On May 6, 2026, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) announced a sweeping set of new regulations to crack down on dishonest immigration and citizenship consultants. The changes, which take effect July 15, 2026, give the College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants (the College) sharper teeth—and give applicants who have been cheated a clearer path to compensation.
If you are applying for a visa, permanent residence, or citizenship, or if you are considering hiring a paid representative, these rules will directly affect your rights and protections. Here is everything you need to know about the new framework and how to safeguard your own application.
Why These New Regulations Matter
Since the College was created in 2021, it has been responsible for licensing and disciplining Canadian immigration and citizenship consultants. However, bad actors have continued to exploit vulnerable applicants through ghost consultants, fraudulent promises, and unlicensed advice.
Minister Lena Metlege Diab put it bluntly: “People looking to build their future in Canada deserve access to honest and reliable immigration and citizenship advice. They need to have confidence that our government is taking effective steps to improve integrity.”
The new regulations, originally published in draft form in December 2024 and refined after stakeholder feedback, are designed to shift the balance. They give the College stronger enforcement tools, force greater transparency on who is licensed, and create real financial consequences for misconduct.
Key Changes Effective July 15, 2026
Here is a breakdown of what the new regulations introduce.
1. A Tougher Complaints and Discipline System with Higher Penalties
The College can now impose more severe penalties on consultants who break the rules. While specifics on the exact penalty ceilings have been left to the College’s by-laws, the regulation explicitly empowers the body to strengthen its discipline process. This means:
- Consultants found guilty of misconduct, fraud, or incompetence can face steeper fines, longer suspensions, and faster licence revocation.
- The disciplinary process will be streamlined to reduce delays that previously allowed problematic practitioners to continue operating while complaints lingered.
What this means for applicants: If you have been a victim of consultant fraud, filing a complaint now carries more weight. The College has greater authority to act—and to deter future misconduct.
2. Expanded Public Register of Licensed Consultants (April 2027)
A major transparency measure comes into force a little later. Starting April 2027, the College’s online public register must include more detailed information about every licensed consultant. Currently, the register confirms a consultant’s name, licence status, and contact details. The new rules will add fields that could include (based on the regulatory intent):
- Disciplinary history and sanctions
- Areas of practice or restrictions on a licence
- Any conditions imposed on a consultant’s ability to practise
The goal is to let you, as a prospective client, make a fully informed decision before signing a retainer agreement.
Pro tip: Until the enhanced register launches, you can already verify a consultant’s licence status at any time on the College’s current public register. Never hire someone who does not appear there as an active licensee.
3. New Reporting Requirements for the College
To ensure the College itself remains accountable, the regulations introduce new reporting obligations to IRCC. The College must provide more robust data and reports on:
- The number and types of complaints received and resolved
- Disciplinary outcomes
- The operation of its compensation fund
- Audit and governance matters
This creates a feedback loop in which the Minister can monitor whether the College is fulfilling its public-protection mandate, and intervene if necessary.
4. Clearer Investigation Rules for Misconduct Cases
Investigations into consultant misconduct have sometimes been slowed by procedural ambiguity. The new regulations clarify the rules governing how the College carries out investigations, including:
- Powers to compel documents and records
- Timelines for each stage of the investigation
- Standards for preserving confidentiality while ensuring procedural fairness
This clarity is expected to reduce the time between a complaint and a resolution, minimizing the window during which a potentially harmful consultant can continue to represent clients.
5. Ministerial Authority to Appoint a Replacement for the Board
If the College’s board of directors fails to meet its responsibilities, the Minister of Immigration now has the power to appoint someone to take over board duties. This is a governance failsafe. It ensures that even if internal College governance becomes dysfunctional, the organization can still regulate the profession in the public interest.
6. Establishment of a Compensation Fund Framework
One of the most victim-focused changes: the regulations lay out guidelines for the College’s compensation fund. This fund is designed to provide financial remedy to people who have suffered a monetary loss because of a consultant’s dishonest actions.
Key features expected under the framework include:
- Eligibility criteria for claimants
- Caps on claims or payout structures
- The process for applying to the fund
- How the fund will be financed (the College is funded entirely by licence fees, not tax dollars)
If you paid a consultant who subsequently defrauded you or mishandled your case dishonestly, you could apply to this fund rather than only having recourse through the court system.
The Big Picture: What Kate Lamb, Interim CEO of the College, Says
Kate Lamb, the College’s Interim President and CEO, welcomed the regulations: “The regulations strengthen the tools available to the College to help ensure that Canada’s immigration and citizenship consultants continue to meet the highest professional standards for their clients.”
