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Short Description: A complete, practical guide to Canada’s employer-specific work permit: eligibility, LMIA, documents, costs, process, family, extensions, and PR options.

Last Verified On: 2026-03-22

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Canada
Visa name Employer-Specific Work Permit
Visa short name Work Permit
Category Temporary foreign worker authorization
Main purpose To allow a foreign national to work in Canada for a named employer under stated conditions
Typical applicant Foreign worker with a qualifying job offer, often supported by an LMIA or LMIA exemption
Validity Usually fixed-term; based on passport validity, job offer/LMIA-exemption period, and officer decision
Stay duration Usually matches permit validity unless otherwise limited at entry
Entries allowed The work permit is not itself an entry visa; re-entry depends on whether the person also has the required travel document such as a TRV or eTA
Extension possible? Yes, in many cases, if still eligible and applied for in time
Work allowed? Yes, but only under permit conditions, usually for the named employer, occupation, location, and period
Study allowed? Limited; some work permit holders may study without a separate study permit if the course meets the legal exemption rules
Family allowed? Yes, often possible for spouse/partner and dependent children, but each family member may need their own status document
PR path? Possible; Canadian work experience may help with PR programs such as Express Entry or Provincial Nominee Programs
Citizenship path? Indirect; this permit does not lead directly to citizenship, but time in Canada and later PR may contribute toward citizenship eligibility

1. What is the Employer-Specific Work Permit?

A Canadian employer-specific work permit is a temporary authorization that allows a foreign national to work in Canada under specific conditions set on the permit.

It is meant for people who will work:

  • for a particular employer
  • in an approved occupation or role
  • often at a stated location
  • for a fixed period

In plain English, this is the “closed” work permit route. It is different from an open work permit, which allows broader work flexibility.

What it is legally

Canada distinguishes between:

  • a work permit: authorization to work in Canada
  • a temporary resident visa (TRV) or electronic travel authorization (eTA): travel document or travel authorization to come to Canada, if required by nationality

A person may need both: – a work permit to work – and, depending on nationality, a TRV or eTA to travel to Canada

So this is not exactly a visa in the strict legal sense. It is a temporary resident permit to work, usually issued as a work permit document. However, many applicants casually call it a “work visa.”

Why it exists

Canada uses employer-specific work permits to fill labor shortages, support international agreements, allow certain intra-company and policy-based labor mobility, and regulate temporary foreign work in a controlled way.

Where it fits in Canada’s immigration system

It sits within Canada’s temporary residence framework and labor mobility system, mainly administered by:

  • Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC)
  • Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC), for many LMIA-based cases
  • Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), for entry decisions at the border

Alternate names and related terms

Common official or practical labels include:

  • Employer-specific work permit
  • Closed work permit
  • Work permit with conditions
  • LMIA-based work permit
  • LMIA-exempt work permit
  • Temporary foreign worker work permit

Related but different categories:

  • Open work permit
  • Post-Graduation Work Permit
  • IEC work permit
  • Business visitor
  • Temporary resident visa

2. Who should apply for this visa?

This permit is best for people who already have a qualifying Canadian job arrangement.

Ideal applicants

Employees

Best for: – foreign workers hired by a Canadian employer – people with an LMIA-supported job offer – people using an LMIA-exempt route such as intra-company transfer, significant benefit, or international agreement category

Researchers

May fit if: – a Canadian institution is employing them – the work falls under a valid work permit stream or exemption category

Students

May fit if: – they are no longer relying only on student work authorization – they have a qualifying employer-specific offer and need a separate work permit

Spouses/partners

Usually this is not the first-choice category unless: – the spouse has their own specific Canadian employer and job offer

In many family cases, an open work permit may be more appropriate if available.

Founders/entrepreneurs

Possible in limited cases, such as: – owner-operator style situations under applicable current rules or policy-based frameworks – significant benefit or certain LMIA-exempt options – but this area is technical and fact-specific

Religious workers

Can fit if: – a Canadian religious organization is employing them – they qualify under the relevant work permit rules or exemptions

Artists/athletes

Can fit if: – they are being hired for work or paid performances requiring a work permit – they are not covered by a work permit exemption

Usually not the right visa for

Tourists

A visitor should not use an employer-specific work permit for tourism. Use: – visitor visa or eTA, if required

Business visitors

If the activity is truly business visitor activity without entering the Canadian labor market, a work permit may not be needed. Use: – business visitor route, where eligible

Job seekers

Canada generally does not issue this permit just to look for work. You usually need: – a real job offer – and often LMIA or LMIA-exempt support

Digital nomads

If working remotely for a foreign employer while entering as a visitor, this is a separate issue from an employer-specific work permit. If you will work for a Canadian employer, you likely need a work permit. Grey areas exist and should be assessed carefully.

Investors and retirees

This is generally not the right route unless the person also has a genuine qualifying work role.

Transit passengers, medical travelers, diplomatic travelers

Usually not applicable. Other status categories apply.

