Getting an LMIA approved is a win, but it’s not the finish line. For HR teams, the true compliance challenge begins after the foreign worker is hired. As of 2025, penalties for post-approval violations have doubled, and Service Canada is expanding audits on employers years after the LMIA decision.
In this article, we explain what your company must do after receiving a positive LMIA, what to document, how long to keep it, and what triggers inspections.
Once your LMIA is approved and your foreign hire starts working, your obligations as an employer shift into long-term compliance mode.
Service Canada may conduct random or targeted inspections at any time in the 6 years following employment. If you can’t provide proof of compliance, you risk:
You must ensure the worker:
By law, employers must retain all records for 6 years from the first day of employment. This includes:
Service Canada may request these at any time, even years after the worker has left.
Your company may be selected for inspection if:
The consequences of non-compliance are serious and long-lasting:
Violation | Potential Penalty |
Underpaying wages | Up to $100,000 fine + repayment |
Missing records (e.g. hours worked) | Monetary penalty + audit flag for future LMIAs |
Changing job duties without notice | Program suspension for up to 5 years |
Repeated violations | Permanent ban + public blacklisting on Canada.ca |
Once listed publicly, it becomes harder to hire foreign workers, even in other programs.
Even well-organized HR departments often fall short in areas like:
Tip: Use a shared compliance checklist across your HRIS, payroll, and immigration teams to stay aligned.
HR teams should:
Your responsibility doesn’t end when the LMIA is approved, it continues for 6 years. The best way to stay safe is to treat LMIA compliance like a long-term legal obligation, not just an immigration step.
Not sure if your file would pass an audit? Book a free LMIA compliance check with AskAïa’s experts today.