool
- obtaining police certificates
- biometrics appointment scheduling
- medical exam timing
- travel planning
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
Many applicants must give biometrics after receiving a biometrics instruction letter.
Interview
A formal consular interview is not routine for most IEC applicants, but border questioning on arrival is normal.
Medical exam
You may need an immigration medical exam if:
- you have lived in certain countries for 6+ months in the relevant period, or
- your intended work falls into categories where medical clearance matters
Police certificates
You may need police certificates for countries where you have lived for the period specified by IRCC.
Validity and reuse
Rules on biometric reuse and validity can change; check IRCC’s latest guidance.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
IRCC does not always publish easy, visa-category-specific approval rates for IEC International Co-op in a format useful to applicants. If official approval-rate data is not publicly available or not clearly broken down by this exact category, applicants should not rely on unofficial percentages.
Practical refusal patterns
Common practical reasons include:
- not truly meeting International Co-op requirements
- poor evidence of student status
- internship not clearly related to studies
- wrong IEC category selected
- employer compliance steps not completed correctly
- insufficient funds
- missing police/medical documents
- inattention to deadlines after invitation
17. How to strengthen the application legally
Show the internship-study connection clearly
Include:
- enrollment letter
- transcript or program description if useful
- internship duties
- brief explanation linking duties to your field of study
Use a concise explanation letter
Explain:
- what you study
- why this internship fits your academic path
- duration
- host employer details
- that you understand the temporary conditions
Present funds cleanly
Use official statements and explain unusual deposits.
Make the employer documents precise
The employer letter should clearly state:
- role title
- duties
- dates
- location
- hours
- supervision
- how it qualifies as a placement/internship
Check permit-limiting issues early
A short passport or short insurance policy can shorten your permit.
Common Mistake
Applicants often obsess over writing a long personal essay but forget the most important issue: proving the internship is directly tied to their studies.
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
Apply with a long-validity passport
If your passport expires soon, renew before applying if possible. A shorter passport can mean a shorter permit.
Buy correct insurance before travel
At the border, bring insurance proof covering the entire intended stay and including medical care, hospitalization, and repatriation.
Organize documents by theme
Upload files in a way that makes the officer’s review easy:
- passport
- education
- employer/internship
- funds
- police/medical
- explanation letter
Get the school involved
A short letter from your university confirming the internship relates to your field can materially improve clarity.
Be careful with employer language
Avoid an offer letter that looks like generic permanent or unrelated employment.
Do not wait too long after approval
Your letter of introduction has an expiry date. Plan travel well before it expires.
Handle old refusals honestly
If you have prior visa refusals for Canada or elsewhere, disclose them accurately where asked.
When to contact IRCC
Contact IRCC or use official web forms when:
- your passport changes after application
- you cannot meet a document request
- there is a serious factual error in your file
Avoid unnecessary status enquiries if you are still within normal processing times.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
A cover letter is not always mandatory, but it is often useful.
What to include
- Your full name, passport number, and IEC category
- Your current university/program
- Confirmation you are a post-secondary student
- Summary of internship offer
- Clear explanation of how the internship relates to your studies
- Brief note on funds and insurance
- Confirmation you understand the temporary nature of the permit
What not to say
- do not imply unauthorized work plans
- do not suggest you will work for another employer
- do not use vague language like “I will do any work available”
Sample outline
- Introduction
- Academic background
- Internship details
- Relationship between duties and studies
- Financial readiness
- Compliance statement
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
Employer guidance
The key “sponsor-like” party here is usually the Canadian employer.
Employer should provide
- signed offer/contract
- clear duties
- dates and location
- wage/remuneration terms if applicable
- supervision details
- Employer Portal offer of employment submission
- compliance fee payment where required
School guidance
Helpful supporting evidence may include:
- enrollment confirmation
- statement that internship is part of or relevant to the program
- expected academic benefit
Common employer mistakes
- vague role description
- no link to studies
- missing Employer Portal step
- dates inconsistent with the applicant’s forms
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
There is no automatic dependent inclusion under IEC International Co-op.
