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Licensed RCIC and CPA guidance on the C11 work permit: who can run a Canadian business under the International Mobility Program in 2026, what the rules actually require, and how a temporary work permit differs from permanent residence.
Written and reviewed by Usman Khalil, RCIC (R709592), a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant and member of the College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants (CICC). Last reviewed: June 2026.
The C11 work permit lets certain foreign business owners come to Canada to run their own business without a Labour Market Impact Assessment. It is a useful route, but the official rules are often misunderstood, and the details matter. This page explains, in plain English and using the official rules, who qualifies, what the significant-benefit test and the 51 percent ownership rule actually mean, how funds and duration work, and one point many websites get wrong: the C11 is a temporary work permit, not permanent residence. If you are weighing it as a way into Canada, the most useful first step is an honest review of whether it fits your situation and your longer-term plan.
Current status: The C11 is an open, LMIA-exempt work permit under the International Mobility Program (R205(a), significant benefit, exemption code C11). It is temporary. It does not grant permanent residence, and time spent self-employed on a C11 does not count toward the Canadian Experience Class.
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Book a ConsultationStart Your Free AssessmentTable of Contents
1. Current status in 20262. What the C11 work permit is3. Who the C11 is for4. Who the C11 is not for5. C11 eligibility at a glance6. The 51 percent business control rule7. Significant benefit, explained in plain English8. Temporary intent and the 18-month maximum duration9. Funds: business funds and separate support funds10. Business plan and source of funds11. C11 is not permanent residence12. How C11 may fit into a broader immigration strategy13. C11 vs Start-Up Visa vs provincial entrepreneur programs14. Common officer concerns and refusal risks15. How MAK helps16. Official sourcesThe C11 work permit is open in 2026. It is issued under the International Mobility Program, which means it does not require a Labour Market Impact Assessment, and it sits under the provision for work that brings a significant benefit to Canada. With the federal Start-Up Visa paused for new applicants and the Self-Employed Persons Program also paused, more business owners are looking at the C11 as a way to enter Canada and operate a business. It is important to be clear about what it is and is not: it is a temporary work permit for business owners, not an investor visa and not a grant of permanent residence.
The C11 is the exemption code Canada uses for a foreign national who comes to Canada to operate, including to establish, their own business, where that work can create a significant benefit for Canadians or permanent residents. Because it falls under the International Mobility Program, no Labour Market Impact Assessment and no Canadian employer sponsor are needed. The official term Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada uses is business owner, defined as a person who is self-employed or an entrepreneur. You may also see it described informally as an owner-operator work permit, but the rules are written around the business-owner concept. For the wider picture, see our business immigration hub. The C11 is a temporary work permit tied to running your business, and it is assessed case by case.
The C11 is for foreign business owners who will actively run a business in Canada and who can show that the business brings a significant economic, social, or cultural benefit, or opportunities, to Canadians or permanent residents. In practice it fits people who will own and control the Canadian business (see the 51 percent rule below), who will be hands-on in operating it rather than passive, who have a genuine, viable business and a credible plan, and who intend to be in Canada temporarily for this work.
The C11 is not for passive investors who will not actively run the business, minority owners who control less than 51 percent of the business (they would generally apply as an employee instead), applicants whose real intention is to settle permanently right away rather than to work temporarily, or anyone expecting the work permit, by itself, to lead to permanent residence. If your goal is permanent residence, a temporary work permit built around temporary intent may not be the right starting point, and other programs should be assessed.
The table below summarises what the official rules indicate. The detail in each section explains how officers apply these factors, because that is where applications succeed or fail.
| Current status | Open, LMIA-exempt, International Mobility Program (R205(a), code C11) |
|---|---|
| Ownership | You must control at least 51 percent of the business |
| Significant benefit | The work must generate significant economic, social, or cultural benefit, or opportunities, for Canadians or permanent residents |
| Investment | No official minimum amount; officers assess viability and that funds are sufficient and legally sourced |
| Funds (two separate sets) | Settlement and support funds separate from business funds; support funds at least the Low Income Cut-Off for your family size for a minimum of 18 months |
| Duration | Maximum of 18 months; officer-assessed, not guaranteed |
| Extensions | Possible, but not automatic; you must again show temporary intent and continued significant benefit |
| Temporary intent | Required; you must intend to leave Canada at the end of your authorized stay |
| Permanent residence | Not granted by the C11; PR is a separate application under a different program |
This is one of the clearest rules. To be considered for a work permit as a business owner, you must control at least 51 percent of the business. If your share is smaller than 51 percent, the official guidance is that you would generally need to apply for a work permit as an employee, not as a business owner. So before anything else, your ownership and control structure has to support a business-owner application. We review this early, because a structure that does not meet the 51 percent control test changes the whole approach.
The heart of the C11 is the significant-benefit test. Your work in the business has to be able to create a significant economic, social, or cultural benefit, or opportunities, for Canadian citizens or permanent residents. There is no points grid for this. An officer assesses it on the facts: what the business does, whether it is viable, whether it creates or maintains jobs or other benefits for Canadians or permanent residents, and whether your role genuinely delivers that benefit. It is not about how much money you spend; it is about the real, documented benefit your business brings. A vague plan or a business that does not clearly benefit Canadians is a common reason these applications fail.