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

An employer-specific work permit may allow:

  • paid employment for the named employer
  • work in the approved occupation or occupational scope
  • work at the approved location or locations, if listed
  • temporary residence in Canada for the permit period
  • in some cases, limited study under statutory exemption rules
  • bringing eligible family members through separate applications

Prohibited or restricted uses

This permit does not automatically allow:

  • working for a different employer
  • freelancing or self-employment outside permit conditions
  • unpaid work that is really disguised labor for another employer
  • broad business setup unrelated to permit conditions
  • unrestricted study
  • long-term residence without maintaining temporary status
  • unauthorized side jobs

Activity-by-activity guide

Activity Usually allowed? Notes
Tourism Yes, incidentally You may visit while holding worker status, but the permit is for work
Meetings Yes If consistent with your work role
Employment Yes Only as authorized by permit conditions
Remote work Limited Generally okay for the named employer if consistent with permit terms; other remote work may be unauthorized
Internship Sometimes If the permit and job offer cover it
Study Limited Some work permit holders can study without a separate study permit if the program meets exemption rules
Volunteering Limited Only if it is genuine volunteer work and not displacing paid work
Paid performance Sometimes Must be covered by the permit or a work permit exemption
Journalism Usually separate analysis needed Often governed by different rules or exemptions
Medical treatment Yes As a temporary resident, subject to healthcare/payment realities
Transit Yes But this is not a transit document
Marriage Yes Marrying in Canada does not itself change immigration status
Religious activity Sometimes If covered by permit or exemption
Long-term residence No direct right It is temporary status only
Family reunion Limited Family may accompany or join through separate status applications
Investment/business setup Limited Only if consistent with permit basis and legal conditions

Grey areas

Remote work for a foreign employer

Canada has publicly discussed digital nomads, but whether a work permit is needed depends heavily on facts. If you are entering Canada and working for a Canadian employer, the answer is clearer: you likely need work authorization. If working only for a foreign employer while visiting, the analysis is more nuanced and this permit may not be the right route.

Volunteering

If the role would normally be filled by a paid worker, “volunteering” may still count as work.

Short study

Some short-term or exempt study may be possible, but do not assume all courses are allowed without checking current IRCC rules.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official program name

The official name used by IRCC is:

  • Employer-specific work permit

Short name

Common short names:

  • Work Permit
  • Closed Work Permit

Long name

  • Employer-Specific Work Permit for temporary foreign workers in Canada

Internal streams

This broad permit can be issued under multiple legal bases, including:

  • LMIA-based work permits
  • LMIA-exempt work permits under the International Mobility Program (IMP)

Examples of LMIA-exempt subcategories can include: – international agreements – intra-company transferees – significant benefit – certain charitable or religious workers – other public policy or code-based exemptions

Related permit names

  • Open work permit
  • Post-Graduation Work Permit
  • Spousal open work permit
  • Bridging open work permit

Old vs current naming

“Closed work permit” remains a common practical term, but “employer-specific work permit” is the standard official label.

Commonly confused categories

Category How it differs
Employer-specific work permit Tied to one employer and permit conditions
Open work permit Not tied to one employer in the same way
Business visitor No entry into Canadian labor market; often no work permit needed
Study permit Main purpose is study, not work
Visitor visa Travel document/status for visiting, not for authorized employment

5. Eligibility criteria

Eligibility depends on the specific stream. There is no single universal checklist that fits every employer-specific work permit case.

Core eligibility requirements

Most applicants must show:

  • they will leave Canada by the end of authorized stay, unless later authorized to remain
  • they have enough money to support themselves and family members and to return home
  • they obey the law and have no disqualifying criminality
  • they are not a danger to Canada’s security
  • they are in good health if medically required
  • they can satisfy an officer that they meet the permit requirements
  • they plan to work for an eligible employer and, if applicable, that the employer complied with employer-side requirements

Job offer requirement

Usually yes.

The applicant generally needs: – a genuine job offer from a Canadian employer – details of wages, duties, duration, and location – LMIA or LMIA-exemption support, depending on stream

LMIA requirement

Many cases require a positive Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) from ESDC.

Some cases are LMIA-exempt, but that does not mean “document-free.” LMIA-exempt cases usually still require: – an offer of employment submitted by the employer through the Employer Portal, if applicable – payment of the employer compliance fee, unless exempt – an exemption code

Nationality rules

There is no general nationality restriction for employer-specific work permits. However:

  • whether you need a TRV or eTA depends on nationality
  • where you can apply and whether you can apply at a port of entry may depend on nationality and residence
  • some international agreement streams may be nationality-specific

Passport validity

A valid passport or travel document is required. Officers often do not issue a work permit beyond passport validity.