Spouse/partner
A spouse or partner may apply separately for their own status, such as:
- visitor status
- study permit
- work permit, if independently eligible under Canadian law and policy
Whether the spouse of an IEC work permit holder qualifies for an open work permit depends on broader spousal work permit rules in force at the time and the principal applicant’s job details. This is policy-sensitive and should be checked carefully on current official IRCC pages.
Children
Children may visit or study, but they need their own status/documentation as required.
Proof required
For any separate family application, expect relationship documents such as:
- marriage certificate
- common-law evidence if applicable
- birth certificates for children
- custody/consent documents where relevant
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Work rights
| Activity | Allowed? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Work for approved employer | Yes | Main purpose of permit |
| Work for another employer | Generally no | Requires proper authorization/change |
| Self-employment | Generally no | Not the purpose of employer-specific IEC Co-op |
| Side gig / freelance work | Generally no | Usually not allowed without authorization |
| Unpaid internship with listed employer | Yes, if that is the approved placement | Must match permit/application |
| Volunteering outside authorized role | Risky | Depends on nature of activity |
Study rights
- Short courses may be possible if they do not require a study permit.
- This permit does not replace a study permit for a study program that legally requires one.
Business activity
Business meetings incidental to your internship may be fine, but this is not a business visitor category.
Remote work
If remote work is part of the approved internship for the listed employer, that may be possible. Separate outside work is generally not covered.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Final admission is at the border
An IEC approval does not guarantee admission. A Canada Border Services Agency officer makes the final decision.
Carry these documents when travelling
- passport
- port of entry letter of introduction
- internship offer/employer letter
- proof of funds
- proof of health insurance for full stay
- return ticket or proof of funds to buy one
- copies of education/enrollment proof
- police/medical documents if relevant
Border questions may include
- What is the purpose of your visit?
- Which employer will you work for?
- How does this internship relate to your studies?
- How long will you stay?
- Do you have insurance and funds?
Re-entry after travel
Possible, but not guaranteed. You must still be admissible and hold valid travel documents.
Warning
If you need a TRV to travel to Canada, a valid work permit alone is not always enough for re-entry after foreign travel. Check your travel document requirements.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Extension
Usually not extendable beyond the maximum under the agreement.
Corrective/limited extensions
Sometimes possible if the original permit was shortened due to:
- passport expiry
- insurance only covering part of the stay
These cases are limited and document-sensitive.
Renewal
IEC is not generally a renewable status in the ordinary sense. A second participation depends on the rules for your nationality and whether repeat participation is allowed.
Switching inside Canada
You may in some cases apply to change status or seek another work permit category if independently eligible, but there is no blanket right to “convert” IEC Co-op to another category.
Changing employer
Usually requires new authorization before working for the new employer.
Restoration
If status expires, restoration may be possible in some cases under Canada’s general temporary resident rules, but restoration does not erase past non-compliance and is time-limited.
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
Does this visa directly lead to PR?
No direct PR entitlement.
Can it help indirectly?
Yes, possibly.
Canadian work experience gained under a lawful work permit can help later with PR if it meets the requirements of a PR program. Whether your internship counts as qualifying work experience for a specific PR program depends on the exact program rules, including skill level and other criteria in force at the time.
Citizenship
Temporary resident time on this permit does not itself make you a citizen. Usually the broad path is:
- temporary status
- possible permanent residence
- physical presence and other citizenship requirements
- citizenship application if eligible later
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Tax issues
If you work in Canada, you may have Canadian tax obligations. Tax residency and filing obligations depend on facts such as:
- length of stay
- ties to Canada
- income source
Use official Canada Revenue Agency resources for tax guidance.
Social Insurance Number
You generally need a SIN to work legally and be paid in Canada.
Compliance obligations
- work only as authorized
- stop work when permit expires
- maintain valid insurance
- obey permit conditions
- keep passport valid
- comply with Canadian laws
Address registration
Canada does not generally have the same universal local address registration system that some countries use for all foreign residents, but you may need to update IRCC in certain application contexts and should keep your contact details current where required.
