Annual Report to Parliament on the Administration of the Export and Import Permits Act - 2025
Table of contents
- 1.0 Introduction
- 2.0 Key developments in 2025
- 3.0 Export and brokering controls
- 4.0 Import controls
- 5.0 Offences under the Export and Import Permits Act
- 6.0 Performance standards
- 7.0 References
List of tables
- Table 1: Export Control List groups and permit status summary for 2025*
- Table 2: Top 12 destinations for military, dual-use and strategic export permits issued in 2025*
- Table 3: Number of non-strategic export permits issued by sector in 2025*
- Table 4: Softwood lumber exports to the United States in 2025*
- Table 5: Log permits issued in 2025*
- Table 6: Controlled agri-food exports to the United States in 2025
- Table 7: Dairy export threshold exports under CUSMA in 2025*
- Table 8: Textiles and clothing: CUSMA tariff preference levels and utilization for exports from Canada in 2025*
- Table 9: CETA origin quotas 2025*
- Table 10: Textiles and clothing: CUSMA tariff preference levels and utilization for imports to Canada in 2025*
- Table 11: CETA origin quotas: textiles and apparel 2025*
- Table 12: Poultry and eggs: WTO TRQs*
- Table 13: WTO TRQs*
- Table 14: CETA TRQs*
- Table 15: CPTPP TRQs*
- Table 16: CUSMA TRQs*
- Table 17: Poultry and eggs: supplemental imports*
- Table 18: Dairy - supplemental imports*
- Table 19: Other agricultural product imports in 2025*
- Table 20: Non-FTA steel TRQ utilization in 2025
- Table 21: FTA steel TRQ utilization in 2025
List of figures
- Figure 1: Number of import permits for controlled goods in 2025*
- Figure 2: Number of import permits issued by sector in 2025*
- Figure 3: Number of import permits for weapons, munitions and chemicals in 2025*
1.0 Introduction
The Annual Report to Parliament on the Administration of the Export and Import Permits Act (EIPA), for the year 2025, is submitted pursuant to Section 27 of the EIPA, Chapter E-19 of the 1985 Revised Statutes of Canada, as amended, which provides that:
"No later than May 31 of each year, the Minister shall prepare and cause to be laid before each House of Parliament a report of the operations under this Act for the preceding year and a report in respect of arms, ammunition, implements and munitions of war, that were exported in the preceding year under the authority of and in accordance with an export permit issued under subsection 7(1)."
1.1 Purpose of the Export and Import Permits Act
The authority to control the import and export of goods and technologies is derived from the EIPA. It finds its origin in the War Measures Act and was first introduced as an act of Parliament in 1947. It has subsequently been amended on a number of occasions.
The EIPA provides that the Governor in Council may establish lists known as the Import Control List (ICL), the Export Control List (ECL), the Area Control List (ACL), the Automatic Firearms Country Control List (AFCCL) and the Brokering Control List (BCL). For each respective list, the EIPA sets out criteria that govern the inclusion of items or countries and provides that the Governor in Council may revoke, amend, vary, or re-establish any of the lists. Control over the flow of goods and technology contained in these lists or to the specified destinations is implemented through the issuance of import, export or brokering permits.
By order-in-council, the Minister of Foreign Affairs is responsible for the EIPA, and the Minister has the authority to grant or deny applications for permits under the Act, giving the Minister broad powers to control the trade of items contained in the lists mentioned above. The Minister also has broad authority, under subsection 10(1) of the EIPA, to "amend, suspend, cancel or reinstate any permit". Responsibility for the administration of the EIPA was temporarily transferred to the Minister of International Trade in March 2025 and was returned to the Minister of Foreign Affairs in May 2025. More information can be found in Order SI/2025-85.
While the Minister of Foreign Affairs maintains overall authority for decisions under the EIPA, the Minister of International Trade can assist the Minister of Foreign Affairs in carrying out responsibilities under the Act that are related to import and export controls implemented for economic and trade-related reasons. These include:
Import controls on:
- Agricultural products (including supply-managed products like poultry, eggs and dairy, as well as non-supply managed products like wheat, barley, beef and veal);
- Textiles and clothing;
- Steel; and
- Aluminum.
Export controls on:
- Skim milk powder, milk protein concentrate and infant formula containing more than 10% cow’s milk;
- Peanut butter;
- Sugars, syrups and molasses;
- Sugar-containing products;
- High-sugar-containing products;
- Sugar confectionery and chocolate preparations;
- Processed foods;
- Dog and cat food;
- Vehicles;
- Textiles and clothing;
- Softwood lumber; and
- Logs (of all species).
For export and brokering controls over military, dual-use and strategic goods and technology and import controls over munitions, the Minister of Foreign Affairs retains direct decision-making authority.