Age

There is generally no universal age minimum beyond legal capacity and labor law realities, but: – minors need additional consent and documentation – some youth-specific streams fall outside this category

Education and work experience

Not universal, but often required if: – the job itself requires qualifications – the LMIA or exemption stream requires proof of skills – the officer needs to be satisfied you can do the job

Language

There is no universal language test requirement for all employer-specific work permits, but: – the employer may require language ability – the officer may assess whether the applicant can perform the job safely and realistically – certain PR pathways later will have language requirements

Sponsorship

This is not “sponsorship” in the family class sense. The employer supports the work authorization through: – LMIA, or – LMIA-exempt employer compliance process, where applicable

Invitation

Not usually an “invitation” system. The key document is the job offer and supporting employer-side compliance.

Points requirement

No general points system for the permit itself.

Relationship proof

Relevant only if family members are applying too.

Admission letter

Not normally required unless there is also a related study purpose.

Business/investment thresholds

Not generally applicable unless the stream is a founder/entrepreneur-type LMIA-exempt or specialized case.

Funds

Applicants must show enough money to: – support themselves – support accompanying family members – pay return travel, if needed

IRCC does not always publish one universal fixed fund amount for all work permit applications, so the strength and amount needed depend on circumstances.

Accommodation proof

Not always mandatory as a stand-alone item, but it can help establish plans and readiness.

Onward travel

Not always formally required as a prepaid ticket, but officers may consider whether the person can leave Canada at the end of status.

Health

A medical exam may be required if: – the applicant lived in certain countries for 6 months or more in the past year, or – they plan to work in jobs where public health protection is critical, such as healthcare, childcare, or certain agricultural settings

Character / criminal record

Police certificates may be requested, and criminal inadmissibility rules apply.

Insurance

Canada does not impose one universal private insurance rule for all work permit applicants in the same way some countries do, but practical coverage is highly advisable. Provincial health coverage eligibility varies by province and waiting periods can apply.

Biometrics

Many applicants must provide biometrics unless exempt.

Intent requirements

Applicants must satisfy the officer they are a genuine temporary resident and will comply with conditions. Canada also recognizes dual intent, meaning a person can genuinely want temporary status now and possible permanent residence later.

Residency outside Canada

Not always required, but country of application rules matter. Some people apply from: – outside Canada – inside Canada, if eligible – at a port of entry, if eligible and not restricted

Local registration rules

No general pre-arrival municipal registration requirement for the visa itself, but post-arrival obligations may arise for tax, healthcare, schooling, or provincial systems.

Quota/cap/ballot

No general annual cap for the permit category as a whole, but: – LMIA availability – employer quotas in some sectors – policy restrictions – occupation-specific controls
may affect access

Embassy-specific rules

Document collection and passport submission can vary by visa office or visa application centre. Always follow your local IRCC instructions.

Special exemptions

Some foreign nationals may be exempt from the work permit requirement entirely for specific short-term or special activities. That is separate from this permit.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Ineligibility factors

You may be refused if:

  • the job offer is not genuine
  • the LMIA is missing, invalid, expired, or not matching the job
  • the LMIA exemption claimed does not apply
  • the employer is ineligible
  • you cannot prove you can perform the job
  • your passport expires too soon
  • you are criminally or medically inadmissible
  • you fail to provide biometrics, medicals, or police checks when requested
  • the officer is not satisfied you will comply with temporary stay conditions

Common refusal triggers

  • inconsistent job title, duties, wages, or employer information
  • weak proof of qualifications
  • missing employer compliance documents
  • unclear immigration history
  • lack of funds
  • incomplete forms
  • unverifiable employment records
  • poor translations
  • prior overstays or removals
  • misleading or contradictory explanations
  • applying under the wrong category

Refusal reality

For employer-specific work permits, refusals often center less on tourism-style “weak travel history” and more on: – job genuineness – stream mismatch – employer paperwork – applicant qualifications – inadmissibility – insufficient evidence of compliance with permit rules

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • legal authorization to work in Canada
  • potential access to Canadian work experience
  • possibility for accompanying family members
  • possible route to extend status
  • possible future PR advantages
  • lawful income and tax record in Canada

Family benefits

Depending on circumstances: – spouse/partner may qualify for their own work authorization – children may study in Canada, often with the appropriate status or under applicable exemptions

Travel flexibility

You can leave and re-enter Canada during validity only if you also hold the required travel authorization: – TRV, if your nationality requires one – eTA, if eligible and traveling by air

A work permit alone is not enough for re-entry if a visa is required.

Long-term immigration benefit

Canadian skilled work experience can support future applications under: – Express Entry – Canadian Experience Class, if eligible – Provincial Nominee Programs – Atlantic and regional pathways, where relevant

8. Limitations and restrictions

Core restrictions

  • tied to one employer or the employers listed
  • may be tied to one occupation
  • may be tied to one location
  • valid only for a limited period
  • cannot freely change jobs without new authorization in most cases

No automatic public benefits

Holding a work permit does not automatically grant full public benefits. Access varies by province and program.

