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is an administrative streamlining that does not expand work rights; eligible pending co‑op permit applications will be withdrawn.
Soheil Hosseini
April 9, 2026
Jurisdiction
Federal
Week
Week 15
Impact
Low
Programs Affected
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- *Pending co-op WP applications will be withdrawn* by IRCC where eligible; no action needed from students.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
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