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
This area is crucial for IEC.
Key variables by nationality
- eligible IEC categories
- age range
- maximum participation length
- whether repeat participations are allowed
- whether recognized organization participation is possible
- specific conditions under the bilateral youth mobility agreement
Warning
Do not assume your friend from another country has the same IEC rights you do. IEC rules vary significantly by citizenship.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Dual nationals
Use the passport tied to the IEC-eligible nationality when appropriate. If you hold multiple citizenships, the applicable agreement may differ depending on which passport you use.
Prior refusals
Past refusals do not automatically bar approval, but must be handled honestly.
Criminal records
Even minor records can create admissibility problems. Official rehabilitation or legal analysis may be needed in some cases.
Applying from a third country
Often possible online, but biometrics and document logistics can be more complex.
Expired passport but valid approval letter
You will usually need a valid passport before travel and permit issuance. Update IRCC if your passport changes.
Gender marker/name mismatch
Provide linking documents and a clear explanation where records do not match.
Refugees/stateless persons
IEC is usually nationality-based, so this can be difficult unless you hold eligible citizenship. Verify directly with IRCC.
29. Common myths and mistakes
Myth vs Fact
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| IEC International Co-op is just a tourist visa with internship permission | False. It is a specific temporary work permit route for study-related internships |
| Any student can apply | False. Nationality, age, and IEC agreement rules apply |
| You can work for any employer in Canada | Usually false. International Co-op is generally employer-specific |
| The approval letter is the work permit | False. It is usually a letter of introduction; the permit is issued after arrival if all conditions are met |
| Insurance is optional after approval | False. Proof of proper insurance is a core IEC requirement |
| You can extend forever if the employer wants you to stay | False. IEC participation is time-limited |
| Your spouse and kids are automatically included | False. They need their own status |
| The internship does not need to relate to your studies if the employer calls it an internship | False. Direct relationship to studies is a core rule |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
After refusal
You will generally receive a refusal notice explaining the broad reasons.
Appeal rights
There is no standard broad “appeal” process for most temporary residence/work permit refusals of this kind in the same way some court or tribunal systems operate. Options may include:
- reapplying with stronger documents
- requesting reconsideration in limited circumstances
- seeking judicial review in Federal Court where appropriate and with legal advice
Refunds
Application fees are generally not fully refundable once processing has begun, though specific fee components can have different rules.
Reapplication
Often possible if you still meet eligibility requirements and the IEC season, invitation, and country quota circumstances allow it.
GCMS/ATIP notes
Applicants in some situations can seek case notes through Canada’s access-to-information mechanisms, which can be useful to understand refusal reasoning.
Pro Tip
Do not reapply immediately with the same weak file. Fix the exact refusal concerns first.