Study limits

Study may be limited unless: – a legal exemption applies, or – a study permit is obtained

Reporting and compliance

You must comply with all permit conditions. Changes in employment may require: – a new work permit – permit amendment, where applicable – a new LMIA or exemption process

Travel restriction

Re-entry is never guaranteed. CBSA makes final admission decisions.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Validity

Work permit length depends on: – passport validity – LMIA or LMIA-exempt offer duration – officer assessment – medical validity – category-specific limits

Single or multiple entry

The permit does not itself define “entries” in the same way a visa sticker does. Re-entry depends on: – valid status – valid passport – valid TRV or eTA, if required – continued admissibility

When the clock starts

Usually: – if approved overseas, the work permit is issued on arrival or activated at entry – if approved inland, status begins according to the issued document

Stay calculation

You may remain until the expiry date on the permit, unless: – you receive a shorter authorized stay at entry in a specific scenario – your status is canceled or changed

Grace periods and maintained status

If you apply to extend before expiry, you may benefit from maintained status and can often keep working under previous conditions while awaiting a decision, if the legal conditions are met.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying or working after permit expiry without protection can lead to: – loss of status – restoration requirements – future refusals – enforcement issues

Renewal timing

Apply well before expiry. IRCC strongly encourages early filing, especially given variable processing times.

10. Complete document checklist

Document needs vary by stream, nationality, and visa office. Below is a master checklist.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Application forms IRCC online or paper forms Core legal application Old versions, unsigned forms, inconsistent dates
Job offer letter/contract Employer’s offer with role details Shows genuine employment Missing wages, duties, location, duration
LMIA or LMIA-exemption evidence Positive LMIA or exemption details Legal basis to issue permit Wrong exemption code, expired LMIA, mismatch with offer
Proof applicant meets job requirements CV, references, licenses, certificates Shows ability to do the job Generic CV only, no proof of required skills

B. Identity/travel documents

  • valid passport
  • copies of all stamped pages where relevant
  • previous passports if helpful for identity/travel history
  • national ID, if applicable

Common mistake: – passport validity too short, causing shortened permit validity

C. Financial documents

  • bank statements
  • pay slips, if relevant
  • sponsor support evidence, where relevant
  • proof employer covers relocation or housing, if applicable

Common mistake: – unexplained large deposits

D. Employment/business documents

  • detailed offer letter
  • LMIA decision letter and annexes, if applicable
  • employer compliance offer number, if LMIA-exempt and applicable
  • professional licenses or registration, if needed for the occupation
  • resume/CV
  • past employment letters

E. Education documents

  • degrees
  • diplomas
  • transcripts
  • trade certificates
  • credential assessments only if specifically relevant, not universally required for work permit issuance

F. Relationship/family documents

If family applies: – marriage certificate – proof of common-law partnership – birth certificates for children – custody orders, if relevant – consent letters for minors traveling with one parent

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • address in Canada, if known
  • temporary housing booking or employer housing letter, if available
  • travel itinerary if already booked, though avoid non-refundable bookings until prudent

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

If relevant: – employer support letter – invitation from host organization – proof employer is operating legitimately

I. Health/insurance documents

  • immigration medical exam confirmation, if required
  • vaccination or health records only if specifically requested
  • private insurance proof, if you choose to provide it for practical support

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on nationality or residence: – police certificates – military records – civil status records – local translations – region-specific forms requested by visa office

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • birth certificate
  • parental consent
  • adoption records
  • school letters, if relevant

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

IRCC generally requires documents not in English or French to be accompanied by: – translation – translator affidavit if required by instructions – certified copies where required

Apostille is not universally required by IRCC for all documents, but some source-country legalization may still be useful in specific contexts. Follow IRCC instructions exactly.

M. Photo specifications

Use the latest IRCC photo specifications for temporary residence/work permit applications. Common mistakes: – wrong size – poor background contrast – outdated photo

11. Financial requirements

Is there a fixed minimum fund amount?

Not always. Unlike some immigration programs, employer-specific work permits do not always rely on one published universal minimum funds table for every case.

Applicants should still show they can: – support themselves on arrival – support accompanying family members – pay initial living costs – leave Canada when required

What counts as acceptable proof

  • recent bank statements
  • official bank letters
  • pay slips
  • savings certificates
  • employer relocation support letters
  • accommodation support from employer, if genuine
  • proof of ongoing salary arrangement, where relevant

Who can support the applicant

  • the employer
  • spouse/partner
  • parent or family member, if evidence is credible
  • the applicant themselves

But a third-party sponsor does not replace weak core eligibility.

Strong proof tips

  • show stable balances over time
  • explain sudden deposits
  • match funds to family size and destination costs
  • include employer-provided housing or transport details if relevant

Hidden costs to plan for

  • visa/travel document issuance
  • biometrics
  • medicals
  • police certificates
  • translations
  • airfare
  • first month housing
  • winter clothing, if relevant
  • school setup for children
  • health coverage gap before provincial eligibility

12. Fees and total cost

Fees change, and some costs vary by country and provider. Always check the latest official fee pages.

