Tag: IEC invitation to apply

  • International Experience Part 2 : Working Holiday Visas

    International Experience Part 2 : Working Holiday Visas

    In the last post, we covered how the Working Holiday category works and how your country of citizenship affects your eligibility, how the invitation system operates, and what the fees actually are. In this blog, we’re looking at where a lawyer can really make a difference, both in getting your application right the first time and in planning what happens after your Working Holiday ends. 

    There are a few ways a lawyer can help you

    • Make sure you actually qualify before you sign anything. 

    Bilateral agreements differ from country to country, and eligibility is not always as simple as “are you between 18 and 35.” Some countries have further restrictions; for example, some nationalities can only apply for a second IEC permit after a certain amount of time has passed since their first IEC permit expired. A lawyer can tell you exactly where you stand before you spend time and money on the process. 

    • Ensuring your documents are consistent and complete. 

    The work permit application generates a long and personalized document checklist: police certificates from every country where you have lived for six consecutive months or more since you turned 18, proof of funds (at least CAN$2,500), A CV, copies of your passport, a compliant digital photo, family information forms, and possibly a medical exam depending on your travel history or intended occupation. A gap in your work or travel history, one missing document, or something that doesn’t quite match IRCC’s specs (photo dimensions, file format, translation requirements) can delay or sink a strong application. All of this is reviewed by a lawyer before submission, not after the refusal letter arrives. 

    • Helping you in answering every question correctly and strategically. 

    IRCC is clear that providing false information or omitting important information can lead to refusal and could make you inadmissible to Canada in the future. A lawyer helps ensure that your answers are truthful and presented in a way that gives you the best chance of a clean approval, without contradictions among your forms, your CV, and your supporting documents. 

    • Time management.

    You’ve got 20 days after accepting your ITA, and that window runs on UTC. Having a lawyer means your documents are already prepared before that clock even starts, so you’re not scrambling.

    It’s worth noting that a lawyer isn’t the same as a “Recognized Organization” (RO), which some Working Holiday applicants also use. ROs assist with logistics (job search, banking, accommodation, insurance). However, ROs cannot give legal immigration advice or represent you before IRCC in the same way a lawyer can. If you want someone to advise you on eligibility, to complete your application and to communicate with IRCC on your behalf, that’s the role of an authorized representative.


    What Follows IEC: A Lawyer’s Role in PR And What Comes Next 

    A Working Holiday permit is meant to be temporary but for a lot of people, it’s the first real foothold to stay in Canada long-term. This is where a lawyer’s value extends far beyond the initial application. When your IEC work permit is nearing its expiration, you have a few realistic options to consider, and a lawyer can assist you in determining which option is truly right for your circumstances:

    • Employer-sponsored work visa. 
    • Express Entry for permanent residence.
    • Provincial Nominee Programs (PNP) 
    • A Bridging Open Work Permit (BOWP) 
    • Sponsorship by family. 
    • Changing to a study permit.
    • Status held while waiting. 

    No matter what path you’re on, a lawyer helps you make sure you apply to extend or change your status before your current permit expires, so you remain legally in Canada while a new application is being processed, instead of risking a gap that could jeopardize things down the line.

    The Working Holiday permit isn’t usually the finish line; it’s just the starting point. The applicants who transition smoothly into a work visa, Express Entry, or a PNP are the ones who started planning early. That’s really where a lawyer’s work really shows: an accurate, well-prepared application at the outset, and a clear plan for what comes next long before it’s urgent. Immigration timelines are unpredictable; your preparation doesn’t have to be.

    IEC Application Resources: Fees, Forms, Representatives & More

    Who Can Represent You in Canadian Immigration Applications:

    https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/immigration-citizenship-representative/learn-about-representatives.html

    List of Recognized Organizations for International Experience Canada (IEC :

    https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/iec/recognized-organizations.html

    How to Submit Your IEC Work Permit Application (Step-by-Step Guide) :

    https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/iec/apply-work-permit.html

    IEC 2026: Check Your Country’s Invitation Rounds and Available Spots :

    https://ircc.canada.ca/english/work/iec/selections.asp

    Work Permit Application Forms and Guides (Applying from Outside Canada) :

    https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/application-forms-guides/apply-work-permit-outside-canada.html

    Citizenship and Immigration Fees: How to Pay, Get Refunds, and See Recent Changes :

    https://ircc.canada.ca/english/information/fees/index.asp

    How Much Does International Experience Canada (IEC) Cost?

    https://ircc.canada.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?qnum=858&top=25

  • International Experience Part 1: Working Holiday Visas

    International Experience Part 1: Working Holiday Visas

    Ever dreamed of living, working, and traveling in Canada for a year (or more)? The International Experience Canada (IEC) Working Holiday program may be the fastest way to make it happen. The current IEC season is open, allowing young adults to live and work in Canada for 12 to 36 months, gain international work experience in industries such as hospitality, engineering, or information technology, and fully engage with Canadian culture. But this is not an ‘apply and go’ process. It works on invitations, fees, deadlines, and a long list of documents – and if you miss just one step, you could lose your place.

