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Expanded Open Work Permit Access for Spouses of Quebec’s Foreign‑Trained Healthcare Workers

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Expanded Open Work Permit Access for Spouses of Quebec’s Foreign‑Trained Healthcare Workers

Spousal open work permit: Quebec healthcare spouses get a narrow exemption from IRCC’s 16‑month rule

The federal government has expanded access to spousal open work permits for a specific group of spouses and common‑law partners of foreign‑trained healthcare workers in Quebec. Effective May 25, 2026, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) removed the recently introduced requirement that the principal worker’s work permit be valid for at least 16 months at the time the spouse applies — but only for spouses of foreign‑trained healthcare professionals admitted into three Quebec recruitment and recognition projects. IRCC published the change as an update to its program delivery instructions on May 29, 2026.

What changed and why it matters

In January 2025 IRCC tightened spousal open work permit (SOWP) access by introducing a 16‑month minimum validity requirement for the principal worker’s authorization and narrowing eligible occupations. That reform reduced SOWP eligibility for many families. The May 25, 2026 exemption carves out a limited exception for spouses of certain foreign‑trained healthcare workers in Quebec, allowing them to apply for an open work permit under the usual C41 process without meeting the 16‑month validity test.

IRCC’s move responds to Quebec’s acute healthcare staffing needs and supports federal‑provincial efforts to retain internationally trained health professionals. The exemption does not alter the broader national policy introduced in 2025; it simply creates a targeted pathway to reduce obstacles to family reunification and workforce stability for a defined cohort of workers in Quebec.

Who qualifies for the Quebec exemption

To benefit from the exemption, both the principal worker and the spouse must meet specific conditions:

  • The principal foreign national must be employed in one of three National Occupational Classification occupations:
    • Registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses (NOC 31301)
    • Respiratory therapists, clinical perfusionists, and cardiopulmonary technologists (NOC 32103)
    • Medical laboratory technologists (NOC 32120)
  • The principal worker must have been admitted into one of three Quebec projects that recruit and recognize foreign‑trained healthcare credentials:
    • Projet de reconnaissance des compétences d’infirmières et d’infirmiers recrutés à l’international
    • Projet de reconnaissance des compétences d’inhalothérapeutes formés à l’étranger
    • Projet de recrutement et reconnaissance des compétences de technologistes médicaux formés à l’étranger
  • The spouse or common‑law partner must apply using the standard C41 spousal open work permit application and meet the remaining C41 eligibility requirements.
  • The principal worker must still be authorized to work in Canada at the time the spouse applies; the exemption removes only the 16‑month minimum validity test for this group.

These Quebec projects are administered jointly by Quebec’s Ministry of Immigration, Francisation and Integration (MIFI), Ministry of Health and Social Services (MSSS), and Ministry of Higher Education (MES). The exemption applies only to spouses of principal workers admitted into these projects.

How to apply and common application pitfalls

Eligible spouses must complete the standard C41 spousal open work permit application. No separate or special application form exists, but IRCC requires two additional steps so the application is processed under the Quebec exemption rather than the standard SOWP rules:

  • Enter the code CONJOINTSANTQC in both the job title box and the brief description of duties box on the application form. IRCC will apply the exemption only if the code appears in both fields. If the code is missing, IRCC may process the file under the standard rules that include the 16‑month requirement.
  • Include the principal worker’s Quebec selection letter confirming admission into one of the eligible projects. This letter must be signed by all three Quebec ministries—MIFI, MSSS, and MES—and explicitly confirm the worker’s admission into the named project.

Other normal C41 requirements remain in force. IRCC will still check the principal worker’s authorization to work at the time of application and assess the spouse’s admissibility, identity, and other regulatory criteria. If the Quebec selection letter is incomplete, unsigned by the required ministries, or otherwise ambiguous, IRCC may not apply the exemption and could request further documentation or refuse to waive the 16‑month condition.

Practical tips:

  • Attach a clear, legible copy of the Quebec selection letter and highlight the admission statement if necessary.
  • Double‑check that CONJOINTSANTQC appears in both required fields before submitting to avoid processing delays or misclassification under the 2025 rules.
  • Confirm the principal worker’s employment aligns with one of the listed NOC codes; misclassification can lead to an eligibility refusal.

How this fits with other federal measures for Quebec workers

This exemption is part of a series of federal steps to ease the transition and retention of internationally trained healthcare workers in Quebec. In March 2026 the federal government introduced a temporary IMP measure allowing eligible workers who have been invited by Quebec to submit a Demande de Sélection Permanente (DSP) to obtain an employer‑specific work permit for up to 12 additional months while Quebec reviews their DSP eligibility. Together, these measures aim to limit employment interruptions during credential recognition and selection processes.

The May 25 exemption complements, but does not replace, those broader measures. It is narrowly targeted to family reunification through open work authorizations and does not restore pre‑2025 SOWP access for workers outside the defined occupations and Quebec projects.

What this means for applicants and employers

For spouses and common‑law partners of eligible Quebec healthcare workers, the exemption reduces a key timing barrier to obtaining an open work permit. That can make it easier for families to arrive and stabilize economically in Quebec, supporting household income and improving retention by allowing partners to work while the principal worker completes provincial credential recognition.

For employers and health‑system planners, the exemption may reduce recruitment friction. When a prospective employee knows a spouse can access an open work permit without the 16‑month requirement, acceptance of job offers in targeted recruitment projects could become more attractive.

However, the relief is limited. The exemption applies only to three occupations and to workers admitted into three specific provincial projects. Spouses of foreign workers in other occupations, or workers in Quebec who are not part of these projects, remain subject to the 16‑month rule and the narrower occupation list introduced in January 2025.

Key takeaways

  • IRCC created a narrow exemption effective May 25, 2026, allowing spouses of certain foreign‑trained healthcare workers in Quebec to apply for the C41 spousal open work permit without meeting the 16‑month validity requirement introduced in January 2025.
  • The exemption covers three NOC groups: registered nurses (31301), respiratory therapists and related occupations (32103), and medical laboratory technologists (32120).
  • Eligible applicants must enter the code CONJOINTSANTQC in both the job title and duties boxes on the C41 form and include the principal worker’s Quebec selection letter signed by MIFI, MSSS, and MES.
  • All other C41 eligibility rules still apply, and the principal worker must be authorized to work at the time of application.
  • This is a limited, province‑specific carve‑out and does not reverse the broader SOWP restrictions introduced in January 2025.

For applicants considering this route, careful documentation and precise form entries will determine whether IRCC applies the exemption. Missing the code or the signed Quebec letter risks having the application assessed under the standard rules and subject to the 16‑month requirement.

For personalized support with your Canadian immigration pathway, contact GTR Immigration.
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