Typical government fee structure

Fee type Usual official structure
Work permit processing fee Separate IRCC processing fee applies
Biometrics fee Separate fee if biometrics required
Employer compliance fee Paid by employer in many LMIA-exempt cases, where applicable
LMIA fee Usually employer-side through ESDC in LMIA cases

Other common costs

Cost item Notes
Medical exam Paid to panel physician; amount varies by country
Police certificate Varies by issuing country
Translation/notarization Varies widely
VAC service/courier Depends on location
TRV fee if required Separate from work permit in some cases/processes
Travel costs Airfare and relocation vary widely
Renewal/extension fee Separate fee if extending
Dependent fees Each family member may have their own fees

Warning

Do not rely on unofficial fee lists. Use the current IRCC fee page and your local visa application centre instructions.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct category

Check whether you need: – employer-specific work permit – open work permit – business visitor classification – study permit – another route

2. Confirm LMIA or LMIA exemption

Your employer may need to: – obtain a positive LMIA, or – submit an LMIA-exempt offer of employment and pay the compliance fee if required

3. Gather documents

Collect applicant-side documents and employer-side support.

4. Create IRCC account / complete forms

Most applications are filed online through IRCC.

5. Pay fees

Pay the processing fee and biometrics fee, if applicable.

6. Submit application

Upload supporting documents and submit.

7. Give biometrics

If required, attend a biometrics collection appointment.

8. Complete medicals or police checks

If instructed or proactively required under stream rules.

9. Track application

Use the IRCC account and processing tools.

10. Respond to additional document requests

Provide requested documents quickly and consistently.

11. Decision

If approved from outside Canada, you may receive: – a letter of introduction – and, if applicable, a TRV in your passport or eTA issuance linked electronically

12. Travel to Canada

Carry your approval documents.

13. Port of entry issuance

In many overseas cases, the actual work permit document is issued by CBSA at arrival after final examination.

14. Post-arrival steps

Apply for: – Social Insurance Number (SIN) – provincial health coverage, if eligible – school enrollment for children – banking and housing setup

Online vs paper

Online is standard for many applicants. Some cases may still involve paper or visa office-specific handling, but online is generally preferred where available.

14. Processing time

Official standard times

Canada does not have one single global processing time for all employer-specific work permits. Processing times vary by:

  • country of application
  • whether biometrics are completed
  • completeness
  • medical/security screening
  • workload
  • stream type

IRCC publishes processing times online and updates them regularly.

What affects timing

  • missing documents
  • employer-side errors
  • security checks
  • medical delays
  • peak season
  • passport submission delays
  • local VAC logistics

Priority options

There is no general premium processing product for all applicants like in some countries. Some employer or program facilitation may exist in limited contexts, but not as a universal purchase option.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Many applicants must give biometrics unless exempt.

Biometrics usually involve: – fingerprints – photo

They are generally given at an authorized collection location.

Interview

A formal interview is not automatic in every work permit case. If requested, it may focus on: – your job – your qualifications – your employer – your plans in Canada – your immigration history

Medical exam

Required in certain circumstances, especially: – recent residence in designated countries for long periods – intended work in healthcare, childcare, primary/secondary school settings, or certain agriculture jobs

Medical exams must be done with an IRCC panel physician.

Police checks

May be requested depending on background and country history.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

IRCC does publish broad immigration data in some contexts, but there is no single simple official approval-rate page for all employer-specific work permits by every stream that applicants can rely on as a universal benchmark.

Practical refusal patterns

Based on official requirements, refusals commonly arise from:

  • weak employer documents
  • wrong LMIA-exemption code
  • inability to prove qualifications
  • inadmissibility issues
  • inadequate explanation of role
  • incomplete forms
  • temporary intent concerns in some cases
  • mismatch between employer offer and supporting evidence

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Official-rule-based strengthening

  • match your documents exactly to the job requirements
  • ensure the offer letter, LMIA/exemption details, and application form all align
  • include licenses or registration proof if the occupation is regulated
  • provide clear proof of experience, not just a CV
  • explain any gaps in employment history
  • provide clean translations
  • disclose previous refusals honestly

Practical tips

Pro Tip: Add a short evidence index at the front of your upload pack listing each document and what it proves.

Pro Tip: If your bank statement has unusual large deposits, add a one-page explanation with supporting proof.

Common Mistake: Uploading a job offer letter that does not match the LMIA job title, NOC, wage, or location.

Cover note value

A concise cover letter can help tie the file together, especially in complex cases.

