Quebec universities see sharp drop in international student applications | CBC News (2025)

Montreal

After both the federal and provincial governments lowered limits on international student study permits, some Quebec universities fear a clear message has been heard by students around the world: they are not as welcome here as they were before.

Concordia, Université de Montréal report 37 per cent decrease in applications for fall semester

Quebec universities see sharp drop in international student applications | CBC News (1)

Annabelle Olivier, Kwabena Oduro · CBC News

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Quebec universities see sharp drop in international student applications | CBC News (2)

Quebec universities are sounding the alarm over plummeting admission requests by international students wanting to study in the province.

The institutions say the drop is hurting their bottom line but has broader implications as well.

"These students are really important ...for our capacity to innovate, for our innovation, for the work that they are doing in our labs,"said Geneviève O'Meara, a spokesperson for the Université de Montréal.

TheBureau de coopération interuniversitaire(BCI), which represents the province's universities, said applications from international students dropped by 46 per cent between April 2024 and April 2025.

In Montreal, Concordia Univeristy and the Université de Montréalboth reported a 37 per cent decrease in applicationsfor the fall 2025 semester, while at McGillit was 22 per cent.

WATCH| Why Quebec is seeing a drop in international students applying to universities:

Quebec universities see sharp drop in international student applications | CBC News (3)

Quebec universities sound the alarm over plummeting international student applications

4 hours ago

After both the federal and provincial governments lowered limits on international student study permits, some Quebec universities fear a clear message has been heard by students around the world: they are not as welcome here as they were before.

That's in addition to a significant drop of 32 per cent the year prior, according to Concordia University spokesperson Vannina Maestracci.

According to Christian Blanchet, president of the Université du Québecà Trois-Rivièresand the BCI, for some universities, the number is well over 50 per cent.

The schools say shifting government priorities and restrictions on immigration, both at the federal and provincial levels, are precipitatingthe decline.

  • Canada further reducing the number of international student permits

In 2024, the federal governmentcapped the number of study permit applications that could be accepted for processing.

The measure was introduced to "help ease the strain on housing, health care and other services," and resulted in a40 per cent drop in the number of international students coming to Canada to study, according toImmigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada(IRCC).

For 2025, IRCC, has set a target of437,000 study permits for international students, representing a decrease of 10 per cent.

Meanwhile, in February, Premier François Legault's government announced that universities would not be permitted to admit more international students than they did in 2024, meaning the quotastands at 63,299 applications province-wide.

  • Quebec universities face $200M shortfall amid international student drop

In a statement to CBC, a spokesperson for McGill University, said the reforms were introduced without consultation or coordination withthe academic sector, leading to "persistent instability in the management of student immigration."

The tightened immigration rules are alsotarnishing Quebec's international image and sending the wrong message that students are not welcome here, the universities say.

"Seeing our position decrease and our [attractiveness] decrease means that we are actually losing the battlefor talent," Blanchette said.

Like O'Meara, Blanchettestressed the critical role international students play in terms of innovation, competitivenessand fuellingeconomicdevelopment in the province.

"International students in theresearch labs that we have, play a fundamental role because in a highly specialized laboratory, we do not have enough Quebec students to actually help the research that has to be done there," he said.

"International students are key to to enable us to reach the economic goals that we have."

  • Quebec adopts bill to restrict international student enrolment

In an email in French,a spokesperson for Higher Education Minister Pascale Déry, said the government istaking into account the province's capacity to welcome foreign students after seeing a substantial increase in recent years.

"That is why we adopted Bill 74, to regulate the presence of these students in the territory and protect regional programs," spokesperson Simon Savignacwrote.

Under the law, which was adopted inDecember 2024 and tabled byQuebec Immigration Minister Jean-François Roberge, the ability of foreign students to enrol at certain colleges and universities is determined bycertain criteria, including region, programs, language, cohort size, labour needs and "government priorities."

Savignac said universities are being invitedto take part in upcoming consultations on the province's immigration plan, something the universities intend to do.

Blanchette hopes the government will reversecourse on its targets and work in concert with the schools and other levels of government to change its messaging in time for universities' recruitment cycle which starts in October.

The signal for 2026 that should be sent across the world is "You're welcome, please come," Blanchette said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Quebec universities see sharp drop in international student applications | CBC News (4)

Annabelle Olivier

Journalist

Annabelle Olivier is a digital journalist at CBC Montreal. She previously worked at Global News as an online producer. You can reach her at anne.isabelle.olivier@cbc.ca.

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