31. Arrival in Canada: what happens next?
At the airport or land border
- Present passport and travel documents
- Show your port of entry letter of introduction
- Answer questions truthfully
- Show proof of funds and insurance if asked
- Receive your work permit if approved for issuance
Immediately after permit issuance
Check:
- spelling of your name
- employer name
- occupation details if listed
- expiry date
- conditions
First 7 days
- obtain SIN
- secure housing
- start employer onboarding
- set up phone/bank account if needed
First 30 days
- understand tax/payroll deductions
- keep copies of permit and insurance
- track permit expiry and passport validity
32. Real-world timeline examples
Scenario 1: Student intern from an IEC partner country
- Week 1–3: receives internship offer and school confirmation
- Week 3–4: creates IEC profile and enters pool
- Week 4–10+: waits for invitation
- After invitation: submits application within deadline
- Next 1–8+ weeks: biometrics, background review, possible document requests
- Approval: receives POE letter
- Before travel: buys full-stay insurance and prepares funds proof
- Arrival: work permit issued at border
Scenario 2: Student with passport expiring soon
- Same process as above
- Permit may be shortened to passport expiry date unless passport is renewed first
Scenario 3: Applicant with residence in multiple countries
- Extra time needed for police certificates
- Processing can be delayed if certificates are incomplete or late
Scenario 4: Spouse wants to accompany
- Principal applicant proceeds under IEC Co-op
- Spouse prepares separate visitor or work-related application if eligible
- Travel planning should account for separate timelines and approval risks
Scenario 5: Founder/student trying to use own startup
- Possible only if the setup genuinely fits IEC rules, employer compliance rules, and internship requirements
- This is a high-scrutiny scenario and should be reviewed very carefully against official rules
33. Ideal document pack structure
Recommended order
- Passport
- IEC invitation/IRCC forms
- Internship offer and employer compliance details
- School enrollment letter
- Internship-study connection evidence
- Proof of funds
- Insurance
- Police certificates
- Medical documents
- Explanation letter
File naming convention
Use simple names like:
- 01_Passport.pdf
- 02_Enrollment_Letter.pdf
- 03_Internship_Offer.pdf
- 04_Funds_Bank_Statement.pdf
- 05_Insurance.pdf
Scan tips
- use clear color scans
- avoid cropped edges
- keep orientation upright
- combine multi-page documents logically
- ensure translations follow the original document
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- confirm your nationality is eligible for International Co-op
- confirm your age is within the allowed range
- confirm you are a post-secondary student
- obtain a qualifying internship offer
- ensure the internship relates to your studies
- check passport expiry
- prepare funds proof
- plan insurance
- review police/medical needs
Submission-day checklist
- correct IEC category selected
- all forms complete
- dates match across documents
- employer details match exactly
- enrollment proof uploaded
- funds proof uploaded
- fees paid
- copies saved
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- biometrics instruction letter
- passport
- appointment confirmation
- any center-specific requirements
Arrival checklist
- passport
- POE letter
- insurance proof
- funds proof
- internship offer
- return ticket or extra funds
- accommodation details
Extension/renewal checklist
- verify if extension is legally available at all
- identify exact reason for shortened permit
- gather proof such as renewed passport or corrected insurance
- apply before current status expires where applicable
Refusal recovery checklist
- read refusal reasons carefully
- obtain notes if useful
- fix missing or weak evidence
- verify you still meet IEC invitation and eligibility rules
- reapply only with a materially improved file
35. FAQs
1. Is IEC International Co-op a visa or a work permit?
It is an IEC program category that generally leads to an employer-specific work permit, plus travel documentation if needed.
2. Do I need a job offer first?
You need a signed internship or work placement offer.
3. Do I have to be a student?
Yes, this category is for post-secondary students.
4. Does the internship have to be related to my studies?
Yes, directly related.
5. Is this an open work permit?
Usually no. It is generally employer-specific.
6. Can I work part-time for another employer?
Usually no.
7. Can I freelance on the side?
Usually no, unless separately authorized.
8. Can I study in Canada on this permit?
Only limited study that does not require a study permit. This is not a general study permit.
9. How much money do I need?
IEC guidance commonly states at least CAD 2,500, plus enough for a departure ticket if you do not already have one.
10. Is health insurance mandatory?
Yes, for the full period, including medical care, hospitalization, and repatriation.
11. What happens if my insurance covers only 6 months?
Your work permit may be limited to that shorter period.
12. What happens if my passport expires soon?
Your permit may be shortened to the passport expiry date.
13. Can I extend my IEC Co-op permit?
Usually not beyond the maximum allowed by the agreement, though some shortened permits may be corrected in limited cases.
14. Can I apply from inside Canada?
IEC processes and eligibility can vary; many applicants apply from outside Canada. Check current IRCC rules for your situation.
15. Do I need biometrics?
Many applicants do.
16. Do I need a police certificate?
Maybe, depending on your residence history and IRCC instructions.
17. Do I need a medical exam?
Maybe, depending on where you lived and the type of work.
18. Is there a quota or cap?
IEC operates with pools and invitation rounds, and country-specific allocations can matter.
19. Does everyone eligible get invited?
No.