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

  • Apply early enough to handle biometrics, medicals, and passport logistics.
  • Ask the employer to review all details for consistency before submission.
  • Use file names like 01-Passport.pdf, 02-JobOffer.pdf, 03-LMIA.pdf.
  • Combine small supporting documents into logical PDFs instead of many random uploads.
  • If reapplying after refusal, address each refusal point directly with new evidence.
  • Keep copies of everything submitted, including screenshots of forms.
  • If using a representative, still read your own application before submission.
  • Carry employer contact details and your approval letter when traveling.
  • Do not book irreversible travel too early unless the risk is acceptable.
  • If applying with family, organize each person’s evidence separately plus a family-summary cover letter.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

Not always mandatory, but highly useful when: – your case is complex – you changed fields – your documents need explanation – you had previous refusals – funds or timelines need context

What to include

  1. Your identity and purpose
  2. Employer details
  3. Job summary
  4. LMIA or exemption basis
  5. Why you qualify
  6. Financial readiness
  7. Compliance statement
  8. Family details, if relevant
  9. List of supporting evidence

What not to say

  • anything untrue
  • vague statements about “any work”
  • inconsistent PR-only language if your temporary compliance case is weak
  • emotional claims without evidence

Sample outline

  • Introduction
  • Job offer summary
  • Eligibility and qualifications
  • Immigration compliance
  • Funds and settlement
  • Family arrangements
  • Closing

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Employer role

In most cases, the “sponsor” is effectively the employer support structure, though this is not family sponsorship law.

The employer may need to provide: – job offer letter – LMIA or LMIA-related documents – Employer Portal offer number for LMIA-exempt cases, where applicable – business legitimacy evidence, if requested

Employer mistakes

  • wrong wage details
  • unclear duties
  • wrong work location
  • mismatch between job title and LMIA
  • failure to pay employer compliance fee where required

Accommodation support

If the employer provides housing, a support letter can help. It should state: – address or type of housing – whether free or subsidized – who pays utilities – duration

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes, often possible, but they need their own immigration status documents.

Who qualifies

  • spouse
  • common-law partner
  • dependent children as defined by current Canadian immigration rules

Proof required

  • marriage certificate
  • evidence of genuine relationship
  • proof of common-law cohabitation where relevant
  • children’s birth certificates
  • custody/consent papers for minors

Work/study rights of dependents

These rights depend on the principal worker’s status, occupation, stream, and current policy.

A spouse may, in some cases, qualify for: – an open work permit

Children may: – study in Canada subject to current rules and whether a study permit is required in their case

Because family-member work authorization policies have changed in recent years, applicants must verify current eligibility carefully.

Combined vs separate applications

Families can often apply together, but each person’s forms and supporting documents still matter.

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Work rights

The principal permit holder may work: – only under the conditions printed on the work permit

This often includes: – employer name – occupation – location – validity dates

Self-employment

Usually not allowed unless specifically authorized through the permit basis.

Side income

Usually not allowed if it amounts to unauthorized work outside permit conditions.

Passive income

Generally fine if it is truly passive, such as investments, but tax consequences may arise.

Study rights

Some work permit holders can study in Canada without a separate study permit if the course meets the statutory exemption conditions. Longer or ineligible study usually requires a study permit.

Business meetings

Attending meetings related to your authorized employment is generally fine.

Receiving payment in Canada

Only for authorized work or otherwise lawful activity.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance vs final admission

Even if your application is approved, final admission is decided by CBSA at the border.

Carry these documents

  • passport
  • letter of introduction, if issued
  • job offer letter
  • LMIA or exemption support summary
  • proof of qualifications
  • proof of funds
  • accommodation details
  • employer contact information

Return or onward ticket

Not always mandatory, but you should be able to explain your travel and work plans.

New passport

If your TRV is in an old passport or your circumstances changed, review current IRCC guidance before travel.

Dual nationality

Travel document rules can vary depending on which passport you use.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Yes, often.

A worker may apply to extend if: – the employer still needs them – a new LMIA or continued exemption basis exists – status is maintained properly – the application is filed before expiry

Changing employers

Usually requires: – a new work permit application – new supporting employer documentation – and, where required, a new LMIA or exemption process

Switching inside Canada

In some situations, people can apply from inside Canada to change conditions or status. Eligibility depends on current status and category.

Maintained status

If you apply before expiry, you may usually continue under previous work conditions while waiting, if the legal requirements are met.

Restoration

If status expires, restoration may be possible within the legal deadline, but you generally cannot keep working unless specifically authorized.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does this permit count toward PR?

Indirectly, yes.

It can help by providing: – Canadian skilled work experience – arranged employment value in some contexts – eligibility for provincial nomination programs

Common PR pathways later

  • Express Entry
  • Canadian Experience Class
  • Federal Skilled Worker Program
  • Federal Skilled Trades Program
  • Provincial Nominee Programs
  • Atlantic-related options where relevant

Citizenship

This permit alone does not lead directly to citizenship. Usually the path is:

  1. Temporary work permit
  2. Permanent residence
  3. Citizenship later, if eligible

Physical presence

Citizenship rules are separate and require checking current law and calculations.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax

Most workers in Canada will have: – income tax obligations – payroll deductions – possible tax residency implications depending on facts

SIN

A Social Insurance Number is generally needed to work legally and be paid.

Provincial obligations

Depending on province: – health insurance registration – driver licensing timelines – school registration for children

Work permit compliance

You must: – work only as authorized – stop work when required – maintain valid status – respect occupation restrictions and medical restrictions printed on the permit

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

TRV vs eTA

Whether you need a visa sticker or eTA depends on nationality.

