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Spouse Open Work Permit (SOWP) 2024-2025 changes: who still qualifies after the January 2025 restrictions

Summary โ€” On January 21, 2025, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) implemented major restrictions on the Spouse Open Work Permit (SOWP) program โ€” one of Canada's most popular work authorization streams. Previously, spouses of international students and most foreign workers could obtain an open work permit allowing them to work for any Canadian employer. Under the new rules, most spouses of international students no longer qualify, and spouses of foreign workers must show their principal applicant works in TEER 0 or 1 (managerial/professional) roles, with limited exceptions for certain TEER 2/3 occupations in shortage sectors. This guide breaks down exactly who still qualifies, who's affected, and what pathways remain for affected families.

Background: what changed and why

The SOWP program existed for years as part of the International Mobility Program (IMP), allowing spouses to:

  • Work for any employer in Canada.
  • Reside legally with the principal applicant.
  • Build Canadian work experience for future PR pathways.

The January 2025 changes are part of broader IRCC moves to manage temporary resident volumes, which had grown to over 3 million in 2023-2024. By tightening SOWP eligibility, IRCC aims to reduce overall numbers while continuing to support highly skilled foreign workers and their families.

What's new (January 21, 2025)

Spouses of international students

Before: spouses of any full-time international student in a public DLI could get an SOWP for the duration of the student's program.

After:

  • Spouses now only qualify if the student is in:
    • A master's program of 16+ months.
    • A doctoral (PhD) program.
    • A professional and eligible program (medicine, law, dentistry, pharmacy, engineering, etc. โ€” full list on canada.ca).
  • Bachelor's-level students: spouses no longer eligible for SOWP.
  • College/CEGEP students: spouses no longer eligible for SOWP (with very limited exceptions).

Spouses of foreign workers

Before: spouses of most foreign workers (TEER 0, 1, 2, 3) could get an SOWP automatically.

After:

  • TEER 0 (management) or TEER 1 (professional): spouse still eligible for SOWP.
  • TEER 2 or TEER 3: spouse no longer automatically eligible, with exceptions for labour shortage occupations (specific NOCs in healthcare, construction, agriculture, manufacturing โ€” list updated periodically).
  • Principal applicant must have at least 16 months remaining on their work permit at the time of SOWP application.

Spouses of permanent resident applicants and refugees

Unchanged โ€” these spouses continue to qualify based on existing rules.

Who still qualifies in 2025

Category 1: Spouse of TEER 0/1 worker

  • Principal applicant is a manager (TEER 0) or professional (TEER 1).
  • Examples: software engineer (NOC 21231), physician (NOC 31100), financial manager (NOC 10010), engineering manager (NOC 20010).
  • Most Global Talent Stream (GTS) workers, CUSMA professionals, Intra-Company Transferees (ICT) still qualify.

Category 2: Spouse of master's/PhD student

  • Student is in a master's program of 16+ months OR a PhD.
  • Student must be enrolled full-time at a public DLI.
  • SOWP duration: matches student's status duration.

Category 3: Spouse of certain professional program student

Professional/regulated programs that qualify (partial list):

  • Medicine (MD)
  • Dentistry (DDS, DMD)
  • Pharmacy (PharmD)
  • Veterinary medicine
  • Law (LLB, JD)
  • Optometry (OD)
  • Engineering (BASc, MASc, PhD)
  • Architecture (M.Arch)
  • Education (B.Ed, M.Ed)

Category 4: Spouse of TEER 2/3 worker in shortage occupations

Limited list of TEER 2/3 NOCs where SOWP is still available, including:

  • Healthcare aides (NOC 33102)
  • Long-haul truck drivers (NOC 73300)
  • Construction trades (electricians, plumbers, welders)
  • Agriculture and food processing

Full list maintained by IRCC.

Who's no longer eligible

  • Spouses of bachelor's degree students (university undergrad).
  • Spouses of college/CEGEP students (most diploma/certificate programs).
  • Spouses of TEER 2/3 workers outside shortage list.
  • Spouses of TEER 4/5 workers (already excluded before 2025).

Application process for SOWP

Step 1: Confirm eligibility

  • Verify principal applicant's status (study or work permit).
  • Verify category eligibility (TEER level, program type).
  • Confirm marriage or common-law relationship is documented.

Step 2: Gather documents

  • Copy of principal applicant's permit.
  • Marriage certificate or common-law evidence (12+ months cohabitation).
  • Spouse's passport.
  • Spouse's biographical information.
  • Letter from principal applicant's employer (for foreign workers) or DLI enrollment letter (for students).