The operations carried out under the EIPA include:
- Import and export controls implemented for economic reasons, including obligations in Canada’s international trade agreements. The aim is to find a balance between ensuring that Canadians and Canadian businesses can benefit from predictable rules-based trade, while also supporting vulnerable Canadian industries and ensuring the viability of important Canadian policies, such as supply management.
- Export and brokering controls over dual-use, military and strategic goods and technology, which are designed to ensure that our exports are consistent with Canadian foreign and defence policies and security interests. A key priority of Canada’s foreign policy is the protection and promotion of international human rights, peace and security.
- Munitions items controlled for import for the purpose set out in section 5, para (c.1) of the EIPA, which restricts, “the importation of arms, ammunition, implements or munitions of war, army, naval or air stores, or any articles deemed capable of being converted thereinto or made useful in the production thereof”.
2.0 Key developments in 2025
Proposed amendments to the Export and Import Permits Act - Economic security
The Budget 2025 Implementation Act (Bill C-15) was introduced in Parliament in November 2025 and later received Royal Assent in March 2026. The Bill amends the Export and Import Permits Act to allow the government to control exports and imports of selected goods and technologies if required to protect Canada’s economic security. These authorities are intended to safeguard Canada against international coercion and supply chain vulnerabilities if needed in the future, and no economic security controls have been adopted to date.
2.1 Export controls
Guidance on the use of cloud services in respect of controlled technology
In November 2025, Global Affairs Canada (GAC) published Notice to exporters No. 1159 – guidance on the movement to and storage of controlled technology in the Cloud. The guidance clarifies when the use of cloud services constitutes a transfer of controlled technology within the meaning of the Export and Import Permits Act and if an export permit is required. This guidance is intended to give industry and the research community greater comfort and regulatory certainty in using cloud services where appropriate.
Policy reviews
Russia and Belarus
Throughout 2025, GAC maintained its presumptive denial policy on the export and brokering of any controlled goods and technology to Russia, as well as its suspension on the issuance of new permits to Belarus as set out in Notice to exporters and brokers No. 1071 (2022-02-24) and Notice to exporters and brokers No. 1033 (2020-11-09). In addition to export controls, Canada also imposed sanctions in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. More information on Canada’s sanctions is available on the Canadian sanctions website.
Israel
Since January 8, 2024, the Government of Canada has not approved any new arms export permits to Israel that could be used in the conflict in Gaza, and this remains the approach.
At the same time, the government also suspended export permits for parts destined for Israel that could be incorporated into items used in Gaza. All of the permits suspended in 2024 have expired and cannot be used to export to Israel.
Regulatory updates
Guide to Canada’s Export Control List update
Further to a streamlining amendment to the Export Control List (ECL) on June 3, 2021, commitments made at the four key multilateral export control regimes (the Australia Group, the Missile Technology Control Regime, the Nuclear Suppliers Group, and the Wassenaar Arrangement) are automatically incorporated into Canadian regulations 30 days after publication of an updated Guide to Canada’s Export Control List by GAC, as opposed to via a regulatory amendment.
The May 2025 edition of A Guide to Canada’s Export Control List was published on May 30, 2025, and provided to industry to allow a 30‑day period to familiarize themselves with the new controls that came into effect on July 1, 2025. The amendments introduced, clarified, and removed controls on specific items, reflecting updates agreed to within the four key multilateral export control regimes up to January 1, 2025.
In addition to the commitments made at the export control regimes, the ECL was amended to add new controls under item 5506 related to semiconductor manufacturing, quantum computing, temperature coating, and metal additive manufacturing machines (advanced 3D printers) technologies. This proposal was approved on March 7, 2025 (SOR/2025-89). These controls came into force on April 25, 2025.
These recent changes to the ECL were reflected in the May 2025 edition of A Guide to Canada’s Export Control List.
Other control lists: Area Control List, Automatic Firearms Country Control List and Brokering Control List
There were no amendments to the Area Control List (ACL) or Brokering Control List (BCL) in 2025.
On February 26, 2025, the Automatic Firearms Country Control List (AFCCL) was amended to add Brazil and Montenegro (SOR/2025-41). This amendment allows Canadians to export prohibited firearms, weapons and devices to these destinations further to receiving an export permit.
Inclusion of a country on the AFCCL allows Canadian residents to apply for permits to export prohibited firearms, weapons and devices to that destination. Each application is assessed on a case-by-case basis.