Port of entry applications

Some foreign nationals may be able to apply at a port of entry in certain circumstances, but eligibility is restricted and can change. It is not available for everyone and can be affected by nationality, residence, and current legal/policy rules.

International agreements

Some LMIA-exempt work permits are available only to nationals covered by certain agreements.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Possible, but extra documentation and legal/workplace considerations apply.

Divorced or separated parents

For child applications: – custody documents – travel consent – school arrangements
may be needed

Same-sex spouses/partners

Canada recognizes qualifying spouses and common-law partners regardless of sex, subject to standard proof rules.

Stateless persons and refugees

Possible but document requirements can be more complex.

Prior refusals

Must be disclosed. Failure to disclose can create serious misrepresentation issues.

Criminal records

A record may trigger inadmissibility analysis. Legal advice may be important.

Applying from a third country

Possible in many cases, but local processing logistics and lawful presence in that country may matter.

Gender marker/name mismatch

If documents differ, include legal change documents and a short explanation.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth Fact
A work permit is the same as a visa No. Many people also need a TRV or eTA to travel
An employer-specific work permit lets me work any job No. It is usually tied to one employer and set conditions
If I have a job offer, approval is automatic No. The officer still reviews eligibility, admissibility, and documentation
I can start working as soon as I land, even before permit issuance You need the actual authorization and must read its conditions
My spouse automatically gets a work permit No. Eligibility depends on current policy and the principal worker’s situation
I can ignore a past refusal if it was long ago No. Disclose it honestly
I can study freely on any work permit No. Study rights are limited and rule-based

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

You usually receive a refusal letter explaining the main reasons.

Is there an appeal?

There is generally no standard full appeal right for most temporary resident work permit refusals in the same way as some other immigration categories.

Possible options can include: – reapplication with stronger evidence – judicial review in Federal Court, where appropriate – case-specific reconsideration requests in limited situations

Refund

Processing fees are usually not refunded after processing starts, though biometrics rules may vary by circumstance.

Reapplying

Best when: – you understand the refusal reasons – you have new evidence – you have corrected inconsistencies

GCMS notes

Applicants often request case notes under Canada’s access processes to better understand a refusal. This can be useful before reapplying.

31. Arrival in Canada: what happens next?

At the airport or land border

A CBSA officer examines: – your passport – approval letter – supporting work documents – admissibility

If satisfied, the officer issues the work permit or activates your status.

Check the permit immediately

Before leaving the inspection area, verify: – your name – employer name – occupation – location – expiry date – any remarks

First steps after arrival

First 7 days

  • review permit conditions
  • contact employer
  • arrange housing
  • apply for SIN

First 14 days

  • open bank account
  • register children for school if applicable
  • check provincial health coverage eligibility

First 30 days

  • get local phone number
  • understand payroll deductions
  • update records with employer

First 90 days

  • monitor permit expiry planning
  • keep copies of pay stubs and employment letters
  • assess PR or extension planning if relevant

32. Real-world timeline examples

Example 1: Solo worker, LMIA-based

  • Weeks 1–8+: employer gets LMIA
  • Weeks 9–10: worker gathers documents
  • Week 11: online submission
  • Week 12: biometrics
  • Weeks 13–20+: processing
  • Week 21: approval and travel prep
  • Week 23: arrival and permit issuance

Example 2: Skilled worker with spouse and child

  • Employer finalizes offer and support
  • Family gathers civil documents and funds proof
  • Main worker applies with family applications
  • Biometrics for adults, possibly minors depending on rules
  • Approval issued
  • Family travels together
  • Spouse pursues own work authorization if approved/eligible
  • Child enrolls in school

Example 3: LMIA-exempt intra-company transfer

  • Employer confirms exemption category
  • Employer Portal submission completed
  • Worker files online with transfer evidence
  • Biometrics/medical if required
  • Approval and entry
  • Permit checked for exact employer and role conditions

33. Ideal document pack structure

Suggested naming convention

  • 01_Passport_MainApplicant.pdf
  • 02_ApplicationForms.pdf
  • 03_JobOffer_and_Contract.pdf
  • 04_LMIA_or_ExemptionDocs.pdf
  • 05_CV_and_EmploymentReferences.pdf
  • 06_Education_and_Licenses.pdf
  • 07_FinancialProof.pdf
  • 08_CoverLetter.pdf
  • 09_FamilyDocs.pdf

PDF order

  1. Cover letter
  2. Document index
  3. Passport
  4. Job offer
  5. LMIA/exemption documents
  6. Qualifications
  7. Financials
  8. Family records
  9. Extra explanations

Scan quality tips

  • use clear color scans
  • ensure all corners visible
  • avoid shadows and blur
  • keep translations attached to originals

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • correct category confirmed
  • employer paperwork complete
  • passport valid
  • job offer consistent across all documents
  • funds evidence ready
  • family documents ready
  • translations prepared
  • medical/police requirements checked