Step 3: Apply online

  • Through IRCC portal.
  • Fees:
    • Work permit fee: $155 CAD.
    • Open work permit holder fee: $100 CAD.
    • Biometrics: $85 CAD.
    • Total: ~$340 CAD.

Step 4: Biometrics

  • At nearest VAC.
  • Required for most applicants from outside Canada.

Step 5: Decision

  • Processing time: 2-4 months typically.
  • Approved permit issued at port of entry or by mail/portal if applying inside Canada.

Pathways for ineligible spouses

Option 1: LMIA-based work permit

  • Find a Canadian employer willing to apply for an LMIA.
  • More expensive ($1,000+ for employer) and longer (3-6 months).
  • Tied to specific employer.

Option 2: Visitor record + intent to study

  • Spouse enters as visitor.
  • Considers studying themselves at a DLI.
  • After enrollment, can apply for own study permit.
  • Can work 20 hours/week during studies (off-campus work permit).

Option 3: Apply directly through Express Entry

  • If spouse independently qualifies for Express Entry (Canadian or foreign experience, language, education), apply for PR.
  • This bypasses SOWP entirely.

Option 4: PNP based on principal applicant's job

  • Some PNPs allow PR application that includes spouse without requiring spouse's separate work permit.
  • Examples: Ontario OINP, BC PNP, Alberta AAIP.

Option 5: Wait for principal applicant's PR

  • Once principal applicant gets PR, spouse becomes a permanent resident automatically (as accompanying family).
  • Spouse then has full work authorization.

Strategic considerations

For newly-arrived families (post-January 2025)

  • Plan ahead: confirm SOWP eligibility before relocating.
  • Research alternative pathways (visitor + study, LMIA, PNP).
  • Consider TEER level of principal applicant's job.

For families already in Canada with SOWP

  • Existing SOWPs remain valid until expiry.
  • Renewal under old rules may apply if criteria met.
  • No retroactive cancellation of valid permits.

For students considering Canada

  • Master's and PhD applicants: spouses still qualify.
  • Undergraduate applicants: budget for spouse working as a student or visitor.
  • College/diploma applicants: spouse won't qualify for SOWP โ€” plan accordingly.

Impact on key applicant groups

Indian families

India has historically been the largest source of SOWP applications. The changes affect:

  • Tens of thousands of college students (Conestoga, Centennial, Seneca, etc.).
  • Working professionals in TEER 2/3 roles outside shortage list.

Filipino families

  • Many caregivers (TEER 4/5) were already excluded.
  • New healthcare aides (TEER 3) may still qualify under shortage list.

South American (Brazil, Mexico, Colombia)

  • Many CUSMA professionals (TEER 0/1) continue to qualify.
  • Diploma students' spouses no longer qualify.

European (Germany, France, UK)

  • Most IEC participants are exempt as principal applicant but cannot bring spouses on SOWP.
  • Working professionals with TEER 0/1 jobs continue to qualify.

Key facts

  • Effective date: January 21, 2025.
  • TEER 0/1 worker spouses: still eligible.
  • TEER 2/3 worker spouses: only if in shortage occupation list.
  • Master's/PhD student spouses: eligible.
  • Bachelor's/college student spouses: NOT eligible (with rare exceptions).
  • Existing SOWPs: remain valid until expiry.
  • Application fees: $340 CAD total.
  • Processing time: 2-4 months.
  • Renewal: typically requires meeting current rules at time of renewal.
  • Alternative pathways: LMIA, visitor + study, PNP, direct Express Entry.

Source attribution

This article rewrites public information published by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada at https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/permit/spouses-open-work-permit-temporary-residents.html. The original Government of Canada content is licensed under the Open Government Licence โ€” Canada.

Verify on canada.ca

SOWP rules, shortage occupation lists, and eligibility categories change periodically. Verify before applying at canada.ca.


IRCC.com is an independent news and information aggregator. We are not affiliated with the Government of Canada and do not provide immigration services or advice. For personalized assistance, contact a CICC-licensed Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) or a Canadian immigration lawyer.

IRCC.com is independent and not affiliated with the Government of Canada. Verify all details on canada.ca/immigration.

Verify on canada.ca: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/permit/spouses-open-work-permit-temporary-residents.html
IRCC.com is independent โ€” not the Government of Canada. Confirm all details on the official source before acting.

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