2.2 Import controls
Steel TRQs
Pursuant to the Order Imposing a Surtax on the Importation of Certain Steel Goods (SOR/2025-148) (Surtax Order) effective June 27, 2025, Canada implemented a steel import tariff-rate quota (TRQ) regime with a 50% surtax applicable to certain steel goods originating in certain countries that are imported above the specified volumes. To facilitate the implementation of the TRQs, certain steel goods were included under item 82 of the ICL. The Surtax Order was amended twice (August 1 and December 26) to adjust the country coverage, product scope and volumes of the TRQs.
Administration of the Surtax Order is shared between GAC, which administers TRQs and issues shipment-specific import permits for goods listed under item 82 of the ICL, and the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), which applies and enforces the over-quota surtax.
Public reports for country of melt and pour information for steel imports
Following the November 2024 amendments to General Import Permit (GIP) No. 80 – Carbon Steel and General Import Permit No. 81 – Specialty Steel Products to require importers to provide country of melt and pour (COM) information to the CBSA as a term and condition of using the GIPs, COM data was published online as of spring 2025. This improves supply chain transparency and provides a more comprehensive picture of the origin of imported steel goods.
2.3 Export and Import Permits Act Litigation
Hammam Farah et al v. Minister of Foreign Affairs et al.
This judicial review, filed on March 5, 2024, challenges any export or brokering permits issued for military goods and technology destined to Israel issued on or after October 9, 2023. In addition to asking the Court to order that the Minister of Foreign Affairs cease issuing such permits and cancel existing permits, the Applicants are also seeking declarations that the approval of such permits violates various domestic and international legal instruments.
This is the first judicial review related to military exports in which directly affected companies/permit holders have been added as Respondents.
This judicial review was ongoing as of December 31, 2025.
Hany El Batnigi and Tamer Jarada v. Attorney General of Canada
An action was filed, in November 2024, in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice alleging that Canada failed to take all reasonable measures to prevent genocide by Israel against the Palestinian people of Gaza, and alleging that Canada violated both international and domestic legal obligations by issuing permits under the Export and Import Permits Act authorizing the export of arms to Israel.
This action was ongoing as of December 31, 2025.
Viandes Riendeau Ltée et Jam-Bec Inc. c. Procureur General du Canada
These two applicants for import allocations under the chicken and chicken products tariff rate quotas (TRQs) have brought an application for judicial review in the Federal Court to challenge the Department’s decisions to deny them chicken TRQ allocations on account of their non-compliance with the “related persons” policy found in Notices to importers serial nos. 986, 987 and 988.
The Federal Court (on December 20, 2024, and on January 14, 2025) granted the Applicants’ motions to file their applications for judicial review outside the normal timelines. By Order of February 27, 2025, these two judicial reviews have been consolidated and will be heard together.
The parties are awaiting the issuance by the Federal Court of a hearing date for this application.
3.0 Export and brokering controls
3.1 Export Control List
Section 3 of the EIPA provides that the Governor in Council may establish a list of goods and technology, to be called the Export Control List, including therein any article the export of which the Governor in Council deems necessary to control for purposes specified in the EIPA. A complete list of goods and technology that are subject to export controls may be found on the Export controls webpage.
The Export Control List is comprised of nine groups, of which one has been repealed, as follows:
| Group | Goods and technology |
|---|---|
| 1 | Dual-use |
| 2 | Munitions |
| 3 | Nuclear non-proliferation |
| 4 | Nuclear-related dual-use |
| 5 | Miscellaneous goods and technology |
| 6 | Missile technology control regime |
| 7 | Chemical and biological weapons non-proliferation |
| 8 | Repealed, SOR/2006-16, s. 11 |
| 9 | Arms Trade Treaty |
Groups 1 and 2 contain Canada's multilateral commitments made under the Wassenaar Arrangement on Export Controls for Conventional Arms and Dual-Use Goods and Technologies (WA), founded in 1996. As set out in its “Initial Elements”, the objectives of the Wassenaar Arrangement include: “to contribute to regional and international security and stability, by promoting transparency and greater responsibility in transfers of conventional arms and dual-use goods and technologies, thus preventing destabilising accumulation.”
The 2025 Annual Report on Strategic Goods and Technologies Pursuant to Section 27 of the Export and Import Permits Act contains extensive detail and breakdown of information on Group 2 exports.
Through national policies, the WA participating states seek to ensure that transfers of items covered by the common control lists do not contribute to the development or enhancement of military capabilities that have the potential to undermine regional and global security and stability. Participating states also commit to take every precaution to ensure that such items are not diverted to illegitimate end-uses.
Groups 3, 4, 6 and 7 represent Canada’s multilateral commitments under the various non-proliferation regimes (the Nuclear Suppliers Group, the Australia Group, and the Missile Technology Control Regime) designed to control the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (chemical, biological and nuclear weapons) as well as their delivery systems.
