
Canada remains a top destination for entrepreneurs, offering stability, clear immigration pathways, and support for innovation. The Start-Up Visa program is the leading option for founders, but its landscape is changing. Success now requires more than meeting formal requirements — credibility, early activity, and consistent follow-through matter most.
This article highlights five trends shaping the program and what they mean for future applicants.
Immigration officers no longer limit themselves to checking incorporation papers or business plans. What matters now is proof of execution: product prototypes, contracts, Canadian presence, and team engagement.
IRCC data shows that as of July 2025, more than 2.2 million applications were in processing inventories, with 901,700 cases already beyond standard timelines. This means that applications without proof of real business steps are the ones most likely to be rejected.
Showing early business activity in Canada, whether through hiring, incorporation, or testing a service, can make an application more convincing and improve its chances in the current backlog.
According to Canada’s 2025–2027 Immigration Levels Plan, overall permanent resident admissions will be capped at 395,000 in 2025, 380,000 in 2026, and 365,000 in 2027, a decrease compared to earlier plans. At the same time, Ottawa introduced for the first time a goal to limit temporary residents to 5% of Canada’s population by 2026.
SUV falls within the federal business category, which now has just 2,000 spots per year across 2025–2027. With over 6,200 pending SUV applications at the end of 2024, demand far outstrips supply.
At the same time, IRCC eliminated the peer review process. Officers now carry full responsibility for assessing feasibility, team capacity, and innovation. Without external review, applicants must demonstrate a business that is not only eligible on paper but also credible, coherent, and ready to execute in Canada.
Many provinces now direct business immigration toward regional needs, encouraging applicants to buy and operate existing businesses in smaller communities where succession and local jobs are priorities.
Programs in provinces such as Manitoba, New Brunswick, and Saskatchewan require personal investment, active management, and a commitment to settle in the region. Entrepreneurs who are ready to manage operations directly and consider regions beyond Toronto or Vancouver may find PNPs a more stable and accessible option than the Start-Up Visa.
Innovation under the Start-Up Visa program is not limited to advanced technology. What counts is distinctiveness and value to the Canadian market.
For instance, a logistics software platform adapted specifically to the needs of mid-sized Canadian cities, where delivery routes and supply chains differ from large metropolitan hubs, can qualify as innovative if it clearly improves efficiency for local businesses. Likewise, a healthcare service that has already proven effective in another country but is redesigned to address the unique needs of Canadian patients and communities can also be seen as innovation.
The most successful projects balance novelty with practicality, offering solutions that fill real gaps in the Canadian market. Both advanced technologies and simple, effective models can meet the program’s definition of innovation.
Securing a Letter of Support or a work permit is just the starting point. IRCC increasingly monitors what happens after approval, including incorporation, hiring, operations, and compliance.
In 2024 alone, IRCC finalized over 7 million decisions across all categories, yet the backlog still grew. As a result, greater priority is given to applications supported by visible progress and sustained activity.
One example from our practice is an SUV applicant who engaged Canadian talent and launched a beta product before PR approval, which made the application notably stronger.
Canada’s business immigration remains a solid pathway, but the standards are shifting. With lower admission targets, larger backlogs, and closer scrutiny from IRCC, success now comes from more than compliance. Entrepreneurs need to show real activity, credible teams, and steady follow-through. In today’s environment, preparation and execution matter as much as the business idea itself.
We aim to share insights as the landscape evolves to help you stay informed and plan effectively. If you have questions about how these trends may apply to your plans, feel free to contact us.


Proud Sponsor of the 2026 CAPIC National Citizenship and Immigration Conference & CBA Immigration Law Conference
Proud Sponsor of the 2026 CAPIC National Citizenship and Immigration Conference & CBA Immigration Law Conference


Keep Exploring

10.01.26
As 2025 draws to a close, Canada’s business immigration landscape continues to evolve amid tightening program quotas, shifting provincial priorities, and a stronger emphasis on measurable business performance.

14.11.25
Canada’s AI Shift 2025 explored how artificial intelligence is reshaping immigration practice, highlighting ethical use, regulatory alignment, and CBGA’s role in advancing responsible innovation across the sector.

06.11.25
On November 5, CBGA participated in Startup Investment Night held at Hangzhou Startup Accelerator in Zhejiang Province, China.
Find the
Connect with the experts who can help you unlock your business’s full potential
Expertise
You Need