An estimated 47,000 international students in Canada are facing a desperate race against time, at risk of losing their legal status as their study permits expire. This crisis is the direct fallout from Canada’s visa crackdown, a series of sweeping policy changes initiated in early 2024 that abruptly rendered many ineligible for the post-graduation work permits they had once counted on.
- At-Risk Population: An estimated 47,000 students, primarily those who enrolled in public-private partnership (PPP) college programs before the rules changed, are graduating in 2025 only to find themselves ineligible for a Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP).
- Core Policy Shift: In January 2024, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) announced students in PPP programs would no longer be eligible for a PGWP, a policy that took effect immediately for new enrollees but is now impacting those who were already in the system.
- The Cap’s Ripple Effect: A two-year cap on new study permits, aiming for a 35% reduction in 2024, has created intense competition and uncertainty, reducing overall international student intake to approximately 360,000 new permits for the year.
- Financial Squeeze: The cost-of-living financial requirement for applicants was nearly doubled to $20,635 (excluding tuition) in late 2023, putting a Canadian education out of reach for many, including prospective students from Bangladesh.
- Economic Blowback: Educational institutions face financial turmoil, and Canadian employers report growing labour shortages in sectors that previously relied on international student workers.
The Promise That Vanished
For years, Canada was marketed globally as the premier destination for international students, offering quality education and a clear pathway to permanent residency. This promise attracted hundreds of thousands annually, including a significant cohort from Bangladesh, who saw the Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) not as a bonus, but as an integral part of their educational and financial planning.
This well-trodden path buckled starting in late 2023. Facing a national housing crisis and reports of systemic exploitation within the international education sector, the Canadian government enacted drastic measures. The first major blow was the doubling of the proof-of-funds requirement. The second, and more catastrophic for students already in Canada, was the January 22, 2024 announcement by IRCC Minister Marc Miller. Alongside a national cap on new students, the government declared that graduates of public college-private partnership programs would no longer be eligible for a PGWP.
These PPP programs, where a private college teaches the curriculum of a public institution, were a popular, often more affordable, option. For the thousands enrolled before the announcement, the news was a bombshell. They had invested tens of thousands of dollars and years of their lives based on a set of rules that no longer applied to them. Now, in late 2025, as they receive their diplomas, they are being handed a de facto deportation notice.
The Data: A System in Shock
The statistical aftermath of Canada’s visa crackdown reveals a system undergoing a painful correction. The explosive growth seen in prior years has reversed sharply, leaving a trail of uncertainty.
1. Study Permit Approvals Plummet
Following the implementation of the cap and the mandatory Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL) system, the number of new study permits issued has fallen dramatically. Projections for 2025 show the numbers stabilizing at this new, lower baseline.
| Period | Study Permits Issued (Projected/Actual) | Year-over-Year Change |
| Q1-Q3 2023 | ~450,000 | Baseline |
| Q1-Q3 2024 | ~295,000 | -34.4% |
| Q1-Q3 2025 | ~290,000 | -1.7% from 2024 |
2. The 47,000 Stranded by PGWP Ineligibility
The most acute crisis is concentrated among graduates of the now-ineligible PPP programs. A September 2025 report by the Canadian Alliance of Student Associations (CASA) estimates the number of students graduating from these programs throughout 2025 who are now without a pathway to work.
- Estimated Affected Students: 47,000
- Primary Location: Ontario, which hosted the vast majority of PPP colleges.
- Financial Impact: These students collectively represent over $1 billion in tuition fees paid to Canadian institutions.
3. Impact on Top Source Countries
Nations like India and Bangladesh, which were major sources of students for PPP colleges, have seen a disproportionate impact. While overall numbers are down due to the cap, the chilling effect of the PGWP change has been significant.
| Country | New Permits (2023) | Projected New Permits (2025) | Percentage Change |
| India | 200,000+ | ~110,000 | ~ -45% |
| Bangladesh | ~12,000 | ~7,500 | ~ -37.5% |
Official Response and Expert Rebuke
The government has maintained that these changes were necessary to restore integrity to the international student program and alleviate pressure on social infrastructure. In a statement from early 2024, IRCC Minister Marc Miller stated the goal was to target “bad actors” and ensure a quality experience for students.
It is not the intention of this program to have sham colleges, to be defrauding students and to have them living in situations that are undignified,” Minister Miller said in a press conference in January 2024. “The goal is to get the bad actors, and there are many.”
However, immigration lawyers and academics argue the retroactive nature of the PGWP change has punished students instead of the institutions.
This is a catastrophic policy failure,” says Fariha Rahman, a Toronto-based immigration lawyer specializing in student cases, paraphrased from a recent interview with Canadian Lawyer Magazine. “These students followed the rules as they existed. They were sold a package deal by recruiters and institutions, often with the implicit endorsement of the government’s own branding. To pull the rug out from under them upon graduation is not just unfair; it’s a profound breach of trust that damages Canada’s international reputation.”
Voices from the Ground
For students like Anis Ahmed from Dhaka, the situation is a nightmare. He is set to graduate in December from a business program at a private college in Brampton that delivered a public college’s curriculum.
My family sold land to pay my $18,000 tuition fee for the first year,” he shared via a phone call, his voice heavy with anxiety. The plan was simple: study, get the three-year work permit, gain experience, and pay back the loan. Now, the government says the program I studied doesn’t count. My study permit expires in February. What do I do? Go home with nothing but a huge debt?
Anis’s story is one of thousands. Student support groups are overwhelmed with calls from individuals suffering extreme mental and financial distress.
What to Watch Next
The crisis has become a political flashpoint, especially with a federal election mandated to occur on or before October 20, 2025.
- Advocacy for a Transitional Pathway: Student unions and legal clinics are lobbying intensely for a temporary public policy that would “grandfather in” students who enrolled in PPP programs before the January 2024 announcement, granting them PGWP eligibility.
- Provincial Responses: Provinces, particularly Ontario, are under pressure to address the fallout, as many of the affected colleges operated under their jurisdiction.
- The Election Factor: Opposition parties have seized on the issue, framing it as a failure of Liberal government planning. The government’s response over the coming days could influence key ridings with large immigrant populations.
As winter approaches, the future for 47,000 students hangs in the balance. They are the human cost of a policy course correction that, in its haste, failed to account for those who were already navigating the system in good faith. Their fate now rests on whether the government will offer a last-minute lifeline or stand by a decision that turned thousands of Canadian dreams into dead ends.
The Information is Collected from Times of India and MSN.