Group 5 is comprised of various strategic and non-strategic goods and technology controlled for other purposes, as provided in the EIPA. This category includes: forest products (logs, softwood lumber), agricultural products (skim milk powder, milk protein concentrate, infant formula containing more than 10% cow’s milk, peanut butter, sugars, syrups and molasses and sugar-containing products), Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) origin quotas (high-sugar containing products, sugar confectionery and chocolate preparations, processed foods, dog and cat food, vehicles and certain apparel products) and the Canada-U.K. Trade Continuity Agreement (TCA) origin quota for vehicles.
In addition, Group 5 places export controls on non-regime listed strategic items, including all U.S. origin goods and technology not otherwise controlled on the ECL, blinding laser weapons, anti-personnel mines, nuclear fusion reactors, items with respect to quantum computing and advanced semiconductors, and contains an end-use provision to control the export of items that may be destined for use in a weapons of mass destruction activity or facility.
In accordance with its legislative authority in the EIPA to implement an international agreement, textile and clothing exports to certain countries with which Canada has free trade agreements (FTAs) (U.S., Mexico, Chile, Costa Rica and Honduras) are regulated under the EIPA. Section 9.1 of the EIPA also authorizes the Minister responsible for the EIPA to issue export certificates of eligibility. Group 5 includes these items as well.
Group 9 is a subset of Group 2 and includes the full-system conventional arms listed in Article 2 of the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT), namely:
- Battle tanks;
- Armoured combat vehicles;
- Large-calibre artillery systems;
- Military aircraft;
- Military helicopters;
- Military vessels and submarines;
- Missiles and missile launchers; and
- Small arms and light weapons destined for police and/or military end-use.
Canada is required to report annually on exports of Group 9 items to the United Nations ATT Secretariat and has been voluntarily reporting to the United Nations since 1992.
3.2 Military, strategic and dual-use items
In 2025*, for military, dual-use and strategic goods exports, there were:
- 4,663 permits issued;
- 377 applications returned without action;
- 411 applications withdrawn;
- 11 applications denied; and
- 38 permits cancelled or suspended.
*Between January 1 and December 31, 2025 (data based on submission of application).
The EIPA requires any resident who wishes to export from Canada any items included on the ECL to obtain, prior to export, an export permit issued by Global Affairs Canada. The exporter may be a non-resident of Canada however the applicant must always be a resident of Canada. In the case of a non-resident exporter, the applicant accepts legal responsibility for the use of the export permit if issued and is responsible for the export and potential violations.
An export permit describes, among other things, the quantity, technical description and nature of the items to be exported, as well as the final destination country and consignee. Unless otherwise stated, an export permit may authorize multiple shipments, up to the expiry of the permit and as long as the cumulative total of the quantity and value of items exported does not exceed the quantity and value stated on the permit. An export permit constitutes a legal authorization to export controlled goods or technology as described.
A key priority of Canada’s foreign policy is the maintenance of international peace and security. In line with its foreign policy objectives, the Government of Canada strives to ensure that goods and technology exported from Canada are not used in a manner that is prejudicial to human rights, peace, security or stability.
Furthermore, the Minister is legally required to take into account the assessment criteria referred to in Article 7 of the ATT for export and brokering permit applications for arms, ammunition, implements or munitions of war.
Specifically, the Minister is required to consider whether the goods or technology specified in the application:
- Would contribute to peace and security or undermine it; and
- Could be used to commit or facilitate:
- A serious violation of international humanitarian law;
- A serious violation of international human rights law;
- An act constituting an offence under international conventions or protocols relating to terrorism to which Canada is a party;
- An act constituting an offence under international conventions or protocols relating to transnational organized crime to which Canada is a party; or
- Serious acts of gender-based violence or serious acts of violence against women and children.
The legislation also stipulates that the Minister cannot issue an export or brokering permit for “arms, ammunition, implements or munitions of war” if, after taking into account the relevant considerations described above, including available mitigating measures, the Minister determines that there is a substantial risk that the proposed transaction would result in any of the negative consequences referred to in the ATT assessment criteria.
Additional information about the assessment process for export and brokering permits for military, strategic and dual-use items is available in the 2025 Annual Report on Strategic Goods and Technologies Pursuant to Section 27 of the Export and Import Permits Act.
