Canada introduced the Home Care Worker Immigration Pilots (HCWP) on March 31, 2025, letting qualified caregivers—either in Canada or abroad—apply directly for permanent residence. You’re eligible with a full-time job offer in childcare or home support and just six months of relevant experience or training.
Two streams are available:
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Workers in Canada (already open for those employed in Canada with work authorization)
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Applicants Not Working in Canada (scheduled for a later launch in 2027)
What You Can Earn Doing Care Work in Canada
According to Job Bank, home support workers (NOC 44101) earn between CAD $15.55 and $25.63 per hour, with a median of $20/hour across Canada.
Some employers—especially in urban centres or private households—offer CAD $25+/hour, placing annual incomes around CAD $50,000, depending on hours worked.
That salary range keeps care work competitive, especially given the path to permanent residence these pilots provide.
What Roles Qualify & What You’ll Do
Two main occupations are eligible:
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Child Care Providers (NOC 44100) and Early Childhood Educators Assistants (NOC 42202)
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Home Support Workers / Caregivers (NOC 44101) and Nurse Aides or Orderlies (NOC 33102)
You could work helping children in private households or supporting older adults with daily tasks at home. These are full-time, non-seasonal roles requiring at least 30 hours/week.
How Pay Adds Up: Typical Earnings Breakdown
| Hourly Pay | Weekly (37 hrs) | Annual (50 weeks) |
|---|---|---|
| $20 | $740 | $37,000 |
| $22 | $814 | $40,700 |
| $25 | $925 | $46,250 |
At $25/hour, with benefits and overtime, annual income can exceed CAD $50,000, especially in high-wage provinces like BC or Ontario.
Why This Pilot Stands Out
Canada’s previous caregiver programs required years of local experience or temporary permits. With HCWP:
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You can get PR from day one—no need to wait or reapply later.
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Provincial experience and education from abroad count, as long as it’s aligned with the NOCs above.
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No LMIA required, so job offers don’t need employer certification.
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Only CLB 4 language and high school diploma (or equivalent) are needed—making the entry level more achievable.
Who Should Apply
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Home caregivers or child-care workers with at least 6 months of full-time experience (or a relevant credential).
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Those already working in Canada with valid work status.
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People applying from abroad once the Applicants Not Working in Canada stream opens in 2027—if they meet criteria.
What You Should Do Now
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Take a CLB level 4 test in English or French.
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Get your education assessed (especially if your schooling was abroad).
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Prepare work references or proof of training in caregiving.
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Secure a job offer for full-time care work paying at or above the median wage for your province.
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If you’re in Canada already with legal work status, apply under the Workers in Canada stream before March 30, 2026.
Final Thoughts
Canada’s 2025 caregiver pilot offers a meaningful step up—not just a job, but a career and a home. With pay ranging CAD $20–25/hour and a clear route to permanent residence, it delivers both stability and a future in Canada.