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LABOUR MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT

LMIA Applications

High-wage, low-wage, and Global Talent Stream LMIA applications for Canadian employers.

A Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) is a document issued by Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) that confirms a Canadian employer can hire a foreign worker without harming the Canadian labour market. This page covers everything from the employer perspective — streams, advertising requirements, processing times, and 2024–2026 reforms.

LMIA at a glance — employer view

  • Application fee: CAD $1,000 per position (non-refundable, paid before processing)
  • Compliance fee: $230 (for LMIA-exempt hires under International Mobility Program)
  • Validity: Most LMIAs valid for 12 months from issuance (worker has 12 months to use it for a work permit)
  • Processing time: Standard streams 8–12 weeks; GTS 2 weeks; Caregiver and Agricultural variable
  • Required before: Most steps including job offer signing, work permit application, recruitment commitment

LMIA streams comparison

StreamBest forKey requirementProcessing
High-WageSalaries ≥ provincial median wageTransition plan + standard recruitment8–12 weeks
Low-WageSalaries below provincial median wageHousing + transport + healthcare + cap on % of workforce8–12 weeks
AgriculturalPrimary agriculture / SAWPSpecialized housing/wage rules; SAWP for 11 partner countries4–8 weeks
CaregiverIn-home care workDifferent rules for households vs care agencies4–12 weeks
Global Talent StreamTech / specialized talentDesignated partner referral OR GTOL occupation + Labour Market Benefits Plan2 weeks (target)

High-Wage LMIA — the standard pathway

If you're offering a wage at or above the provincial/territorial median wage, you fall into the High-Wage stream. This stream has fewer restrictions but stricter transition plan obligations.

High-Wage requirements

  • Wage: At or above the provincial median wage for the occupation (Ontario ~$28.39/hr, BC ~$28.85/hr, AB ~$29.50/hr — varies and updates annually)
  • Standard recruitment: Advertise on Canada Job Bank + at least 2 other methods (industry-specific job site, local newspaper, professional association, etc.) — for minimum 4 weeks
  • Recruitment must target underrepresented groups — Indigenous persons, persons with disabilities, recent immigrants, youth (post-2022 rule)
  • Transition plan — written plan showing how the employer will reduce reliance on foreign workers over time (training Canadians, hiring local recent grads, automation, etc.)

Low-Wage LMIA — major 2024 reforms

The Low-Wage stream saw the most significant changes in 2024–2025. Caps on the percentage of foreign workers in a workplace were cut, refusal-to-process zones were expanded, and certain regions/industries face moratoriums.

Low-Wage requirements

  • Workforce cap (Sept 2024 reform): Maximum 10% of the workforce can be Low-Wage TFW (down from 20%). Some sectors (food processing, construction) retain higher caps in specific regions.
  • "Refusal to process" zones: ESDC refuses LMIAs in Census Metropolitan Areas with unemployment rates ≥ 6% (for low-wage stream). Updated quarterly.
  • Mandatory employer provisions:
    • Affordable housing OR housing search support
    • Round-trip transportation from country of residence
    • Private health insurance until provincial coverage kicks in
    • Registration with provincial WSIB/WCB
    • Employer-paid recruitment fees (cannot charge worker)
  • Advertising: Same Canada Job Bank + 2 other methods, minimum 4 weeks, must target underrepresented groups
  • Maximum permit duration: Reduced to 1 year in 2024 (was 2 years previously) for most positions

Agricultural Streams

Three distinct LMIA pathways for agricultural employers:

Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP)

  • Government-to-government bilateral program with Mexico + 11 Caribbean countries
  • Maximum 8 months per year per worker
  • Workers return home between seasons
  • Special protections: standardized employer-paid housing, return transportation, $10 daily transport allowance
  • Reduced advertising requirement (industry-specific Job Bank posting)

Agricultural Stream (non-SAWP)

  • Open to workers from any country
  • Up to 24-month work permits
  • Employer must provide adequate housing (inspection required)
  • Wage at or above the federally-set agricultural wage for the province
  • Reduced advertising requirements compared to general LMIA

Stream for Lower-Skilled Occupations (food processing)

  • For meat processing, fish/seafood processing, mushroom production, etc.
  • Falls under Low-Wage rules with industry-specific cap exceptions
  • Standard wage + working condition requirements apply

Caregiver LMIA — for individuals hiring home care workers

The Caregiver LMIA stream applies when a Canadian household (not a business) hires a foreign worker for in-home care of children, seniors, or persons with disabilities. Distinct from the worker-side Home Care Worker Immigration Pilots (HCWP) which is a direct PR pathway.