Table 1: Export Control List groups and permit status summary for 2025*
| Groups | Submitted applications | Issued | Denied | Returned without action | Withdrawn | Cancelled or suspended | Under review or under assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group 1: Wassenaar dual-use list | 1,305 | 1,153 | 0 | 40 | 28 | 5 | 79 |
| Group 2: Wassenaar munitions list | 3,492 | 3,036 | 11 | 245 | 85 | 31 | 84 |
| Group 3: Nuclear non-proliferation list | 119 | 94 | 0 | 2 | 5 | 0 | 18 |
| Group 4: Nuclear-related dual-use list | 75 | 65 | 0 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 5 |
| Group 5: Miscellaneous goods and technology* | 107 | 73 | 0 | 5 | 27 | 0 | 2 |
| Group 6: Missile technology control regime list | 137 | 124 | 0 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
| Group 7: Chemical and biological weapons non-proliferation list | 129 | 110 | 0 | 7 | 5 | 1 | 6 |
| Group 9: Arms Trade Treaty | 10 | 7 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Others** | 350 | 1 | 0 | 70 | 255 | 0 | 24 |
| Totals | 5,724 | 4,663 | 11 | 377 | 411 | 38 | 224 |
*Strategic goods only. Non-strategic goods are covered in section 3.3.
**This category includes applications that were not assigned to an ECL group either because they were withdrawn or returned without action prior to a technical assessment being conducted or because the item in question required a permit for export to a destination listed on the Area Control List.
Notes for table 1
| Submitted applications: | Table 1 includes data on all export permit applications submitted between January 1 and December 31, 2025. It does not include information on applications that were submitted prior to 2025 (or those that were submitted on December 31, 2025, and not received until January 1, 2026), nor does it include information on export permit amendment requests. Items in an export permit application may be assessed under more than one ECL group. To avoid counting the same application twice, applications containing more than one ECL assessment have been assigned to a single group based on the following order of precedence: 9, 2, 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 5. Therefore, an application containing both a Group 9 assessment and a Group 2 assessment appears in the Group 9 row, and an application containing both a Group 6 and a Group 5 assessment appears in the Group 6 row. The status of all export permit applications reflected in the table is accurate as of December 31, 2025. |
| Issued: | Permit applications that were approved and issued in 2025 are included in the issued column in Table 1. Applications that were issued in 2025 but have since expired are also counted in the issued column. If a permit was issued in 2025 and is subsequently cancelled, it is only counted once in the cancelled or suspended column. |
| Denied: | Table 1 includes information on applications that were submitted in 2025 that had been denied up to December 31, 2025. This includes permit applications that were denied by the Minister, either directly by the Minister or by departmental officials further to policy direction received from the Minister. This occurs in fewer than 1% of cases annually and is generally for reasons related to Canada’s obligations under the ATT or Canada’s foreign and defence policies, as provided in the criteria for controlling the export of military, dual use and strategic goods outlined above. |
| Returned without action: | A permit application is returned without action by Global Affairs Canada if it is administratively incomplete, or if there is inconsistent information. A company that wishes to pursue the export is required to submit a new permit application. |
| Withdrawn: | Permit applications may be withdrawn either at the request of the exporter or if the exporter is advised by Global Affairs Canada that a permit is not required. An exporter may decide to withdraw their application if the permit is no longer required because the commercial contract has fallen through, if a change to the contract requires them to resubmit the information under a separate application, or if the exporter becomes aware of political, commercial, or other types of risk that may affect their application and decides not to pursue the export. An application may also be withdrawn if the goods or technology proposed for export are not controlled, if the items are controlled but a permit is not required for their export to the United States, or if a General Export Permit applies. All of these situations are captured in the category of withdrawn permits. In 2025, a total of 237 applications were withdrawn by Global Affairs Canada because an individual export permit was not required. The remaining 174 were withdrawn at the applicant’s request. |
| Cancelled or suspended: | An export permit that has been issued may be cancelled for administrative reasons (e.g., at the request of the applicant as the permit is no longer required, or due to an error on the permit requiring replacement by a new permit), or for policy reasons at the direction of the Minister. An export permit that has been cancelled is no longer valid for the export of goods or technology. An issued export permit can be suspended for policy or compliance reasons and reinstated later. |
| Under review: | Table 1 includes permit applications submitted in 2025 that as of December 31, 2025, were not completely processed, whose consideration was paused, or were otherwise under review. |
Table 2: Top 12 destinations for military, dual-use and strategic export permits issued in 2025*
| Destination | Number of permits issued |
|---|---|
| Australia | 147 |
| France | 283 |
| Germany | 429 |
| India | 111 |
| Italy | 177 |
| Netherlands | 130 |
| Norway | 128 |
| South Africa | 174 |
| Spain | 131 |
| Switzerland | 167 |
| United Kingdom | 652 |
| United States | 215 |
*Between January 1 and December 31, 2025 (data based on submission of applications).
