British Columbia nears cap on skilled worker invitations in first draw of 2025

author avatar
Asheesh Moosapeta
Published: May 11, 2025

British Columbia has held its first provincial immigration draw of 2025 under its skills immigration program, inviting candidates based on their potential for “high economic impact” in the province.

Prior to this draw on May 8, the British Columbia Provincial Nominee Program (BC PNP) had only held draws under its entrepreneur streams in 2025.

Assess your eligibility for enhanced PNP streams

Draw results

The BC PNP held a single immigration draw, inviting 94 candidates to apply for provincial nomination.

Candidates were invited based on

The 94 invitations to apply (ITAs) issued were evenly split between these two criteria.

The BC PNP previously announced that it would only nominate “approximately 100” candidates through its high-economic skills immigration pathway in response to greatly reduced provincial nomination allocations from the federal government.

The BC PNP advises that future high economic impact skills immigration draws may be based on different factors. These can include a candidate’s

  • Education – specifically the level and field of education, and where it was completed;
  • Professional designation in British Columbia;
  • Language skills;
  • Occupation;
  • Duration and skill level of work experience;
  • Wage and/or skill level of job offer;
  • Intent to live, work, and settle in a specific region in British Columbia; and/or
  • Strategic priorities – specifically, factors that address specific labour market needs in B.C., or support government pilot projects and initiatives.

Wider outlook for the BC PNP

The BC PNP plans on accepting only 1,100 net new applications for provincial nomination in 2025.

Assuming that the province has reached its vaguely stated cap (and that all applications resulting from this draw are approved for provincial nomination), the remainder of the BC PNP’s provincial nominations will be allocated to

  • Front-line healthcare workers and managers in healthcare; and
  • Entrepreneurs.

In addition, British Columbia has also announced major changes to multiple immigration streams of the BC PNP, including

  • A pause on general and priority occupations draws for 2025;
  • The waitlisting of applications under the International Post-Graduate (IPG) Stream received between September 2024 and January 2025;
  • The postponement of three new student immigration streams until the restoration of the BC PNP’s provincial allocation;
  • New limitations on the Health Authority Stream to front-line healthcare workers and managers in healthcare only; and
  • The exclusion of Early Childhood Educator Assistants from education draws, creating a new focus on Early Childhood Educators (ECEs).

To learn more about major changes to the BC PNP, read our article covering these major changes.

Assess your eligibility for enhanced PNP streams

Share this article
Share your voice
Did you find this article helpful?
Thank you for your feedback.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Did you find this article helpful?
Please provide a response
Thank you for your helpful feedback
Please contact us if you would like to share additional feedback, have a question, or would like Canadian immigration assistance.
  • Do you need Canadian immigration assistance? Contact the Contact Cohen Immigration Law firm by completing our form
  • Send us your feedback or your non-legal assistance questions by emailing us at media@canadavisa.com
Related articles
Newfoundland and Labrador issues 108 invitations to candidates across both provincial immigration programs
The remote Northern town of Trinity, along the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
British Columbia issues over 350 invitations to skilled workers and entrepreneurs in first draw of June
Rocky Mountains and buildings in North Vancouver, British Colombia, Canada.
British Columbia unveils requirements for new time-limited pathway to permanent residence
Naramata, a community within the Regional District of Okanagan–Similkameen, in British Columbia, Canada. Houses, greenery, and mountains are visible; clear blue skies.
93% of Express Entry pool growth driven by candidates scoring in the 501–600 range
A crowd gathers at Place des Arts in Montreal
Top Stories
Alberta launches new online tool to help foreign nationals assess AAIP eligibility
The Bill C-3 paradox: Millions now qualify for Canadian citizenship, but few will apply
Canada moved the goalposts for proof of citizenship applicants, lawyers say
Join our free newsletter. Get Canada's top immigration stories delivered to your inbox.
Subscribe
More in Citizenship
The Bill C-3 paradox: Millions now qualify for Canadian citizenship, but few will apply
A phone sits atop a coffee table showing ancestry results of its owner, with glasses and a cup of coffee to each side of the frame
Canada moved the goalposts for proof of citizenship applicants, lawyers say
Citizenship certificate holders have been instructed to surrender their certificates for having broken rules they were never told.
Forced surrender of Canadian citizenship certificates may be unconstitutional, experts say
Holders of proof of Canadian citizenship certificates may have had their constitutional rights violated by the federal government.
Yes, you can still apply for Canadian citizenship by descent, even if you can’t find all the paperwork
A box of old documents on a table, with a birth certificate laid out to the right
Link copied to clipboard