Key requirements

  • Eligibility: Household with the need (e.g. children under 18, senior 65+, or person with documented disability)
  • Wage: Provincial minimum wage or higher; many provinces set caregiver-specific rates
  • Housing: Live-in is no longer required (since 2014); if live-in, must be private bedroom with lock
  • Advertising: Standard recruitment requirements apply, with specific Job Bank posting for caregiver positions
  • Reduced fee: CAD $1,000 fee waived for households earning under specific income thresholds (Canada Caregiver Pilot Program)

Job Bank Compliance — mandatory advertising

Every LMIA requires advertising on the federal Canada Job Bank. Missing or incorrectly-formatted Job Bank postings is the #1 reason LMIAs get returned without processing.

Job Bank posting must include

  • NOC code and detailed job duties (must match what's on the LMIA application)
  • Wage (must equal or exceed prevailing wage; range with min not below threshold)
  • Location of work
  • Minimum education and experience requirements (cannot be artificially inflated)
  • Language requirements: English OR French only (specifying additional languages flags discrimination)
  • Application instructions (email, phone, or online)
  • Statement targeting underrepresented groups: Indigenous persons, persons with disabilities, recent immigrants, youth

Advertising checklist beyond Job Bank

  • 2 additional methods for high-wage / low-wage streams (industry job site, association, social media, etc.)
  • All ads must run for at least 4 weeks consecutively
  • Documentation: keep screenshots, ad receipts, applicant lists, interview notes, rejection reasons
  • Must list TFW reliance reduction efforts (transition plan summary)

Step-by-step employer LMIA process

  1. Confirm need + stream selection — determine if wage qualifies as high-wage, and which stream applies
  2. Prepare job description + wage analysis — confirm prevailing wage from ESDC's database; the wage you offer must equal/exceed this
  3. Begin recruitment — post on Job Bank + 2 other methods, minimum 4 weeks
  4. Document recruitment — keep all applications, screen each Canadian/PR applicant, document reasons for non-selection
  5. Develop transition plan (high-wage) or housing/transport plan (low-wage)
  6. Submit LMIA application via ESDC online portal with all supporting documents + $1,000 fee per position
  7. Respond to ESDC questions — most files generate at least one clarification request; respond within 5 business days
  8. Receive LMIA decision — positive, neutral (rare), or negative
  9. Send LMIA to worker — worker applies for work permit using the LMIA confirmation letter + employment contract
  10. Ongoing compliance — maintain employment conditions, keep records 6 years (see Employer Compliance)

Documents the employer needs

  • Business registration / incorporation documents
  • Most recent T2 corporate tax return + financial statements (proving business viability)
  • Payroll evidence for current Canadian/PR employees in similar positions
  • Job description with NOC code, duties, wage, location, requirements
  • Recruitment evidence: Job Bank screenshot, 2+ additional ads, applicant log, interview notes
  • Transition plan (high-wage stream)
  • Housing/transportation/healthcare plans (low-wage stream)
  • Worker's CV/resume, qualifications, employment contract
  • Attestation forms (no labour disputes, paid recruitment fees, etc.)

Common LMIA refusal reasons

  • Inadequate or non-compliant Job Bank posting — wrong NOC, wage below prevailing, missing underrepresented-groups language
  • Insufficient recruitment effort — fewer than 2 additional methods, ads ran under 4 weeks, weak documentation
  • Canadian applicants summarily rejected — qualified applicants existed but not properly considered
  • Weak transition plan — high-wage stream applicant didn't show genuine plan to reduce TFW reliance
  • Workforce cap exceeded — low-wage stream applicant has more than 10% TFW already
  • Refusal-to-process zone — applying in a CMA with high unemployment
  • Business not viable — financial documents show inability to sustain the position
  • Past compliance failures — prior ESDC inspections found violations

Useful official resources

Hiring a foreign worker? The LMIA process has 50+ specific requirements that change quarterly. We handle the full process — Job Bank posting drafting, advertising compliance, transition plans, and ESDC response. Book a free LMIA consultation.

At a glance
• $1,000 per position, 12-month validity • 5 main streams (high-wage, low-wage, agriculture, caregiver, GTS) • 2024 reform: low-wage cap cut 20%→10% • Refusal-to-process zones for high-unemployment CMAs • 4-week mandatory advertising (Job Bank + 2 others) • Transition plan required (high-wage) • Housing/transport mandatory (low-wage)
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