Note: Export permits are only required for a small number of items controlled for strategic purposes on the ECL when exported to the U.S. This chart reflects the top 12 destinations by number of permits issued in 2025 for all military, dual use and strategic items on the ECL. The 2025 Annual Report on Strategic Goods and Technologies Pursuant to Section 27 of the Export and Import Permits Act has a similar table but is a listing of Canada’s top destinations excluding the U.S. for military items (Group 2 and its subset Group 9) for permits utilized in 2025.
3.2.1 Brokering controls and Brokering Control List
Article 10 of the ATT requires State Parties to take measures to regulate the brokering of arms taking place under its jurisdiction. Canada controls the brokering activities of persons and organizations in Canada, as well as the activities of Canadians abroad (Canadian citizens, permanent residents and organizations).
Brokering is defined in the EIPA as “arranging or negotiating a transaction that relates to the movement of goods or technology included in a Brokering Control List from a foreign country to another foreign country.”
General Brokering Permit 1 (GBP1) streamlines the authorization of brokering activities involving certain low-risk transactions. Similar to a General Export Permit, a General Brokering Permit is a type of permit that is issued generally to all persons and organizations in Canada as a way to reduce administrative burden, provided that users follow all applicable terms and conditions.
For more information about Canada’s brokering controls, please consult the brokering regulations online or the Annual Report on Strategic Goods and Technologies Pursuant to Section 27 of the Export and Import Permits Act.
Brokering Control List
Section 4.11 of the EIPA provides that the Governor in Council may establish a list of goods and technology, to be called a Brokering Control List, including in it any article that is included in the Export Control List the brokering of which the Governor in Council considers it necessary to control. The BCL includes full-system conventional arms listed in the ATT (as defined in Group 9 of the ECL), all items listed in Group 2 of the ECL, as well as any ECL item – including dual-use items – that are likely to be used to produce or develop a weapon of mass destruction, or in any facility used for such activities.
3.2.2 Area Control List
Section 4 of the EIPA provides for the control of “any goods or technology to any country included in an ACL”. Currently the only country listed on the ACL is the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea). In 2025, one (1) permit was issued for North Korea, falling within the Government of Canada’s general humanitarian policy, which was established to allow the approval of exports to countries on the ACL, if the export in question has a humanitarian basis. Notice to exporters No. 172 provides context on the treatment of permit applications to this destination.
3.2.3 Automatic Firearms Country Control List
Further to sections 4.1 and 7(2) of the EIPA, certain prohibited firearms, weapons, or devices, and components and parts thereof, that are included on the Export Control List, may be exported only to destinations listed on the Automatic Firearms Country Control List (and only to consignees that are government or authorized by government).
As of December 31, 2025, the following countries were listed on the AFCCL:
- Albania
- Australia
- Austria
- Belgium
- Botswana
- Brazil
- Bulgaria
- Chile
- Colombia
- Croatia
- Czechia
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Hungary
- Iceland
- Ireland
- Israel
- Italy
- Japan
- Korea, Republic of
- Kuwait
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- Luxembourg
- Montenegro
- Netherlands
- New Zealand
- North Macedonia
- Norway
- Peru
- Poland
- Portugal
- Qatar
- Romania
- Saudi Arabia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Spain
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Türkiye
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- United States
3.3 Non-strategic exports
In 2025, for non-strategic exports*, Global Affairs Canada:
- Issued a total of 208,403 permits;
- Rejected 637 export applications; and
- Cancelled 9,881 permits.
Table 3: Number of non-strategic export permits issued by sector in 2025*
| Sector | Number of permits issued |
|---|---|
| Softwood lumber | 179,901 |
| TPL clothing and textiles | 16,815 |
| Sugar, syrups and molasses and sugar-containing products | 4,776 |
| Logs | 4,882 |
| Peanut butter | 774 |
| CETA apparel | 826 |
| Dairy export thresholds (CUSMA) | 429 |
| Vehicles | 0 |
| Dog and cat food | 0 |
| Processed food | 0 |
| Total | 208,403 |
*Between January 1 and December 31, 2025 (data based on submission of applications).
3.3.1 Softwood lumber products to the United States
Based on the definitions specific to the 2006 Canada-United States Softwood Lumber Agreement, exports of softwood lumber totalled 10,631,142,309 board feet in 2025. Global Affairs Canada continues to require export permits for shipments to the U.S., having implemented a monitoring program that took effect October 13, 2015.
Table 4: Softwood lumber exports to the United States in 2025*
| Month | Number of permits issued |
|---|---|
| January | 17,378 |
| February | 14,500 |
| March | 17,614 |
| April | 15,462 |
| May | 16,212 |
| June | 15,820 |
| July | 17,872 |
| August | 11,849 |
| September | 15,441 |
| October | 14,607 |
| November | 12,022 |
| December | 11,124 |
| Total | 179,901 |
*Between January 1 and December 31, 2025 (data based on submission of applications and can be subject to corrections).
