Hakam Immigration Services · Vancouver, BC

Employer Portal
Support

Your LMIA or LMIA-exempt job offer must be submitted correctly through the IRCC Employer Portal before your worker can apply for an employer-specific work permit.

✓ Job Offer Submission ✓ Portal Registration ✓ Compliance Support ✓ Employer-Specific Permits
LMIA approved? Submit the offer correctly.
LMIA-exempt role? Use the right exemption code.
Hiring foreign talent? Compliance starts now.
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Employer Portal Overview

What is the
IRCC Employer Portal?

The IRCC Employer Portal is the federal online system Canadian employers use to submit a formal job offer before a foreign worker applies for an employer-specific work permit.

For many LMIA-exempt work permits, and in certain employer-specific work permit situations, the portal submission is a critical step. The worker generally needs the offer of employment number generated through the portal before applying.

The portal is also connected to employer compliance. Once an offer is submitted and the worker is hired, the employer must maintain records and comply with the wages, duties, location, and working conditions listed in the submission.

At Hakam Immigration Services, we help Canadian employers navigate portal registration, job offer submission, exemption code matching, and compliance obligations.

Where the portal fits

Between the employer step
and the worker’s permit.

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The Employer Portal sits inside the employer-specific work permit process. It connects the employer’s job offer to the worker’s work permit application.

LMIA Approved or LMIA Exemption Confirmed

The employer confirms whether the role is supported by a positive LMIA or qualifies under an LMIA-exempt work permit category.

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Employer Portal You Are Here

The employer registers, submits the job offer, enters the LMIA number or exemption code where applicable, pays the employer compliance fee where required, and receives the offer number.

3

Worker Applies for Work Permit

The worker uses the required employer-side documents and offer number to apply for an employer-specific work permit.

View Employer-Specific Work Permit →
4

Worker Starts and Compliance Begins

Once the worker begins employment, the employer must maintain the conditions promised in the offer and preserve records for compliance review.

What the portal requires

This is not just
a one-time submission.

Employer Portal use involves registration, job offer accuracy, fees where applicable, and ongoing employer compliance obligations.

Step 1

Employer Registration

Employers may need to create and manage an Employer Portal account using accurate business and contact information.

Step 2

Job Offer Submission

The offer must reflect the correct occupation, wage, work location, duties, start date, LMIA number or exemption code, and employment conditions.

Step 3

Compliance Fee Payment

In many LMIA-exempt employer-specific cases, the employer compliance fee must be paid before the offer number is generated.

Ongoing

Record Keeping

Employers should retain employment records, payroll records, contracts, and supporting documents in case of future compliance review.

Ongoing

Condition Compliance

The employer must respect the wages, duties, location, hours, and working conditions described in the submitted offer.

Ongoing

Inspection Readiness

IRCC may conduct employer compliance inspections. Employers should be ready to demonstrate that promised conditions were maintained.

Compliance risks

What happens if
you do not comply?

Employer compliance is taken seriously. Errors, omissions, or failure to maintain job offer conditions can create significant consequences.

!

Financial Penalties

Employers found non-compliant may face administrative monetary penalties depending on severity, history, and the nature of the violation.

!

Ban from Hiring Programs

Serious or repeated violations can restrict an employer’s ability to hire foreign workers through employer-supported programs.

!

Public Disclosure

Names of non-compliant employers may be published, creating reputational and business consequences beyond the immigration file.

!

Worker-Side Consequences

Compliance problems can affect workers, permits, extensions, workplace stability, and the employer’s future ability to support immigration applications.

How we help

Employer Portal support
with compliance in mind.

Hakam Immigration Services supports Canadian employers through portal registration, job offer submission, exemption code review, and ongoing compliance planning.

Portal Registration

We guide employers through account setup and business information review so the portal foundation is correct.

Job Offer Submission

We help review the offer details before submission to reduce errors that could delay the worker’s permit application.

LMIA or Exemption Matching

We confirm the LMIA number or exemption code used in the submission aligns with the work permit strategy.

Compliance Briefing

We explain the employer’s obligations in clear terms, including wages, duties, working conditions, and record retention.

Record Keeping Guidance

We advise what documents to keep and how to organize records in case the employer is selected for review.

End-to-End Employer Support

We connect LMIA, Employer Portal, worker permit, and compliance steps so the process is coordinated from start to finish.

Common questions

Employer Portal Support
answered.

Do I need the Employer Portal for every foreign worker?
Not always. Open work permit holders usually do not require an employer portal submission. Many employer-specific work permit situations do require an employer-side submission or supporting employer documents.
How much is the employer compliance fee?
In many LMIA-exempt employer-specific cases, the employer compliance fee is payable before the offer number is generated. Fee rules should be confirmed for the specific pathway.
What happens if there is an error in the portal submission?
Errors can delay or weaken the worker’s application and may result in incorrect permit conditions. Some issues may require correction or a new submission.
How long should employers keep records?
Employers should keep employment records, payroll documents, contracts, and evidence of compliance for the applicable compliance review period.
Can IRCC inspect the employer?
Yes. Employers may be selected for compliance review to confirm that wages, duties, work location, and working conditions match what was promised.
What if wages, duties, or work location change?
Changes may require updated employer-side steps and sometimes a new work permit. Employers should get advice before changing the conditions connected to a foreign worker’s permit.

Let’s get your job offer submitted correctly.

Book an employer-focused Work Permit Consultation with Hakam Immigration Services to navigate the Employer Portal, avoid preventable errors, and understand your compliance obligations.

Book Employer Consultation View LMIA Services → View Employer-Specific Work Permit →

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