Posting the job is only half the LMIA battle. For HR teams, most rejections happen when the file is incomplete: missing documents, vague transition plans, or new 2025 rule violations. Service Canada now reviews LMIA files more aggressively, making full documentation critical.
This article explains exactly what HR must include in the LMIA file, how transition plans work, and which 2024–25 rule changes could stop your application before it even starts.
Recent data shows how serious LMIA file preparation failures have become. Between April and September 2024, Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) conducted 649 employer compliance inspections. 11% of those inspections found employers non-compliant, resulting in over $2.1 million in fines, more than double compared to the same period in 2023. Additionally, 20 employers were banned from the program, a fivefold increase from the year before.
Every LMIA is a compliance package. Service Canada isn’t just reviewing your candidate, they’re evaluating whether your company followed every rule, documented every step, and can justify each hiring decision.
Failure to include one required document can result in:
Before you submit your LMIA application, Service Canada expects a fully organized and verifiable file. HR teams must approach file preparation as a legal audit package, not simple paperwork.
Note: Since October 2024, lawyer or accountant letters of attestation are no longer accepted. Business legitimacy must be proven directly with corporate documents.
Weak plans like “We will advertise locally” or “We will try to hire Canadians” often trigger RFIs or refusals.
As regulations continue to evolve, HR teams must closely track annual LMIA rule changes that directly impact documentation and eligibility. The following updates are particularly important for LMIA file preparation in 2025:
Rule Change | Impact on LMIA File Preparation |
Ban on lawyer/CPA attestations (Oct 2024) | Business legitimacy must be proven directly with tax & corporate filings |
Wage threshold increase (Nov 2024) | Wage calculations must reflect new median wage tables |
Low-wage moratoriums (2024-2025) | Files for low-wage roles in certain regions — including census metropolitan areas with unemployment rates of 6% or higher — may be automatically refused, particularly in cities like Montréal and Laval. |
More audit triggers (2025) | Incomplete files increase audit likelihood after approval |
These enforcement trends underscore the growing importance of full audit readiness. With compliance penalties sharply rising, HR teams must build audit-proof LMIA files from the start.
Even after approval, employers remain under audit risk for 6 years. HR must retain:
Failure to provide these documents during an audit can result in serious consequences for the employer, including:
Building a compliant LMIA file isn’t paperwork, it’s risk management. The strongest LMIA applications are built from day one of recruitment, with every document gathered in real-time.
Don’t wait until submission day to organize your file. Book a free consultation with our team to plan your next hire.