20. Can my spouse come with me?
Not automatically. They need their own status.
21. Can my spouse get an open work permit?
Possibly in some cases under broader Canadian spousal work permit rules, but this is not automatic and current policy must be checked.
22. Can I bring children?
They need separate status/documentation.
23. Can this lead to permanent residence?
Indirectly, possibly, if you later qualify under a PR program.
24. Does internship work count for Express Entry?
It depends on the exact program rules and the nature of the work at the relevant time. Verify carefully.
25. What if I change employers?
You usually need proper authorization before working for a different employer.
26. Is the approval letter enough to enter Canada?
It helps, but final admission is still decided at the border.
27. What if I am refused?
You can often reapply if you still qualify and fix the problems, but fees may not be refunded.
28. Can I use a recognized organization instead of country eligibility?
Sometimes, depending on current recognized organization arrangements and your case. Verify on the official IEC site.
29. What if I have two passports?
Your IEC eligibility may depend on which nationality/passport you use.
30. Can I arrive before my internship starts and travel around?
Possibly, as long as you are admitted and your documents are in order, but your main purpose must remain consistent with the IEC permit.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official sources relevant to IEC International Co-op and related requirements.
-
IRCC International Experience Canada main page:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/iec.html -
IRCC eligibility by country/territory for IEC:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/iec/eligibility.html -
IRCC International Co-op (Internship) category page:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/iec/eligibility.html#co-op -
IRCC apply for IEC work permit:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/iec/apply.html -
IRCC after you apply / preparing for arrival under IEC:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/iec/after-apply.html -
IRCC fees page:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/immigration-citizenship/helpcentre/fees.html -
IRCC biometrics information:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/biometrics.html -
IRCC police certificates guidance:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/medical-police/police-certificates.html -
IRCC medical exams guidance:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/medical-police/medical-exams.html -
IRCC processing times tool:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/check-processing-times.html -
Employer compliance and Employer Portal information:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/employers-non-compliant.html -
Canada Border Services Agency:
https://www.cbsa-asfc.gc.ca/ -
Government of Canada temporary residents: work in Canada:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada.html -
Social Insurance Number information:
https://www.canada.ca/en/employment-social-development/services/sin.html -
Canada Revenue Agency tax information:
https://www.canada.ca/en/services/taxes.html
37. Final verdict
IEC International Co-op is one of the best temporary Canadian entry routes for eligible foreign students who need a real, study-related internship in Canada.
Best for
- post-secondary students
- applicants from IEC partner countries
- those with a clear internship offer linked to their academic program
Biggest benefits
- legal work authorization for the internship
- relatively streamlined youth mobility framework
- no LMIA route in the standard IEC model
- possible future value for Canadian career and immigration options
Biggest risks
- choosing the wrong IEC category
- weak proof that the internship relates to your studies
- permit shortened because of passport or insurance
- assuming spouse/dependents are automatically covered
- relying on outdated country-specific rules
Top preparation advice
- verify your country’s exact IEC rules
- make the school-study-internship link obvious
- use a long-validity passport
- carry full-stay insurance
- organize documents carefully for both IRCC and border review
When to consider another visa
Choose another route if:
- you are not a student
- your work is not tied to your studies
- you want open work rights
- you want to study full-time in Canada
- you need a family-based or long-term immigration route
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
The following items can vary and should be checked on official sources before you apply:
- your country/territory’s exact age limit for International Co-op
- whether your country is eligible for International Co-op at all
- maximum participation length for your nationality
- whether repeat IEC participations are allowed for your nationality
- whether a recognized organization can be used in your case
- current IEC season timing, pool openings, and invitation rounds
- latest official fee amounts
- current processing times
- current biometrics reuse rules
- current police certificate requirements based on your residence history
- current medical exam rules based on your residence/work type
- whether your spouse may qualify for a work permit under current spousal policy
- whether your internship duties and NOC/TEER level may later help with PR programs
- whether you need a TRV or eTA for travel/re-entry
- whether your employer has completed the latest Employer Portal compliance steps correctly