She confirmed that the College will work to finalize by-laws and supporting frameworks before July 15, 2026, and that collaboration with government partners will continue. The message from both the Minister and the College is clear: the era of light-touch regulation for immigration consultants is over.
How to Protect Yourself Right Now
While these new rules will be transformative once they take effect, you can take steps today to avoid dishonest representatives.
1. Always Verify Your Consultant’s Licence
Before paying any money or sharing personal documents, check the College’s public register. If a person claims to be a lawyer, verify them with their provincial or territorial law society. Only licensed consultants, lawyers, Quebec notaries, and paralegals (in Ontario, for certain matters) are legally authorized to represent you for a fee in Canadian immigration matters.
Red flags: Someone who says they can “guarantee” a visa, who won’t provide a licence number, or who asks you to sign blank forms.
2. Sign a Written Retainer Agreement
Licensed consultants are required to use a retainer agreement that outlines fees, scope of services, and your rights. Read it thoroughly. If a copy is not provided, consider that a serious warning sign.
3. Report Unauthorized Practitioners
If you encounter someone offering paid immigration advice without a licence (so-called ghost consultants), report them to the College and to IRCC’s tip line. The government actively pursues these individuals, and the new regulations reinforce this priority.
4. Keep Copies of Everything
Maintain a file with all correspondence, receipts, applications submitted on your behalf, and the representative’s contact details. These documents become crucial evidence if you ever need to file a complaint or apply to the compensation fund.
5. Use the Compensation Fund When It’s Available
Once the compensation fund framework is fully operational, it will offer a new form of recovery. Stay informed through the College’s website to learn when the application process opens and what documentation is required.
A Timeline of Key Dates
| Date | What Happens |
|---|---|
| December 21, 2024 | Draft regulations published in the Canada Gazette, stakeholder feedback period begins. |
| May 6, 2026 | Final regulations announced by Minister Diab. |
| July 15, 2026 | New regulations take effect. The College gains enhanced disciplinary and investigative powers, new reporting requirements begin, and the compensation fund framework is established. |
| April 2027 | Expanded public register of licensed consultants goes live, giving the public more transparency on consultants’ records. |
Why This Matters for Immigration Applicants Like You
Whether you are navigating an Express Entry profile, preparing a SINP application, or seeking family sponsorship, the integrity of your representative can make or break your case. Unauthorized or unscrupulous consultants not only rob you of money; they can permanently ruin your immigration chances by submitting fraudulent information.
These new regulations represent a deliberate shift toward proactive public protection, not merely reactive discipline. The combined effect—tougher penalties, clearer investigations, a public register with disciplinary history, and a compensation fund—is to make the cost of misconduct unbearable for consultants while giving victims a genuine remedy.
As Minister Diab stated, the government wants people to “have confidence that our government is taking effective steps to improve integrity.” With the July 15, 2026 deadline, that confidence is being built into the system’s infrastructure.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q: Do these rules apply to all immigration consultants worldwide?
A: The rules apply to anyone who is licensed by the College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants to practise in Canada, and indirectly to those who claim to be licensed. Unauthorized practitioners abroad fall under different enforcement mechanisms, but the College’s public register can still help you verify if someone is genuinely licensed.
Q: I was cheated by a consultant before July 2026. Can I use the compensation fund?
A: The framework will set specific eligibility dates. Once the fund is operational, check the College’s guidelines. Generally, the fund is designed to cover losses caused by dishonest acts, and may not be retroactively limited to conduct that occurred after the fund’s creation, but details will be confirmed in the final by-laws.
Q: How do I file a complaint about a consultant?
A: Visit the College’s website, locate the complaints section, and follow the instructions. You will need your retainer agreement, a detailed account of what happened, and supporting documents.
Q: Are lawyers affected by these changes?
A: No. Lawyers in Canada are regulated by provincial and territorial law societies, not the College. If you use a lawyer, you are protected by those bodies’ discipline and compensation mechanisms instead.
Q: Will the public register show every consultant’s disciplinary history immediately on July 15?
A: No. The expanded register goes live in April 2027. Until then, the current register shows licence status but limited historical discipline information.
Final Word
Canada is reinforcing a simple principle: if you charge money to give immigration or citizenship advice, you will be held to the highest standard—and if you break the rules, you will face consequences designed to keep you out of the profession. For clients, this means greater safety, more transparency, and real recourse.
When you choose a representative, make the College’s public register your first stop. In a landscape being reshaped to protect you, due diligence is your greatest personal safeguard.