Skip to main content
Program Delivery Update

IRCC eliminates separate co-op work permit requirement for eligible international post‑secondary students

By Soheil Hosseini • April 9, 2026
IRCC eliminates separate co-op work permit requirement for eligible international post‑secondary students

Effective 2026-04-01 IRCC removed the separate co‑op work permit for eligible international post‑secondary students, allowing required co‑op/internship placements to be done under study authorization with DLI‑approved employers. IRCC says this is an administrative streamlining that does not expand work rights; eligible pending co‑op permit applications will be withdrawn.

S

Soheil Hosseini

April 9, 2026

🔗 Official Source
🏛️

Jurisdiction

Federal

📊

Week

Week 15

🎯

Impact

Low

Programs Affected

Study Permit Work Permit
5 min read

IRCC eliminates separate co-op work permit requirement for eligible international post‑secondary students

Summary: IRCC has removed the need for a separate co-op work permit for eligible international post-secondary students in required program placements, streamlining administration without expanding work authorization. Effective 2026-04-01. Ottawa, 2026-04-09 — Canada’s Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has announced that, *effective 2026-04-01*, eligible international students in post-secondary programs no longer require a separate co-op work permit to complete mandatory work-integrated learning, such as co-op placements and internships. Under the change, students may work for *employers approved by their designated learning institution (DLI)* as part of their program requirements using their study authorization, removing the prior step of obtaining a distinct co-op work permit. IRCC emphasized that this reform *does not expand who is authorized to work* and *does not affect temporary resident volumes*; it is an administrative simplification for single-program study pathways. For those with pending co-op work permit applications, *IRCC will withdraw all eligible and active co-op work permit applications* and no action is required from applicants. Program affected: Study Permit; Work Permit
Source: IRCC
Date of update: 2026-04-09 Key points:
- *No separate co-op work permit required* for eligible, program-required placements as of 2026-04-01.
- Work must be with *DLI-approved employers* and tied to program requirements.
- *No expansion* of work authorization or TR volumes; this is an administrative streamlining.
- *Pending co-op WP applications will be withdrawn* by IRCC where eligible; no action needed from students.

Analysis:
- Potential positives:
- Reduced administrative burden and faster onboarding for required placements.
- Lower compliance complexity and cost for students and institutions.
- May improve program continuity and employer engagement in co-op/internship pipelines.
- Potential risks/considerations:
- Clarification may be needed on the scope of “eligible” students and documentation DLIs must provide for employer approval.
- Transitional confusion possible for students who already applied or for placements starting near the effective date.
- Oversight shifts toward DLIs and employers; consistent compliance practices will be important.

Closing: The policy streamlines co-op authorization for international students without broadening work rights. Stakeholders should monitor IRCC and DLI guidance to ensure placements remain within approved program requirements.

Tags: Canada immigration, IRCC, international students, study permit, co-op work permit, internships, work-integrated learning, designated learning institutions, policy update, 2026 immigration news, compliance, work authorization

Categories

Program Delivery Update

Share This Post

📧

Stay Updated with Immigration News

Get the latest updates on Express Entry draws, OINP invitations, policy changes, and more delivered to your inbox.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe at any time.

Related Articles

Canada launches Francophone student pilot offering direct path to permanent residence for international graduates in winter 2027
Program Delivery Update Moderate

Francophone PR Pilot

Canada will launch the Francophone Minority Communities Student Pilot (FMCSP) in winter 2027 to offer a direct permanent-residence pathway for eligible French-speaking international graduates outside Quebec. Eligible graduates (from 21 OIF countries) must hold an FMCSP study permit, complete a ≥2-year full-time program with >50% French instruction at participating DLIs, may include family, and can obtain an open work permit while PR is processed.

Jun 22, 2026 Read more →
IRCC updates study permit assessment guidance on DLI enrollment, program changes, leave and work rules
Program Delivery Update Low

IRCC Study Permit Guidance

IRCC updated guidance (2026-06-18) clarifying how officers assess study permit conditions: DLI enrollment, program changes, academic progress, leaves and working during leave. Students, institutions and employers should review the instructions to align records and activities, as stricter interpretations of “active pursuit” and work-during-leave rules may affect study and work permissions.

Jun 18, 2026 Read more →
IRCC temporarily pauses intake of refugee sponsorship applications from Groups of Five and Community Sponsors
Program Delivery Update Moderate

IRCC Pauses Sponsor Intake

IRCC has temporarily paused intake of refugee sponsorship applications from Groups of Five and Community Sponsors under the Private Sponsorship of Refugees program (program delivery update posted 2026-06-16). The PDI gives internal processing guidance but no timeline or exemptions; stakeholders should monitor IRCC for reopening details.

Jun 16, 2026 Read more →
IRCC updates Atlantic Immigration Program guidance to clarify employment changes, employer ownership and processing steps
Program Delivery Update Low

AIP guidance update

IRCC revised AIP “Other situations” guidance: post‑submission job or employer changes require updated provincial endorsements and IMM 0157 submitted via the IRCC Web form, with officers recording changes in GCMS and issuing a 90‑day PFL/hold if documents are missing. Provinces will reassess employer designation after ownership changes and applicants must maintain valid work authorization to avoid refusal.

Jun 5, 2026 Read more →