LMIA for Caregiver Employer Canada: Requirements, Fees, and the 2026 Rules
LMIA for Caregiver Employer Canada: Requirements, Fees, and the 2026 Rules
If you're a Canadian family looking to hire a foreign caregiver — or a caregiver trying to help your employer understand the process — the Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) is usually the first obstacle. It's not as complicated as it sounds, but the rules changed in April 2026 and the requirements are stricter than they were even a year ago.
Here's what an employer needs to know to successfully obtain an LMIA for a caregiver position.
What an LMIA Is
An LMIA is a document from Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) that confirms there is no qualified Canadian worker available for the position being offered to a foreign national. For caregivers, this is the standard route into Canada for most workers who are not coming through the PR-first pilot streams (which are currently paused until 2030).
The LMIA is the employer's responsibility — not the worker's. It's illegal for an employer or recruiter to charge the foreign worker for the LMIA application fee or pass that cost along to them in any form. This rule is frequently violated, and ESDC actively investigates complaints.
Who Needs an LMIA (and Who Doesn't)
Most employers need an LMIA. If you're a Canadian family hiring a foreign national to work in your home as a caregiver — for an elderly parent, a person with a disability, or a young child — and the worker is not coming through a PR-first pilot stream, an LMIA is required before the caregiver can apply for a work permit.
LMIA exemptions exist in specific situations. The main LMIA-exempt caregiver route is through the federal Home Care Worker pilots, which allow qualifying caregivers to apply for an "occupation-restricted open work permit" without the employer needing an LMIA. However, those pilots are paused until March 30, 2030. Currently, the only LMIA-exempt caregiver work permit option for new entrants to Canada is if they qualify under a specific international agreement or intra-company transfer scenario — which applies to very few caregivers.
For the vast majority of families hiring foreign caregivers in 2026, an LMIA is required.
The 2026 Advertising Requirements
Effective April 1, 2026, ESDC implemented tighter rules for hiring low-wage temporary foreign workers, which includes most caregivers. The key changes:
Extended advertising period. Employers must now advertise the caregiver position for at least 8 consecutive weeks in the 3 months before submitting the LMIA application. Previously, this was 4 weeks. The advertising must be posted on:
- The federal Job Bank (mandatory)
- At least 2 additional recruitment platforms relevant to the occupation
- One platform specifically targeting Canadian youth (a new requirement)
Youth recruitment targeting. The new rules require that at least one of your recruitment efforts specifically targets Canadian youth. This means posting on youth-specific job boards or platforms like the Magnet Youth Employment Platform, campus career centers, or government youth employment programs.
Unemployment cap. LMIAs for low-wage positions will not be processed in Census Metropolitan Areas (major cities) where the regional unemployment rate exceeds 6%. This cap does not apply in rural areas or smaller communities, which is one reason rural caregiver jobs are processed more smoothly under the current TFWP rules.
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The LMIA Application Fee
The LMIA application fee is $1,000 per position. This is a flat fee that the employer pays to ESDC — it is not refundable if the LMIA is refused.
Fee exemptions apply in two specific scenarios:
Medical care exemption: If the caregiver is being hired to care for a family member who requires assistance due to a documented medical need, the fee is waived. The employer must provide a letter from a licensed physician confirming the medical necessity.
Child care fee exemption: Families hiring a caregiver specifically to care for a child under 13 are exempt from the $1,000 fee if the family's gross annual household income is $150,000 or less. This is a hard income threshold — families above this amount pay the full fee.
Getting a Business Number
Before submitting an LMIA application, the hiring family (even if they're just a household, not a registered business) must obtain a Business Number (BN) from the Canada Revenue Agency. This is specifically for the purpose of remitting payroll deductions — CPP, EI, and income tax — from the caregiver's wages.
The BN application is free and can be completed online through the CRA website. It takes a few business days to receive.
If two adult children are jointly hiring a caregiver for an elderly parent, they can act as co-employers but only need one BN between them.
The Employer Obligations That Follow the LMIA
An LMIA is not a one-time transaction. Approved employers take on ongoing obligations:
Wage commitment: The employer must pay the caregiver at least the wage stated in the LMIA application. This wage must be at or above the prevailing wage for the occupation in the region — ESDC sets these based on labour market data. In 2026, the minimum wage for caregivers in BC is $18.20/hour; in Ontario it varies by region and is around $17–$19/hour for NOC 44101.
Hours guarantee: The employer must provide the caregiver with the hours stated in the job offer (at least 30 hours per week for a full-time position).
Expense coverage: For most caregiver positions, the employer must pay the cost of the caregiver's airfare to Canada (round-trip for the initial work period). Employers cannot deduct recruitment costs from wages.
Compliance inspections: ESDC conducts random and complaint-triggered compliance inspections of LMIA employers. Employers found to be non-compliant can be fined, banned from hiring TFWs, and added to the public ESDC blacklist.
What the Caregiver Needs After the LMIA Is Approved
Once the employer receives the approved LMIA, the caregiver can use it to apply for a Temporary Foreign Worker (TFW) work permit through IRCC. The work permit application requires:
- The LMIA number and a copy of the job offer
- Passport and travel documents
- Language test results (if required — CLB 4 minimum for most caregiver roles)
- Proof of qualifications (education and/or experience matching the job offer)
- Medical exam results
- Police certificates
Work permit processing from abroad typically takes 2–6 months. Once in Canada, the caregiver is authorized to work for the specific employer named in the work permit.
The Difference Between LMIA Work Permits and Pilot Program Work Permits
It's worth being clear on how the LMIA route differs from the pilot program route:
| Feature | LMIA Work Permit | Home Care Worker Pilot (Paused) |
|---|---|---|
| Employer-specific | Yes | No (occupation-restricted open permit) |
| LMIA required | Yes | No |
| Employer can change | Only with new LMIA | Yes, within same NOC |
| PR pathway | Requires separate PR application later | PR application submitted simultaneously |
| Currently available | Yes | Paused until 2030 |
For families and caregivers working through the LMIA route in 2026, the caregiver can accumulate qualifying work experience and apply for PR separately once eligible — either through provincial programs or when the federal pilots reopen in 2030.
The LMIA process is manageable for most families, but the April 2026 rule changes have made the advertising requirements more demanding. Eight weeks of recruitment across multiple platforms — including a youth-specific one — is a meaningful time commitment before you can even submit the LMIA application.
For caregivers: the fact that your employer is handling the LMIA on your behalf doesn't mean you should be uninformed about the process. Understanding what the LMIA requires helps you identify if something is wrong — particularly if a recruiter or agency is asking you to pay for it.
The Canada Caregiver Program Guide covers the full caregiver pathway from initial work permit to PR, including the employer's obligations under the LMIA framework and what a caregiver should know about protecting their rights during the process.
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