Caregiver Immigration to Canada: Financial Guide 2025
Updated March 2025 · bremo.io
Canada's caregiver immigration programs provide pathways to permanent residence for foreign workers who provide care for children, elderly people, or people with medical needs. Understanding the financial aspects — including wages, proof of funds, and the path to PR — is essential for anyone considering this route.
Current Caregiver Pathways in 2025
The caregiver programs have evolved significantly. As of 2025, the main pathways are:
Home Child Care Provider Pilot
For caregivers who care for children (under 18) in a private home. Requires a job offer from a specific Canadian family as an employer.
Home Support Worker Pilot
For caregivers who provide care to elderly people or persons with chronic illness or disability.
LMIA-Based Work Permit (Traditional Caregiver)
Some caregivers continue to come through LMIA-approved job offers and transition to PR through Express Entry after 24 months of qualifying work experience.
Financial Requirements for Caregiver Applications
Settlement Funds
For the pilot programs leading directly to PR, settlement fund requirements apply:
- 1 person: $14,690 CAD
- 2 persons: $18,288 CAD
- 3 persons: $22,483 CAD
- 4 persons: $27,297 CAD
Application Fees
For the caregiver pilots leading to PR:
- Open work permit fee: $255 CAD (if applying for interim work permit while PR processed)
- PR application processing fee: $850 CAD
- RPRF: $575 CAD
- Biometrics: $85 CAD
Wages and Income for Caregivers in Canada
Understanding your earning potential helps with financial planning. Caregiver wages vary significantly by province and type of care:
Provincial Minimum Wages for Caregivers (2025)
- British Columbia: $17.40/hour minimum wage
- Ontario: $17.20/hour minimum wage
- Alberta: $15.00/hour minimum wage
- Quebec: $15.75/hour minimum wage
Typical Caregiver Wages
- Live-in nanny/childcare: $16–$22/hour (plus accommodation if live-in)
- Home support worker: $18–$28/hour
- Private caregiver for elderly: $18–$30/hour
- Healthcare aides (through agency): $18–$26/hour
Live-In vs. Live-Out: Financial Comparison
Live-In Caregivers
If your employer provides accommodation and meals:
- Benefit: Significant housing savings (housing in major cities costs $1,200–$2,500/month)
- Deduction: Employers may make payroll deductions for room and board — maximum deductions are set provincially (typically $500–$900/month)
- Net effect: Even with deductions, most live-in caregivers save substantially more than live-out at the same hourly wage
Live-Out Caregivers
Pay your own housing and living costs from your wages. Budget planning is essential:
- Rent (shared): $700–$1,400/month depending on city
- Transit: $100–$160/month
- Food: $350–$500/month
- Phone: $35–$65/month
Employment Standards: Know Your Rights
All provinces have employment standards that protect caregivers:
- Right to minimum wage (even if live-in, net of legal deductions)
- Overtime pay after 44–48 hours/week depending on province
- Holiday pay and vacation pay
- Right to a written employment contract
- Protection against unjust dismissal
Know your rights: Caregivers are among the most vulnerable workers to labour exploitation. If you believe your employer is violating employment standards, contact your provincial employment standards office — the complaint is confidential and does not affect your immigration status.
Building Credit and Savings as a Caregiver
Caregivers often have limited time for financial administration. Priorities in order:
- Open a Canadian bank account immediately — set up direct deposit from employer
- Get your SIN
- File taxes each April to access GST/HST credit and other benefits
- Open a TFSA and contribute any surplus savings
- Apply for a secured credit card to start building credit history
Sending Money Home
Many caregiver workers support family abroad. The best services for remittances from Canada include Wise, Remitly, and specific corridor services (e.g., LBC Express for Philippines, Ria for Mexico). Avoid bank wire transfers — the fees are disproportionately high on smaller amounts.
After 24 Months: Applying for PR
After completing 24 months of qualifying work experience, caregivers can apply for permanent residence. This triggers the full PR application fees. Start saving for these costs early:
- Single applicant: $850 (processing) + $575 (RPRF) + $85 (biometrics) = $1,510
- Family of 3: Approximately $4,000–$5,000 in total government fees
Many caregivers save toward PR application costs throughout their work permit period, using a TFSA or high-interest savings account for this purpose.
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