3.3.2 Log exports
A federal export permit issued by Global Affairs Canada is required for the export of all logs from any type of land in Canada (e.g. provincial Crown land, federal Crown land, private lands, parks and reserves) to all destinations outside of Canada. In 2025, Global Affairs Canada issued 4,882 permits for logs.
Table 5: Log permits issued in 2025*
| Month | Number of permits issued |
|---|---|
| January | 433 |
| February | 411 |
| March | 209 |
| April | 457 |
| May | 482 |
| June | 355 |
| July | 446 |
| August | 355 |
| September | 555 |
| October | 358 |
| November | 423 |
| December | 398 |
| Total | 4,882 |
*Between January 1 and December 31, 2025 (data based on submission of applications and can be subject to corrections).
3.3.3 Agri-food products to the United States
As part of its implementation of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) commitments, the U.S. established Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs) for imports of peanut butter, certain sugar-containing products and refined sugar. Within these TRQs, the U.S. has established a country-specific reserve for Canada.
The U.S. government administers these TRQs on a first-come, first-served basis. In order to facilitate the orderly export of these products against Canada’s country-specific reserves, Canada added these products to the ECL.
Accordingly, in order to comply with the EIPA and to benefit from the U.S. in-quota tariff rate, Canadian exports of peanut butter, certain sugar-containing products and refined sugar to the U.S. require an export permit issued by Global Affairs Canada. There are no quantitative restrictions for Canadian exports of these products to destinations outside of the U.S.
Under its WTO commitments, the U.S. established a TRQ for imports of peanut butter, with a country reserve of 14,500,000 kilograms for Canada, in 1995. Peanut butter was placed on the ECL the same year. As such, export permits are required for access to the TRQ. Peanut butter is found on the ECL under item 5201. The quota year extends from January 1 to December 31.
Since January 1, 2025, Canadian manufacturers of peanut butter manufactured from originating peanuts have an unlimited preferential access to the U.S. market. To qualify for this preferential access, the peanut butter must satisfy the rule of origin under CUSMA, meaning that the peanuts used to manufacture the peanut butter must be wholly obtained or produced in the free trade area, which means Canada, the U.S. or Mexico. Manufacturers of Canadian peanut butter manufactured from originating peanuts no longer need to utilize the WTO Agreement TRQ for their exports of peanut butter to the U.S. As a result of this new access for originating peanut butter in 2025, utilization under the TRQ decreased significantly to 11,410,364 kg in comparison to the previous year.
Sugar-containing products were placed on the ECL on February 1, 1995. The WTO global TRQ for U.S. sugar-containing products is 64,709,000 kilograms and applies to imports of certain sugar-containing products falling under Chapters 17, 18, 19 and 21 of its Harmonized Tariff Schedule. The quota year for sugar containing products is from October 1 to September 30. In September 1997, Canada obtained a WTO country-specific reserve within the U.S. sugar-containing products TRQ of 59,250,000 kilograms.
Refined sugar was placed on the ECL on October 1, 1995. The WTO global TRQ for U.S. refined sugar is 22,000,000 kilograms. The quota year for refined sugar is from October 1 to September 30. In September 1997, Canada obtained a 10,300,000 kilograms WTO country-specific reserve.
With the coming into force of CUSMA, these commitments for both sugar-containing products and refined sugar were incorporated into CUSMA.
Under CUSMA, Canada obtained additional market access through two new TRQs for refined sugar (9,600,000 kilograms) and sugar-containing products (9,600,000 kilograms) for export to the United States. The quota year for the new TRQs runs from January 1 to December 31. Furthermore, an additional quantity for refined sugar may be determined by the United States, in any given year, in times of domestic shortage. This additional quantity is based on the U.S. decision to increase in-quota imports under its WTO commitments and is equivalent to 20% of the total increase.
Since the premature closing of the CUSMA-sugar containing products TRQ in the U.S. in 2022, Global Affairs Canada has been monitoring discrepancies between Canadian and U.S. utilization data for the CUSMA and WTO sugar containing products TRQs. These discrepancies are believed to be caused primarily by exports of sugar-containing products (SCPs) from Canada without an export permit. The department has reached out to the U.S. Customs and Borders Protection (CBP) and has been adopting several measures to ensure the correct utilization of both SCP TRQs. The department is working with CBP on the necessary steps to join the U.S. E-Certification program, which will allow for the direct sharing of export documents between the two governments, thus addressing any irregular utilization of the SCPs TRQs.
