Canada Issuing Record Numbers Of Study Permits As Top Destination For International Students

ApplyBoard has revealed Canada is processing record numbers of study permits for international students and leads English-speaking western countries as a destination for international study – but the United States and Germany are catching up.

In its Top Trends in International Education for 2024 and Beyond report, the Canadian educational technology company highlights Canada’s enviable position as a favourite destination for international study.

“Canada processed nearly 740,000 student visa applications in 2022, shattering the previous year’s record by 34 per cent … (and) 2023 is also poised for yet another all-time high,” notes the report.

“Canada processed more than 660,000 applications through the first nine months of the calendar year.”

The United States, though, is seeing massive growth in its international student population.


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“The United States experienced the largest swing in student interest. The U.S. government processed more than 630,000 F-1 visa applications for its 2022 fiscal year,” notes ApplyBoard. “This was 42 per cent more than in 2021 and the highest number of student visa applications processed since 2016, when the U.S. sector started trending downward.”

Across the pond, the United Kingdom is also seeing very significant growth in its student population.

“In the United Kingdom, nearly 490,000 sponsored study visa applications were processed in 2022. This surpassed the previous year by 26 per cent,” notes ApplyBoard.

There is concern, though, that international student growth in the UK may have plateaued.


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“During the first six months of 2023, the UK processed 105,000 visas for sponsored study. While this was four per cent more than the same period in 2022, it’s a far cry from the 58 per cent growth between 2021 and 2022. Indeed, many UK institutions reported lower-than-expected enrollment for the September, 2023 intake and a decline in applications looking toward January, 2024 and beyond.”

Outside of the English-speaking world, Germany is showing signs of emerging as a leader in international education.

“We predict that Germany will be their biggest contender for international students, notes ApplyBoard. “Germany hosted nearly 368,000 students in 2022/23, up five per cent over 2021/22 and a new record high.

“Germany offers free tuition for nearly all study programs at public universities and students can apply for an extended 18-month job-seeking visa to find work related to their area of study. Nearly 40 per cent of international students in Germany remain in the country long-term.”

In Canada, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) is eyeing reforms to stop fraud in international student admissions by bad actors.

IRCC Putting In Reforms To Fight Fraud In International Student Admissions

Those reforms are to include:

  • a requirement, starting Dec. 1 this year that all colleges and universities deemed to be Designated Learning Institutions (DLI) be required to confirm every applicant’s letter of acceptance directly with Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).
  • a new “recognized institution” framework by autumn next year to benefit post-secondary DLIs that set a higher standard for services, support and outcomes for international students. These DLIs will benefit, for example, from the priority processing of study permits for applicants who plan to attend their school.
  • an assessment of Post-Graduation Work Permit Program (PGWP) criteria over the coming months and reforms to better calibrate it to meet the needs of the Canadian labour market, as well as regional and francophone immigration goals.

The details of those reforms are to be unveiled later.

“International students are talented, bright and deserving of a positive experience as they pursue their studies in Canada,” said Immigration Minister Marc Miller earlier this year.

“We will continue to improve Canada’s International Student Program by protecting students and weeding out those who try to take advantage of them. Whether an international student stays and works after graduation or returns home, we want their time as a student in Canada to have been beneficial to their growth and aspirations.”

The move by the immigration minister came only days after Michèle Kingsley, the IRCC’s assistant deputy minister of operations, told the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration that 30 international students have already been granted temporary study permits to stay in Canada after a five-month investigation by the federal government.

“If a student had enrolled within three semesters of their arrival and there were no other problems or issues with their applications, such as criminal activity, the task force assessed that person to be a genuine student,” said Kingsley.

“The task force has reviewed 103 cases and determined 63 were genuine students. To date, 30 have been approved for temporary resident permits of up to three years.”

Both Miller and Kingsley recognize the important contributions international students make to Canada.

International education accounts for more than $22 billion in economic activity annually, greater than Canada’s exports of auto parts, lumber or aircraft, and supports more than 200,000 jobs in Canada. The temporary drop in international students in 2020 resulted in a loss of more than $7 billion for Canada’s gross domestic product that year.

