Getting a job in Canada as a foreign worker often comes down to one critical document: the Labour Market Impact Assessment, or LMIA. An employer who holds a positive LMIA has official government approval to hire someone from outside Canada because no qualified local candidate was available. If you can land a job offer from one of these employers, you are already more than halfway to a Canadian work permit.
What Is an LMIA and Why Does It Matter to You?
The LMIA is a screening process run by Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC). Before hiring internationally, most Canadian employers must prove they tried — and failed — to fill the role locally. A positive LMIA is their green light to recruit abroad. For you as a foreign worker, a job offer backed by a positive LMIA is the foundation of your work permit application. Once you have it, you submit your application to IRCC (Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada) and receive an employer-specific work permit typically valid for the duration of the job. Important 2026 update: Canada has made a strategic shift in its work permit priorities. The TFWP target for 2026 has been reduced to 60,000 LMIA-based positions, down from 82,000 the previous year, while the International Mobility Program (IMP) — which issues LMIA-exempt permits — has been increased to 170,000. That means for every LMIA-based permit, Canada now issues nearly three LMIA-exempt permits. If you can qualify for an IMP category such as the Global Talent Stream, intra-company transfer, or CUSMA professional, you bypass the LMIA entirely — saving your employer time and money. LMIA approval requirements have also become more stringent in 2026. Employers must now demonstrate extended recruitment efforts and targeted outreach to Canadian youth groups before ESDC will approve an LMIA application.
Industries with the Most LMIA-Approved Employers
Healthcare
Canada’s healthcare sector has structural, long-term shortages that no level of immigration reduction has resolved. Hospitals, long-term care homes, and community health centres regularly obtain positive LMIAs for registered nurses, personal support workers (PSWs), medical laboratory technicians, and physiotherapists. Healthcare remains the most consistently active LMIA sector in Canada. Express Entry’s Healthcare and Social Services category draw ran at a CRS cut-off of 467 in early 2026, showing strong government prioritisation of this group.
Construction and Skilled Trades
Major infrastructure development across Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba means construction firms in these provinces are among the most active LMIA sponsors. Electricians, carpenters, welders, plumbers, and heavy equipment operators are in high demand. Express Entry’s Trades category draw is active in 2026, providing an additional PR pathway for sponsored trade workers.
Technology
Canada’s tech hubs in Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal use the Global Talent Stream — a fast-track LMIA process that can deliver a decision in as little as two weeks — to hire software developers, data scientists, machine learning engineers, and cybersecurity specialists. The STEM category in Express Entry has been dormant since early 2024, however, so tech workers should plan alternative PR pathways.
Hospitality and Tourism
Resorts in Whistler, Banff, and Niagara Falls and major hotel chains regularly recruit internationally for housekeeping, kitchen, and front desk roles. While salaries are lower than tech or healthcare, the LMIA pathway in hospitality is well-established and consistently active.
Agriculture and Food Processing
Canada’s Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP) and TFWP agricultural stream continue to bring in farm workers and food processing staff annually. Note that the Agriculture and Agri-food category was retired from Express Entry’s category-based draws for 2026, but LMIA-based sponsorship through TFWP and SAWP remains fully operational.
Logistics and Transport
Trucking companies across Ontario, Alberta, and British Columbia face a persistent shortage of licensed Class 1 drivers. Express Entry added a new Transport Workers category in 2026, providing an additional PR pathway for logistics and transport professionals who secure Canadian work experience through an LMIA-sponsored position.
Top Named LMIA-Approved Employers to Target
Based on ESDC disclosure data and industry reporting, these employers have established records of LMIA sponsorship: Amazon Canada (warehousing, tech, and operations); RBC and TD Bank (finance and IT); Deloitte Canada (consulting and advisory); Alberta Health Services (healthcare); CN Rail (transport and engineering); Magna International (manufacturing and engineering); Loblaw Companies (supply chain and logistics); Shopify (technology); AtkinsRealis/SNC-Lavalin (engineering).
How to Find and Verify LMIA Employers
The Government of Canada publishes annual lists of employers with positive LMIA approvals through the ESDC disclosure database. Cross-reference any employer found on third-party sites against the official ESDC database or Job Bank Canada (jobs.gc.ca) to confirm current legitimacy.
Red Flags to Watch Out For
A legitimate employer never charges you for LMIA sponsorship — all application costs are the employer’s legal obligation. Avoid anyone promising guaranteed Canadian PR in exchange for a fee. Only use IRCC-regulated immigration consultants (RCICs) or licensed Canadian immigration lawyers.
The Path from LMIA Work Permit to Permanent Residence
A positive LMIA job offer adds 200 points to your Express Entry CRS score. In 2026, IRCC now runs ten active category-based draw types, meaning skilled workers in healthcare, trades, transport, and other priority fields can receive an Invitation to Apply at CRS scores well below the general pool cut-off. Many provincial nominee programs also have employer-specific streams leading directly to PR nomination.
Start Your Search Today
Use Canada’s Job Bank, tailor your resume to Canadian standards, and focus on the sectors and employers above. The LMIA pathway is active and real — and for qualified workers in priority sectors, the path to permanent residence has never been more clearly mapped out.
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