Canada is one of the world’s leading destinations for international students and international student recruitment. However, the operating environment has changed considerably over the last two years. Federal policy shifts, tighter study permit processing, and increased public scrutiny have created a more constrained and volatile market.
For Canadian institutions, this has two immediate effects. First, recruiting internationally is harder, slower, and less predictable than it was. Second, the importance of partner discipline has increased, particularly where education agent behaviour can create reputational or consumer protection risk.
In this environment, institutions still depend on agent recruitment. At the same time, institutions need a clear, Canadian way to describe what responsible agent engagement looks like in practice.
It is important to recognise that Canada is not a single regulatory environment. Expectations differ by province, and institutions operate within both federal constraints and provincial frameworks.
This page provides a practical overview of the three key provinces where expectations for agent engagement are most clearly articulated through provincial legislation and formal sector standards, and how institutions can strengthen agent governance and partner discipline in a way that remains institution-led. Each of the three provides a concrete illustration of how quality standards for recruitment are developing in Canada, and an indication of the factors that are now shaping international student recruitment in all Canadian provinces and territories.