The 16-Month Rule That Determines Whether Your Spouse Can Work in Canada
If you are a master’s student planning to bring your spouse to Canada in 2026, there is one number that determines everything: 16 months.
IRCC’s January 21, 2025 policy change fundamentally altered the spousal open work permit (SOWP) landscape. The most consequential detail for graduate students is the 16-month minimum duration requirement. If your master’s program is shorter than 16 months, your spouse cannot get an open work permit. No exceptions.
This is not a minor technicality. For the thousands of students enrolled in accelerated 12-month or 14-month master’s programs — which are common in fields like engineering, business, and data science — this rule means your spouse is effectively locked out of the Canadian labour market for the duration of your studies.
Understanding the 2025-2026 SOWP Restrictions
Before January 2025, any international student with a valid study permit could apply for an open work permit for their spouse. The spouse could work anywhere, for any employer, with no restrictions on hours or occupation.
That changed completely. IRCC restricted SOWP eligibility to three narrow categories:
- Master’s degree programs of 16 months or longer
- Doctoral (PhD) programs of any length
- Specific professional degree programs (medicine, dentistry, law, pharmacy, nursing, engineering, education, veterinary medicine, optometry)
Every other category — undergraduate students, college diploma programs, certificate programs, and master’s programs shorter than 16 months — is now excluded.
The government’s stated rationale was to reduce permanent migration pressure while still attracting high-skilled talent for advanced degrees. The practical effect, however, is that many international students now face a choice: pursue a shorter program and lose spousal work rights, or extend their studies to meet the 16-month threshold.
Which Master’s Programs Qualify? The Detailed Breakdown
The key question for every master’s student is: does my program meet the 16-month minimum?
Program duration is measured by the official program length stated in your Letter of Acceptance and confirmed against DLI records. IRCC officers will verify this independently. Do not rely on self-reported program length.
Programs That Qualify for SOWP
| Program Type | Minimum Duration | SOWP Eligible? | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Master’s Degree (thesis-based) | 16+ months | ✅ Yes | MSc (24 months), MA (16 months) |
| Master’s Degree (course-based) | 16+ months | ✅ Yes | MEng (20 months), MPH (24 months), MSW (24 months) |
| Master’s Degree (co-op) | 16+ months | ✅ Yes | MCV (24 months), MPA (16 months) |
| PhD | No minimum | ✅ Yes | All PhD programs |
Programs That Do NOT Qualify for SOWP
| Program Type | Typical Duration | SOWP Eligible? | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accelerated MBA | 12 months (3 terms) | ❌ No | Spouse cannot get SOWP |
| 14-month MEng | 14 months (2 terms + summer) | ❌ No | Spouse cannot get SOWP |
| Data Science MSc | 12-16 months (varies) | ❌ If <16 months | Spouse cannot get SOWP |
| Professional Master’s | 12-14 months | ❌ No | Spouse cannot get SOWP |
| Undergraduate Degree | 3-4 years | ❌ No | Not in qualifying categories |
| College Diploma | 1-3 years | ❌ No | Not in qualifying categories |
The 16-Month Rule: What Counts and What Doesn’t
This is where most students and educational agents make critical mistakes. The 16-month threshold is a hard requirement, not a guideline.
How Duration Is Calculated
IRCC measures the total program duration from the start date to the end date as stated in your Letter of Acceptance. This includes all terms, co-op placements, and internships that are part of the official program structure.
A 12-month MBA completed across three consecutive terms (Fall, Winter, Summer) does NOT qualify. The fact that the program is intensive and covers the same academic content as a 16-month program is irrelevant. IRCC only looks at the calendar duration.
A 14-month Master of Engineering does NOT qualify. Even though many Canadian universities offer this as their standard engineering master’s format, it falls short of the 16-month minimum by two full months.
A 16-month Master of Science DOES qualify. Programs that span at least 16 calendar months from start to finish meet the threshold, regardless of whether they are thesis-based or course-based.
What About Prerequisite Programs?
If your master’s acceptance is conditional on completing prerequisite courses (ESL, foundation programs, academic bridging), those prerequisite periods are included in the total program duration for SOWP eligibility purposes. However, the main master’s program itself must also be 16+ months.
Full-Time Enrollment: The Hidden Requirement
Even if your program meets the 16-month minimum, there is a second eligibility requirement that many students overlook: you must maintain full-time student status throughout the program.
| Your Enrollment Status | SOWP Eligibility |
|---|---|
| Full-time enrollment | ✅ Eligible |
| Part-time enrollment (any term) | ❌ Not eligible |
| Authorized leave of absence | ⚠️ May affect status |
| Final term (reduced course load) | ✅ Permitted |
International student advisors confirm that reduced course load allowances for final terms are permitted. However, if you take a leave of absence or drop to part-time status for any other reason, your spouse’s SOWP may be affected.
Step-by-Step SOWP Application Process
Step 1: Verify Your Program Qualifies
Before your spouse applies, confirm three things:
- Your master’s program is 16+ months (or you are in a qualifying professional degree or PhD)
- You are enrolled full-time at a DLI
- Your study permit is valid
Check your Letter of Acceptance and cross-reference with the DLI’s program information on the IRCC designated learning institution list. If there is any discrepancy, contact your DLI before applying.
