Study Permit vs Work Permit: Which Path to Canada is Right for You?
If you can credibly start either pathway, the question is rarely "which is allowed" - it is "which gets me to PR with the lowest cost, the shortest time, and the lowest risk?" A Canadian study permit typically takes 1-3 years of tuition and gives you a Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) and Canadian work experience that boosts CRS by 50-150 points. A work permit (LMIA-based, LMIA-exempt, or open) skips the tuition and gets you working immediately - but eligibility is narrower. This guide is a side-by-side breakdown of fees, timelines, working rights, family privileges, and the path each route opens to permanent residence.
Side-by-side snapshot
| Study permit | Work permit | |
|---|---|---|
| IRCC form | IMM 1294 (outside Canada), IMM 5709 (inside) | IMM 1295 (outside), IMM 5710 (inside) |
| IRCC fee | $150 CAD | $155 CAD (open: $255) |
| Biometrics | $85 (single) / $170 (family) | $85 / $170 |
| Processing time (typical) | 5-20 weeks (varies by country) | 3-25 weeks (varies by stream & LMIA) |
| Need a Canadian school / employer first? | Yes - Letter of Acceptance from a DLI | Yes - job offer + LMIA, or LMIA-exempt eligibility |
| Working hours during permit | Up to 24 hrs/wk off-campus + full-time on-campus + breaks | Per the work permit (often full-time) |
| Spouse work eligibility | Open work permit (limited eligibility post-2024) | Open work permit if PA is in TEER 0/1 or controlled occupation |
| Children's K-12 schooling | Free public school as accompanying minor | Free public school as accompanying minor |
| Path to PR | Study → PGWP → CEC / PNP / category | Direct CEC eligibility after 1 year skilled work |
| Long-term cost (2-3 yrs) | $25,000-$70,000 tuition + living | Salary income; modest costs |
The study permit route, in detail
You are eligible if you have an unconditional Letter of Acceptance from a Designated Learning Institution (DLI), proof of funds (tuition + $20,635 / year living, plus $4,000 for spouse and $3,000 per dependent under post-2024 rules), and you can prove you intend to leave Canada at the end of your studies (the "dual-intent" rule).
- Best for: applicants under 30 with savings, applicants whose foreign credentials are not strongly recognised, applicants from countries with limited LMIA-supported job offers.
- Tuition window: 1-2 years for a college diploma, 2 years for a public-college master's, 3-4 years for a bachelor's, 1-2 years for a graduate certificate.
- 2024 cap: IRCC capped study permit issuances and now requires a Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL) for most undergraduate applicants. Master's and PhD applicants are exempt from PAL in most provinces.
- PGWP: Issued after graduation, valid 8 months to 3 years (length tied to program length). PGWP-eligibility now requires the program field to align with IRCC's in-demand list for many college diplomas (rule effective Nov 2024 onward).
The work permit route, in detail
Work permits are split into two big buckets:
- LMIA-based (employer-specific): Your employer applies for a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) showing no Canadian was available. With a positive LMIA, you apply for a work permit tied to that employer.
- LMIA-exempt: Including International Mobility Program streams (CUSMA / USMCA, GATS, intra-company transferees), Global Talent Stream, IEC working holidays, spousal open work permits, PGWP, and Bridging Open Work Permit (BOWP).
| Stream | Best for | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|
| LMIA + closed work permit | Sponsored hires for shortage roles | 3-6 months for LMIA + 4-12 weeks for permit |
| Global Talent Stream (GTS) | Tech roles at qualifying companies | ~2 weeks for the work permit; LMIA in 10 business days |
| Intra-company transfer (LMIA-exempt) | Multinational employees moving to a Canadian affiliate | 4-12 weeks |
| CUSMA / USMCA professional | US/Mexican citizens in listed professions | At the port of entry or 2-6 weeks |
| IEC Working Holiday | Young people from bilateral countries (often 18-30/35) | 4-12 weeks once invited |
Total cost comparison (2-year horizon)
| Cost item | Study route | Work route |
|---|---|---|
| IRCC permit + biometrics | $235 | $240 |
| 2 years tuition (public college / graduate cert.) | $24,000-$50,000 | $0 |
| 2 years living (rent + food + transit) | $30,000-$48,000 (often offset by part-time work) | Covered by salary |
| 2 years salary earned | ~$30,000 (24 hr/wk part-time + summers) | $80,000-$140,000 typical TEER 0-3 |
| Net 2-year financial position | -$24,000 to -$68,000 | +$60,000 to +$110,000 |
The work permit is dramatically cheaper financially. The trade-off: it requires a job offer or eligibility under an LMIA-exempt category, which most applicants do not have without significant in-Canada employer-sponsored networking.
