Dear future neighbour,
Manitoba has been quietly but consistently making moves in 2026, and the latest one is worth your attention.
On June 18, 2026, the Manitoba Provincial Nominee Program (MPNP) wrapped up its 12th immigration draw of the year, sending out 124 Letters of Advice to Apply (LAAs) to skilled workers both inside the province and overseas. Every single draw Manitoba has held this year has gone through the Skilled Worker Stream and this latest one is no exception.
So who exactly got invited? Candidates who had been directly contacted by Manitoba through a strategic recruitment initiative, or those who held Manitoba-supported work permits. In other words, this wasn’t a general open draw. Manitoba was deliberately picking people it had already been in contact with.
See below the breakdown of invitations by recruitment category:
| Strategic Recruitment Initiative | LAAs Issued |
|---|---|
| Employer Services | 49 |
| Temporary Public Policy (TPP) | 32 |
| Regional Communities | 19 |
| Francophone Community | 15 |
| Ethnocultural Communities | 9 |
Employer Services took the largest share by nearly 40% of all invitations, showing that having an actual employer connection in Manitoba continues to be a serious advantage. Out of the 124 LAAs issued, 22 went to candidates who also had a valid Express Entry profile, meaning those individuals could potentially benefit from both the provincial and federal immigration systems working in their favour.
One thing to note: the Temporary Public Policy (TPP) that used to help certain candidates secure Manitoba-supported work permits has now expired. However, Manitoba announced back in May that it would still run targeted draws for people who received Support Letters under the TPP while it was active, specifically those whose letters were approved between April 22 and June 30, 2025. This June draw was part of that commitment.
It’s also worth knowing that some candidates who met the criteria may still not have received an invitation. The MPNP flagged two common reasons this happens: either a language test ID was missing, expired, or invalid in the Expression of Interest profile, or the invitation number from a recruitment initiative wasn’t entered correctly. These are fixable issues but only if you catch them before the next draw.
As of June 18, Manitoba has now extended a total of 1,833 invitations to apply this year. For context, the federal government granted the province a 2026 nomination allocation of 6,239, and 2,165 nominations have already been approved as of May.
There are also two recent changes worth flagging. The Career Employment Pathway (CEP) under the International Education Stream was permanently closed on June 11, 2026. Anyone who was pursuing that route and has at least six months of Manitoba work experience is being encouraged to transition to the Skilled Worker in Manitoba pathway instead. Additionally, since April 14, Manitoba introduced temporary measures allowing rural employers (outside the Winnipeg area) to hire a higher percentage of low-wage temporary foreign workers by up to 15% instead of the usual 10%. These measures run until March 31, 2027.
Manitoba isn’t slowing down, and the door hasn’t closed. But the program is clearly becoming more targeted, which means your preparation and profile accuracy matter more than ever.
Your Canadian Dream Doesn’t Have to Wait – Let’s Build Your Path Together
Whether you’re eyeing a provincial nomination through Manitoba or another province, exploring Express Entry, applying for a work permit, postgraduate work permit, spousal sponsorship, visitor or super visa, citizenship, or even school admissions – we’re here to walk you through every step. Book a consultation today and let’s figure out exactly where you stand and what your best options are.