Step 2: Gather Required Documents
| Document | Required From |
|---|---|
| Proof of your enrollment | You (DLI letter or valid study permit) |
| Proof of relationship | Both (marriage certificate or common-law declaration) |
| Spouse’s passport | Spouse (valid for requested duration) |
| Spouse’s medical exam | Spouse (if required by country of origin) |
| Spouse’s police certificate | Spouse (if required) |
Step 3: Submit the Application
Your spouse can apply from outside Canada before you depart, or from inside Canada after arrival. Processing times vary by country, typically 3-6 months.
Strategic tip: Applying for your spouse’s SOWP in parallel with your own study permit application can streamline processing. IRCC sometimes processes family applications together when submitted simultaneously.
The PR Advantage: Why This Matters for Family Immigration
Here is the most powerful aspect of the SOWP strategy that most students do not fully appreciate: your working spouse can qualify for Canadian permanent residence before you even graduate.
Here is how it works in practice:
- Your spouse works full-time for 12+ months in a TEER 0/1/2/3 occupation under the SOWP
- Your spouse enters the Express Entry pool and accumulates Canadian work experience points
- Your spouse receives an Invitation to Apply (ITA) for PR while you are still studying
For a 20-month master’s program (16+ months), the non-studying spouse could receive PR two years before you graduate. This means your family transitions to permanent resident status while one member is still completing their education.
This is the key reason why the 16-month threshold matters so much. A 14-month program means no SOWP, no spouse work experience, no Express Entry points, and no PR pathway through the spouse during your studies. The difference between 14 and 16 months can be the difference between a family PR pathway and no pathway at all.
Who Does NOT Qualify for SOWP
The following scenarios mean your spouse is not eligible for an open work permit:
- Undergraduate degree — regardless of field or duration
- College diploma or certificate programs — regardless of duration
- Master’s programs shorter than 16 months — including accelerated MBAs and 12-month MEng programs
- Part-time enrollment — you must be full-time
- Blended or primarily online programs — may not qualify depending on the proportion of online study
Dependent children are no longer eligible for open work permits under the 2025 changes. Children may still study in Canada with a study permit but cannot work.
What If Your Program Does Not Qualify?
If your master’s program is shorter than 16 months, you have several options:
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
| Switch to a longer program | Transfer to a 16+ month master’s at the same or different DLI |
| PhD pathway | Doctoral programs have no duration restriction — any PhD qualifies |
| Spouse works via LMIA | Spouse finds an employer willing to sponsor an LMIA work permit |
| Spouse studies instead | Spouse enrolls in a qualifying program as the primary applicant |
Warning: Do not misrepresent your program length to IRCC. They cross-reference DLI program data directly, and a misrepresentation finding can result in a 5-year ban from Canada.
Quebec-Specific Considerations
Quebec CAQ (Certificat d’acceptation du Québec) holders must ensure their CAQ aligns with program duration requirements. Some Quebec professional bridging programs may qualify for SOWP, but you need to verify with your DLI and IRCC’s operational instructions.
Maintaining SOWP Validity
Once your spouse’s SOWP is approved, the permit is typically valid for the same duration as your study permit. To maintain validity:
- You must remain enrolled full-time (except final term reduced course load)
- Your study permit must remain valid
- Your spouse must comply with all work permit conditions
- If your program ends early or you withdraw, your spouse must stop working
If your study permit expires and you apply for renewal, your spouse can maintain their own status through maintained status provisions. However, if your new study permit is refused or significantly shortened, the spouse’s SOWP may be affected.
Key Takeaways
The 16-month rule is the single most important factor for master’s students planning family immigration to Canada in 2026.
Three Things Every Master’s Student Must Do:
| # | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Verify your program duration — check Letter of Acceptance against DLI records for 16+ months minimum |
| 2 | Apply for spouse’s SOWP early — submit with or shortly after your own study permit application |
| 3 | Plan the PR pathway — if your spouse works 12+ months in TEER 0-3, they can apply for PR before you graduate |
If your program is under 16 months, reconsider whether the shorter duration is worth the loss of spousal work rights. The financial and immigration implications can be substantial.
FAQ: Common Questions
Q: My master’s program is 14 months. Can I still get my spouse an open work permit?
A: No — under the 2025 restrictions, master’s programs shorter than 16 months do not qualify. Your spouse cannot get a SOWP based on your enrollment.
Q: Does a co-op or internship count toward the 16-month duration?
A: Yes — if the co-op or internship is part of the official program structure, the total duration including work terms counts toward the 16-month minimum.
Q: Can my spouse start working before my SOWP is approved?
A: No — your spouse cannot begin working until the open work permit is actually issued. Applied status does not include work rights.
Q: What if my program gets extended from 14 to 16 months mid-study?
A: If your official program duration changes and is documented in a new Letter of Acceptance, you may reapply for SOWP eligibility. Contact your DLI first to confirm the change is reflected in their records.
Q: Does this rule apply to students already in Canada?
A: The 16-month rule applies to SOWP applications submitted on or after January 21, 2025. If your spouse already has a valid SOWP issued under the old rules, it remains valid until its expiry date.