    Part 1 covers what the program is, how your country of citizenship affects your eligibility, how the invitation system works, and what it costs. In Part 2, we’ll discuss how your lawyer can help with the initial application and what happens next.

    What Is the Working Holiday Category and How Does Your Country Take Part?

    International Experience Canada has three categories, not just one program: Working Holiday, Young Professionals, and International Co-op (Internship). Working Holiday is the only one that does not require a job offer before you apply. Instead, you receive an open work permit, which allows you to work for almost any employer, in almost any position, anywhere in Canada.
    But the catch is that the eligibility is based solely on your nationality. Canada has bilateral youth mobility agreements with the following countries and territories. The terms of your agreement dictate:

    • Whether you are eligible for the working holiday in general
    • Your age group (generally 18–30, although some countries’ agreements permit this to be extended to 35)
    • The duration of your work permit (usually 12 to 24 months, but up to 36 months depending on your country’s agreement)
    • How many places are there for your nation in a season, and how many times in your life can you participate?

    In other words, “how your country can benefit you” is not a phrase; your nationality is the single biggest factor in whether and how you qualify. Two candidates with identical CVs could have very different experiences based on their citizenship alone.

    You Have to Be Invited – Here’s How That Works Out

    This is the part that surprises a lot of applicants – you can’t just submit a work permit application whenever you like. The process is a two-step process.

    First stage: the pool. If you are eligible, you create an IEC profile and enter your country’s pool of candidates. Submitting a profile is free. At this point, you’re not applying for a work permit; you’re just saying that you are willing and eligible to be considered.

    Stage two: invitation to apply (ITA). IRCC conducts regular “rounds of invitations” and draws candidates from the pool to issue ITAs. After receiving and accepting an ITA, you can then start your actual work permit application. From then on, the clock starts ticking. Once you accept your ITA, you have exactly 20 days to submit a full work permit application, and that deadline is in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) and not your local time zone, which has caught more applicants than you’d think.

    The number of openings and your chances of being invited will differ from country to country and will be updated throughout the season. IRCC’s selections page lets you check your real-time odds, which can range from “Excellent” to “Very Low” depending on your country. That means timing is everything. To give yourself the best chance, you need to get into the pool early, know your country’s specific quota, and be ready to act the moment an ITA lands.

    The Fees: What You’re Really Paying For

    The process happens in stages, and the fees do too.

    • Entrance to the pool: free.
    • All IEC applicants are required to pay the IEC participation fee – currently $184.75 CAD once you accept an ITA and apply for your work permit.
    • Applicants under the Working Holiday category, in particular, must pay an open work permit holder fee of CAN$100 in addition to the IEC fee.
    • You may also need to provide biometrics, which is a separate fee (currently $85 CAD per person), depending on your country of citizenship.

    It is different from the other two IEC categories. Young Professionals and International Co-op applicants do not pay this open work permit fee themselves; instead, their employer pays a CAN$230 employer compliance fee and must submit the formal offer of employment directly to IRCC before the applicant can even apply. Working Holiday isn’t an employment visa, so the cost structure doesn’t apply to you, and the fee is on you directly.  One useful thing to know: these fees are generally refundable if you withdraw your application before your port-of-entry letter is issued, or if your application is refused — though refunds aren’t issued if IRCC determines you misrepresented information on your application.

    IEC Application Resources: Fees, Forms, Representatives & More

    Who Can Represent You in Canadian Immigration Applications:

    https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/immigration-citizenship-representative/learn-about-representatives.html

    List of Recognized Organizations for International Experience Canada (IEC :

    https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/iec/recognized-organizations.html

    How to Submit Your IEC Work Permit Application (Step-by-Step Guide) :

    https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/work-canada/iec/apply-work-permit.html

    IEC 2026: Check Your Country’s Invitation Rounds and Available Spots :

    https://ircc.canada.ca/english/work/iec/selections.asp

    Work Permit Application Forms and Guides (Applying from Outside Canada) :

    https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/application-forms-guides/apply-work-permit-outside-canada.html

    Citizenship and Immigration Fees: How to Pay, Get Refunds, and See Recent Changes :

    https://ircc.canada.ca/english/information/fees/index.asp

    How Much Does International Experience Canada (IEC) Cost?

    https://ircc.canada.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?qnum=858&top=25