Submission-day checklist

  • forms complete
  • names and dates consistent
  • fee paid
  • uploads legible
  • cover letter added if useful
  • copy of final submission saved

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • passport
  • appointment letter
  • fee proof if needed
  • clean copy of application summary
  • employer and job details memorized accurately

Arrival checklist

  • passport
  • approval letter
  • job offer
  • LMIA/exemption support
  • proof of funds
  • address in Canada
  • employer phone number

Extension/renewal checklist

  • apply before expiry
  • updated employer support
  • new LMIA or exemption basis if needed
  • current pay records
  • current passport
  • updated family applications if relevant

Refusal recovery checklist

  • read refusal reasons carefully
  • request notes if needed
  • identify missing evidence
  • correct contradictions
  • update cover letter
  • reapply only when the file is materially stronger

35. FAQs

1. Is an employer-specific work permit the same as a closed work permit?

Yes, in common usage.

2. Do I always need an LMIA?

No. Some cases are LMIA-exempt.

3. Can I work for two employers on this permit?

Only if the permit specifically authorizes that. Many do not.

4. Can I change employers after arriving?

Usually only after obtaining new authorization.

5. Is a job offer enough by itself?

No. The employer-side immigration requirements must also be met.

6. Do I need a visa sticker too?

Depends on your nationality. You may need a TRV or eTA.

7. Can I apply from inside Canada?

Sometimes, if you meet inland eligibility rules.

8. Can I apply at the airport?

Only in some cases, and not for everyone.

9. Can my spouse come with me?

Often yes, through separate family applications.

10. Can my spouse work in Canada?

Possibly, depending on current policy and your work situation.

11. Can my children attend school?

Often yes, but status requirements still matter.

12. How long is the permit valid?

Usually tied to the job authorization basis and passport validity.

13. Can I extend it?

Often yes, if you remain eligible.

14. What if my passport expires early?

Your permit may be shortened.

15. Do I need proof of funds?

Yes, generally enough to support yourself and dependents.

16. Do I need an interview?

Not always.

17. Do I need a medical exam?

Sometimes, depending on country history and job type.

18. Can I study on this permit?

Sometimes, but only within current exemption rules or with a study permit.

19. Can I freelance on the side?

Usually no.

20. Does this lead directly to PR?

No direct automatic route, but it can help.

21. What happens if I lose my job?

Your right to work may end unless you get new authorization.

22. What if I apply to extend before expiry?

You may have maintained status if legal requirements are met.

23. Can I re-enter Canada with only my work permit?

Not always. You may also need a valid TRV or eTA.

24. What if I was refused before?

Disclose it and address the reasons honestly.

25. Can I include family in one application package?

Often yes, but each person still needs proper forms and supporting evidence.

26. Is business travel outside Canada allowed during validity?

Usually yes, but re-entry depends on travel documents and admissibility.

27. Can I start work while my extension is in process?

Often yes under maintained status, if you applied in time and meet the conditions.

28. Do I need police certificates up front?

Not always, but they may be requested.

29. What if my employer made an error in the offer details?

Fix it before travel if possible; mismatches can cause delays or border issues.

30. Does Canadian work experience under this permit help Express Entry?

It can, if it fits the applicable PR program rules.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are key official sources. Rules change, so verify again before applying.

37. Final verdict

The employer-specific work permit is best for people who already have a real Canadian job opportunity and a clear legal work permit basis, whether LMIA-based or LMIA-exempt.

Biggest benefits

  • lawful employment in Canada
  • potential family accompaniment
  • strong platform for future PR planning
  • access to Canadian work experience

Biggest risks

  • employer paperwork errors
  • wrong LMIA-exemption selection
  • document mismatch
  • assuming the permit itself is enough for travel
  • misunderstanding spouse/dependent rights

Top preparation advice

  • confirm the exact work permit stream first
  • ensure employer and applicant documents match perfectly
  • submit strong proof of qualifications and financial readiness
  • check passport validity early
  • verify current family-work-policy rules before applying together

When to consider another visa

Consider another route if you: – just want to visit Canada – only need business visitor activities – need broad work flexibility better suited to an open work permit – mainly intend to study – do not yet have a qualifying job offer

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Whether your nationality requires a TRV or only an eTA
  • Whether you are eligible to apply from inside Canada or at a port of entry
  • Whether your case requires an LMIA or qualifies for an LMIA exemption
  • The current employer compliance fee and IRCC processing fee
  • Current processing times for your country of residence
  • Whether your occupation requires an immigration medical exam
  • Whether your spouse currently qualifies for an open work permit under current policy
  • Whether your dependent child needs a separate study permit in your situation
  • Local visa application centre procedures for biometrics and passport submission
  • Province-specific health coverage waiting periods
  • Whether your job is in a regulated occupation requiring provincial licensing
  • Whether recent public policy changes affect your stream, sector, or family eligibility

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