Immigration is not just movement of people. It shapes economies and the future of nations. Watch Blayne Kumar, Nino Melikidze, Immitracker, and NextStars unpack what comes next for immigration to Canada.
Immigration policy is economic policy. With renewed talk about Mark Carney and Canada’s leadership, the conversation is shifting again. Founders, investors, and advisors need clarity on timelines, capital, talent, and real execution related to immigration to Canada.
In this session Blayne Kumar, Nino Melikidze, and Immitracker join NextStars for a straight conversation with clear signals and practical next steps.
Canada treats business immigration as economic policy. The flagship for founders is the Start Up Visa. To qualify for immigration to Canada, you need a Letter of Support from a designated organization, a qualifying business, language at CLB 5 or higher, and proof of settlement funds. You can apply solo or as a team of up to five owners.
Capacity is tight. Since 2024 the government has limited each designated organization to a small number of complete group applications per year. That cap changed intake strategy for incubators, funds, and angel groups. It also raised the bar on preparation and timing.
Timelines are the pain point. Current estimates for permanent residence through the Start Up Visa can stretch many years due to backlogs and intake limits. Smart founders plan for a long PR path and focus on interim work authorization plus real traction in Canada.
There is a bridge while you wait. If you have filed your Start Up Visa PR, you may be eligible for an open work permit that lets you live in Canada and build for up to three years. Another option is the significant benefit work permit for entrepreneurs who can show clear benefit to Canada. These are temporary but they buy time to execute.
Start Up Visa is not the only path for immigration to Canada. Provinces run entrepreneur streams that move from work permit to PR if you hit targets. British Columbia, Ontario, and Alberta each have options for new ventures or business purchases. These streams are competitive but timelines can be more predictable when the business plan, job creation, and investment meet the criteria.
Bottom line. Treat Canada like a market entry project. Secure the right designated partner early if you pursue Start Up Visa. Line up a temporary work path so you can operate in Canada. Use provincial programs where they fit. Then prove it with customers, revenue, and hires. Policy moves slowly. Execution wins.
Chekout Immitracker: https://myimmitracker.com/
Watch the full video: https://youtu.be/oOBcXzIawhU?si=w9AvTfCko41InIkw
Reach out to us: https://nextstars.io/consultation-inquiry/