Path to PR from each route
From a study permit
- Complete eligible program at a DLI (1-3 years).
- Apply for PGWP within 180 days of completion.
- Work in a TEER 0/1/2/3 NOC for at least 1 year.
- Apply for PR via Canadian Experience Class (CEC) or PNP. Canadian study + work adds +50 to +150 CRS.
From a work permit
- Work full-time in a TEER 0/1/2/3 NOC for 12 months.
- Apply for PR via CEC, FSW, or a PNP that nominates EE candidates.
- Many work-permit holders are eligible for a Bridging Open Work Permit (BOWP) once their EE eAPR is submitted, allowing continued work after the original permit expires.
Real examples
Anita - 23, India, undergrad in computer science
No Canadian job offers, no NOC 0 work history. Best route: 2-year master's (graduate cert) at a public Canadian college, then PGWP, then CEC. Cost: $48,000 over 2 years. Timeline to PR: ~4-5 years.
Wei - 31, China, 6 years software engineering at a multinational
Multinational has a Toronto office. Best route: Intra-company transfer LMIA-exempt work permit, 12 months of Canadian work, then CEC. Cost: ~$240. Timeline to PR: ~2 years.
Maria - 27, Brazil, registered nurse
Healthcare is in shortage. Best route: provincial nursing licensure assessment + LMIA-supported job offer OR direct PR via Express Entry healthcare category. Likely no study route needed. Timeline to PR: 1-3 years.
Jonas - 24, Germany, no Canadian connections, hospitality background
Best route: IEC Working Holiday (Germany has reciprocal IEC quota). 1-2 years of Canadian work, often while exploring PR streams via PNPs in tourism/hospitality.
Decision framework
- If you have an LMIA-supported or LMIA-exempt job offer → work permit.
- If you are under 30 and qualify for IEC → working holiday is the cheapest open work permit.
- If your foreign credentials are not strongly recognised → study route to convert to a Canadian credential.
- If you are over 30 with strong work experience but no job offer → consider direct Express Entry first; study only if Express Entry is not viable.
- If your CRS is 380-440 and you have no Canadian connections → study + PGWP + CEC remains the most reliable build to a 470+ CRS.
The hybrid path: short program + early Canadian work
Many candidates find that neither pure-study nor pure-work fits their profile - and the most common successful path in 2024-2026 is a hybrid: a 1-2 year graduate certificate or master's program at a public Canadian institution, paired with active job-search through co-op placements, university career centres, and immigrant-targeted employer programs (e.g. Immigrant Employment Council of BC, ACCES Employment in Toronto). The student arrives, completes the program, lines up a job before graduation, transitions to a PGWP, and qualifies for CEC after just 12 months of full-time work. Total time from landing to PR: 2.5-3.5 years. Total tuition: typically $20,000-$45,000.
Compared to a 4-year bachelor's path (5-6 years to PR, $80,000+ tuition) or a pure work-permit path (often blocked by needing a job offer before applying), the hybrid is the most realistic route for the majority of mid-career international applicants who do not have a Canadian employer sponsor lined up.
FAQ
Can I switch from a study permit to a work permit inside Canada?
Yes. After graduating, apply for a PGWP within 180 days of receiving your final transcript or completion letter. With a job offer + LMIA, you can also apply inside Canada for a closed work permit.
Can my spouse work while I am on a study permit?
Eligibility tightened in 2024. Spouses of master's, PhD, or specific in-demand programs can apply for an open work permit. Spouses of college diploma students are no longer eligible in most cases.
Does LMIA cost the employer or the employee?
LMIA fees ($1,000) and recruitment costs are employer-paid by law - it is illegal to charge the employee. Many candidates encounter scams pushing them to pay these fees themselves.
What if my study program is not PGWP-eligible?
You can still complete the program and apply for a regular work permit if you secure a job offer + LMIA or fit an LMIA-exempt category. But the PGWP route is the easiest CEC entry.
How does Canadian work experience compare to foreign work for CRS?
One year of Canadian skilled work is worth ~+35 to +80 directly, plus +25 to +50 in transferability - often double the CRS yield of a year of foreign work.
Can I sponsor my parents while on a work permit?
Family sponsorship is available only to Canadian citizens and PRs, not to work permit holders. You must reach PR before sponsoring family.
Does the employer pay any of the immigration fees?
LMIA application fees ($1,000) are legally the employer's responsibility. The candidate pays the $155-255 work permit fee and the biometrics fee.