Direct Answer: The Canada Permanent Resident Absorption Index highlights a significant gap between the federal immigration targets of 380,000 new permanent residents annually and the provinces' combined capacity to absorb only 239,700. This results in a pressure ratio of 1.59, suggesting provinces are under strain.
Our Canada Permanent Resident Absorption Index compiled by Immigration News Canada (INC) serves as a critical tool in evaluating the provinces' capacity to absorb newcomers while maintaining economic and demographic stability. It is grounded in a comprehensive benchmark-driven stability model, reflecting provincial capacities against federal targets.
Canada's federal targets, outlined in the 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan, aim for 380,000 permanent residents each year. However, the Absorption Index reveals that under current economic conditions, provinces can collectively accommodate only 239,700 permanent residents annually, thus revealing a shortfall.
Absorption Capacity by Province
| Province | Stabilizing Threshold | Low Range | High Range | Per 1,000 | Final Score |
|---|
| National | 239,700 | 214,800 | 264,400 | 5.89 | 71 |
| Ontario | 92,700 | 83,400 | 102,000 | 5.87 | 72 |
| Quebec | 51,800 | 46,600 | 57,000 | 5.82 | 72 |
| Alberta | 34,800 | 31,300 | 38,300 | 6.90 | 78 |
| British Columbia | 34,200 | 30,800 | 37,600 | 6.11 | 73 |
| Saskatchewan | 7,700 | 6,900 | 8,500 | 6.21 | 73 |
| Manitoba | 7,500 | 6,800 | 8,200 | 5.10 | 66 |
| Nova Scotia | 4,200 | 3,400 | 5,000 | 3.93 | 44 |
| New Brunswick | 4,000 | 3,400 | 4,600 | 4.76 | 62 |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | 2,100 | 1,700 | 2,500 | 3.89 | 41 |
| Prince Edward Island | 600 | 500 | 700 | 3.43 | 41 |
Verixa Intelligence Analysis: The prominent gap between federal immigration targets and provincial capacity underscores the need for policy recalibration to prevent systemic strain. Strategies should enhance regional retention, improve service capacity, and adjust macroeconomic policies in line with the absorbing scenarios. Such actions will ensure sustained economic growth and social stability. Note: This analysis is for strategic guidance and does not constitute legal advice.

The model evaluates various essential factors such as labor market stability, housing, affordability, population growth, and service capacity. Each province's threshold is tailored based on unique macroeconomic conditions and newcomer impact scores.
When the provinces exceed their stabilizing capacity, it can lead to increased pressure on housing markets, labor demands, and public services, potentially compromising living standards and economic stability. Therefore, balancing immigration levels with capacity is crucial for maintaining regional prosperity.
This intelligence briefing was automatically generated. The original press release was published on 2026-05-06 by ImmigrationNewsCanada (unOfficaial news) and can be verified here.
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