“They support our local economies and bolster the skilled workforce across Canada,” said Kingsley.

In Canada, each of the 10 provinces and three territories runs its own educational system and determines which schools, including elementary, middle and secondary schools as well as colleges and universities, are DLIs.

International students can search a list of the post-secondary schools, such as colleges and universities, and language schools that are DLIs in each province and territory on the federal government’s website here.

Since many international students want to work in Canada upon graduation with a PGWP, it is also important for them to know before they start their studies that not all DLIs and programs make them eligible for this work permit.

Colleges And Universities Provide International Students With Lists Of Required Documents

“Along with graduating from a PGWP-eligible designated learning institution, you need to meet all other criteria to get a post-graduation work permit,” notes the IRCC.

Once an international student has chosen a school, college or university, he or she must apply to go there and follow that school’s admission requirements. The admission fees can vary considerably from one school to another.

Canadian immigration officials suggest applying at least six months in advance to study at a primary or secondary school and one year in advance for a post-secondary program at a university or college.

“Contact the school where you want to study to learn how to apply,” notes the IRCC. “They’ll give you the list of all the documents you need to send them. They’ll also be able to tell you about: the cost to apply; tuition fees; health insurance; rent and how much it costs to live in Canada, and; language tests.”

Schools in Canada send international students acceptance letters once they have been admitted and that letter is a very important part of the application process for a study permit.

It’s at the point that a college or university has accepted an international student that he or she should apply for a study permit.

That is usually done online but those who suffer from a disability or some other barrier that prevents them from applying online or makes applying online unreliable can be exempted from this requirement and submit a paper application.

International students applying to a school in Quebec, will also receive, along with their acceptance letter, a Certificat d’Acceptation du Québec (CAQ) and must include this document in their study permit applications.

International Students Urged To Get Adequate Health Insurance

International students are responsible for their own healthcare costs as neither Canada nor the provinces pay for the medical costs of foreign students. Health coverage for foreign students varies between provinces.

It is very important for international students to ensure they have adequate medical and health insurance and can in an emergency situation pay those costs up front as many clinics and hospitals will insist on those payments being made upon treatment and insurance companies may only reimburse those costs later.

International students are advised to contact their schools to get more information about medical coverage and health insurance.

In order to successfully gain entry into Canada under the Student Direct Stream (SDS), every international student will also have to prove proficiency in English or French. The International English Language Testing System (IELTS) is the preferred test for proficiency in English and students must score 6.0 or higher in each language skill: listening, reading and speaking. For francophone students, a Test d’Évaluation de Français (TEF) score that is equivalent to a Canadian Language Benchmarks (CLB) score of at least seven for each ability is required.

Canada Immigration Will Need To Increase, RBC Economics Says

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An RBC Economics update says a massive increase in annual immigration to Canada resulting in up to 842,053 new permanent residents – or 2.1 per cent of the country’s current population every year – is needed to revitalize its aging demographics.

“Canada needs immigrants over the long term,” notes RBC Economics in its Nov  1 update.

“Even the annual immigrant intake of 1.3 per cent of the population is not sufficient to stabilize the age structure of the population, which would require about 2.1 per cent.”

Based on Canada’s current population of 40,097,761 in July this year, an annual immigration rate of 2.1 per cent of the population would mean more than 842,000 new permanent residents annually.

That would be 73.6 per cent more immigrants to Canada annually than the 485,000 new permanent residents Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has set as its target for next year, 2024.


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Under its newly-released 2024-2026 Immigration Levels Plan, Canada is also planning to welcome 500,000 new permanent residents in 2025 and then hold the line on immigration in 2026 with another 500,000 new permanent residents.

That’s a total of 1.485 million immigrants to Canada over those three years.

Given the growth of the Canadian population during those upcoming three years, the 2026 target for immigration to Canada actually represents a slight drop in the rate of immigration to the country, the first such decline in the immigration rate in years.