The official page for this code is, in effect, for business owners seeking only temporary residence, and that framing matters. The C11 is a temporary work permit. You must show that you intend to stay temporarily and that you will leave Canada at the end of your authorized period, which includes showing you have the capacity and willingness to leave. On duration, the guidance is that a C11 work permit should normally be issued for a maximum of 18 months. That is a maximum and is assessed by the officer; it is not an automatic 18-month grant. If you genuinely need more time, that is handled through an extension, not assumed.
The funds requirement has two separate parts, and they cannot be the same money. First, you need business funds to carry out the proposed work; there is no official minimum dollar amount, and the officer assesses whether the funds are sufficient for your specific business and are legally sourced. Second, and separately, you need settlement and support funds to support yourself and any family members, kept separate from the business funds. The official guidance ties the support funds to the Low Income Cut-Off for your family size, for a minimum of 18 months, in transferable and available funds. In short: money for the business, and separate money to live on. Mixing the two, or relying on the business capital to also cover living costs, is a common weakness.
Because the officer assesses business viability and the source of your funds, two documents do most of the work: a realistic business plan and a clean, well documented source-of-funds and net-worth record. This is where the combination of a licensed Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant and a Chartered Professional Accountant is practical rather than promotional. The CPA side (CPA, Ontario, C83028834) helps prepare the financial parts of the business plan, the separation and sufficiency of business versus support funds, and a defensible legal money trail; the licensed consultant manages eligibility, the significant-benefit narrative, and the filing. Weak or unexplained funds and generic business plans are among the most common reasons these applications are refused.
This is the point many sites get wrong, so we are direct about it. A C11 work permit does not grant or guarantee permanent residence, and it is not a permanent residence pathway. Two things follow from the official rules. First, a person with a long-term immigration goal still needs to show temporary intent for the C11 work permit and must qualify separately for permanent residence under another program. Second, and importantly, time spent self-employed as a business owner on a C11 does not count toward the Canadian Experience Class. So a C11 should never be presented, or relied on, as a way to earn Canadian Experience Class eligibility through self-employment.
The C11 can still be useful as part of a wider plan, but only if the permanent residence step is treated as a separate application under a different program, with its own eligibility. Depending on your profile, a possible later route to permanent residence might be a provincial entrepreneur stream, such as the BC Entrepreneur Immigration Base Category, the New Brunswick Business Immigration Stream, or the Manitoba Entrepreneur Pathway, where you would meet that program’s own requirements, or another permanent residence program you separately qualify for. Canada’s main skilled-worker permanent residence system, Express Entry, is entirely separate from the C11, and time self-employed on a C11 does not create Express Entry eligibility on its own. None of these is automatic, and none is conferred by the C11 itself.
These are different tools, and they are commonly confused. The C11 work permit is a temporary federal work permit for business owners; it is not permanent residence. The Start-Up Visa is a federal permanent residence program, and as of 2026 it is paused for new applicants; see our Start-Up Visa status page for the current position. Provincial entrepreneur programs are run by individual provinces and usually work in stages: a temporary work permit first, then, after you establish and operate the business and meet the program’s terms, a provincial nomination, and then a separate federal permanent residence application; see our Provincial Entrepreneur Programs comparison. Choosing among these depends on your funds, goals, timeline, and which programs are currently open.
The C11 applications we see run into trouble most often when the ownership and control structure does not clearly meet the 51 percent rule, when the significant benefit is asserted but not demonstrated with evidence, when the business plan is generic or the business is not clearly viable, when the source of funds is not fully documented or legally explained, when the business funds and support funds are not properly separated or the support funds fall short of the Low Income Cut-Off for the required period, when temporary intent is weak, or when the application is treated as a route to permanent residence rather than a temporary work permit. Most of these are avoidable with the right structure and documentation, which is the point of a proper review before filing.
MAK works with licensed Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultants and a CPA. We confirm whether your ownership structure, business, and funds fit the C11 rules, build the significant-benefit case and the temporary-intent evidence, prepare the business plan and a defensible source-of-funds record with CPA support, and map, separately and honestly, whether a credible permanent residence route exists for you later. We do this assessment before any application is filed, so you are not relying on a work permit to do something it cannot.
This page follows the Government of Canada program delivery instructions and the underlying regulation. See the C11 program delivery instructions (business owners seeking only temporary residence), the significant-benefit guidance (C10), and section 205 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations. Program rules change; confirm the current requirements before you apply.
For how to document your net worth and prove a legal money trail, see our guide to source of funds for business immigration.
Wondering how the temporary C11 compares with a provincial nomination route toward permanent residence? See C11 vs PNP Entrepreneur.
A genuine, viable business case is central to the significant-benefit assessment; see our guide to the business plan for Canadian immigration.
CPA, RCIC | MAK Immigration
Usman Khalil helps entrepreneurs and investors with business immigration planning, provincial entrepreneur pathways, business plans, source-of-funds documentation, and compliance strategy.
CPA, RCIC | MAK Immigration
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