In its latest update, RBC Economics approves of that pause in immigration, explaining that it is likely the right move for Ottawa given the housing crisis in the country.

“The government is responding to concerns that Canada’s infrastructure – especially housing – cannot withstand a greater influx of people without first addressing structural impediments to improving infrastructure and better integrating immigrants into the labour market,” notes RBC Economics.


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“Canadians are also concerned about unprecedented levels of international students and other temporary residents the past two years. Net temporary resident inflows outnumbered immigration inflows in 2022-23, the first time in the 50 years since the series was tracked.”

The Canadian bank’s team of economists and researchers agree Ottawa’s pause on increasing immigration is appropriate given the current challenges.

“Addressing an unrestrained temporary resident population is essential since it may further erode support for permanent residents, which contribute long-term to the Canadian economy,” notes RBC Economics. “Here the feds will need to lean heavily on the provinces and may need to resort to stronger federal incentives to get them to budge.”

Canada On Track To Welcome 494,853 New Permanent Residents This Year

The update also urges Ottawa to be more strategic in its selection of immigrants and temporary residents who often become future immigrants, choosing those with the strongest long-term economic prospects, including those outside highly-educated fields.

IRCC data reveals Canada is already on track to welcome far more than its planned number of immigrants this year.

During the first nine months of this year, Canada saw the arrival of 371,140 new permanent residents, a level of immigration that would put the country on track to welcome 494,853 new permanent residents by the end of this year provided the level of immigration continued through to the end of 2023.

Gaza War: Canada Urged to Expand its Definition of Immediate Family

Some Canadians who escaped the Gaza Strip claim to have had to leave loved ones behind, with criticism directed towards Canada’s definition of “immediate family.”

Canadian citizen Amro Abumiddain, for example, was forced to leave his father in Gaza.

“If it weren’t for my kids I wouldn’t have left my dad, even if I had to die,” he said from his hotel room in Cario, as per The Canadian Press report by Laura Osman.

The Gaza Strip became the target of an Israeli bombing campaign following Hamas’ October 7 attack on Israel that killed 1,200 people.

Since then, more than 11,000 Palestinians are alleged by Hamas to have been killed in Gaza, most of them being women and children. A further 2,700 people have been reported missing.


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Abumiddain had been staying with his father on the family farm since the inception of the Israeli offensive.

Although Canada was working towards evacuating him and his children, the United States succeeded in getting them out more quickly owing to his twin sons’ American citizenship. He had to leave his 78-year-old father behind, however.

Canada’s evacuation efforts in Gaza have been in the works for weeks, focused on getting around 550 Canadian citizens, permanent residents, and family members out of the region through the tightly controlled Rafah border.

The exit of foreign nationals from Gaza has been negotiated between Egypt and Israel, with Qatar acting as a mediating body.

356 people with links to Canada have successfully made it through the border as of now, Global Affairs Canada said on Monday.

However, Ottawa is being criticized for its definition of “immediate family,” which – unlike the US –does not include parents under its legal bracket; rather, it extends only to spouses, common-law partners, dependent children, and grandchildren.

Parents, in-laws, and siblings are not being offered a spot on Canada’s list of potential evacuees.

Osman reported that Abumiddain’s father is also unwilling to leave his brother, having worked with him on the family farm for a long time.


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Abumiddain is requesting Canada to widen the legal definition of immediate family, to allow the family to stay together. The Canadian Council for Refugees has also been advocating for a broader definition to allow individuals to escape and find refuge with their loved ones in Canada.

Co-executive director Gauri Sreenivasan said that the government needs to recognize how modern families are composed and support systems are organized within them, so that narrow definitions are avoided.

“I think this is a time for us to be generous and identify what are the opportunities to get people who are trying to leave to safety, including their families.”

Precedent supports this request. For example, Canada’s evacuation efforts in Afghanistan were underscored by the government expanding the definition of “immediate family” to include “de facto dependents,” which included people who depend on a specific family for emotional or financial purposes and people who live with the family as household members.