Table 6: Controlled agri-food exports to the United States in 2025
| Controlled agri-food | Quota | Utilization |
|---|---|---|
| Peanut butter** | 14,500,000 | 11,410,364 |
| Refined sugar under the WTO commitment raw equivalent* | 10,300,000 | 10,299,523 |
| Sugar-containing products under the WTO commitment* | 59,250,000 | 53,797,322 |
| CUSMA refined sugar** | 9,600,000 | 9,599,752 |
| CUSMA sugar-containing products** | 9,600,000 | 9,004,097 |
*Canadian exit date between October 1, 2024 and September 30, 2025.
**Canadian exit date between January 1 and December 31, 2025.
3.3.4 Dairy export thresholds
Canada administers export controls on various dairy products via two export thresholds. The first threshold covers exports of skim milk powder (SMP) and milk protein concentrate (MPC), while the second covers exports of certain infant formula (i.e. containing more than 10% on a dry weight basis of cow milk solids). These thresholds apply to all exports of SMP, MPC, and infant formula (as described above) to any destination. Both export thresholds are administered on the dairy year, which runs from August 1 to July 31.
Each export threshold includes a volume of exports that is “below-threshold quantity” (BTQ) not subject to a charge. In order to lawfully export from Canada, any export of SMP, MPC, and infant formula (as described above) must be done so under the authority of an export permit issued by Global Affairs Canada.
Table 7: Dairy export threshold exports under CUSMA in 2025*
| Kilograms (KG) | Below-threshold quantity | Utilization |
|---|---|---|
| SMP/MPC | 36,710,482 | 22,643,516 |
| Infant formula | 41,954,837 | 0 |
*Canadian exit date between August 1, 2024 and July 31, 2025.
3.3.5 Textiles and clothing – Tariff preference levels
Tariff Preference Level (TPL) exports to the U.S. and Mexico must be accompanied by a certificate of eligibility. All CUSMA TPL exports to the U.S., except for yarn, are allocated on a historical use basis, based on previous year utilization. CUSMA exports not allocated, including yarn to the U.S. and all TPL to Mexico, are available on a first-come, first-served basis.
Other TPL exports, such as those to Chile, Costa Rica and Honduras, are not subject to Canadian controls and do not require a certificate of eligibility.
For CUSMA TPL clothing and textile exports, Global Affairs Canada issued 16,815 permits, rejected 59 permit applications and cancelled 342 issued permits to the U.S and Mexico.
Table 8: Textiles and clothing: CUSMA tariff preference levels and utilization for exports from Canada in 2025*
| Textiles and clothing | United States | Mexico | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Square metre equivalents (unless otherwise indicated) | Access level | Utilization | Access level | Utilization |
| Wool apparel | 4,000,000 | 2,498,209 | 250,000 | 30 |
| Cotton or man-made fibre apparel | 40,000,000 | 7,250,991 | 6,000,000 | 229,736 |
| Cotton or man-made fibre fabrics and made-up goods | 71,765,252 | 30,950,008 | 7,000,000 | 874,285 |
| Cotton or man-made fibre spun yarn** | 6,000,000 | 1,387,750 | 1,000,000 | 0 |
*Canadian exit date between January 1 and December 31, 2025.
** Exports of cotton or man-made fibre spun yarn are reported in kilograms.
3.3.6 CETA origin quotas
Certain exports from Canada that are eligible under the CETA origin quotas are subject to export controls under the EIPA. Accordingly, an export permit is required for shipments of these products from Canada to the European Union (EU) in order to use a more liberal set of rules of origin, to qualify for preferential tariffs under CETA. These goods are high-sugar containing products, sugar confectionery and chocolate preparations, processed foods, dog and cat food, vehicles and certain apparel products.
Origin quota access is made available on a first-come, first-served basis, with the exception of the origin quotas for high-sugar containing products and vehicles for which allocation policies have been established. With the exception of the origin quota for vehicles, CETA contains growth factors for origin quotas that provide for an increase in the volume of the origin quotas if certain conditions are met.
Table 9: CETA origin quotas 2025*
| Sector | Harmonized System (HS) classification | Access level U = units T = tonnes KG = kilograms | Utilization |
|---|---|---|---|
| High-sugar containing products | 30,000 (T) | 0 | |
| Sugar confectionery and chocolate preparations | 10,000,000 (KG) | 0 | |
| Processed foods | 35,000,000 (KG) | 0 | |
| Dog and cat food | 60,000,000 (KG) | 0 | |
Apparel | Apparel 61.04 – Women's or girls' suits, ensembles, suit-type jackets, blazers, dresses, skirts, divided skirts, trousers, etc. (no swimwear), knitted or crocheted | 535,000 (U) | 91,961 |
| Apparel 61.14 – Garments not elsewhere specified or included, knitted or crocheted | 90,000 (KG) | 7,665 | |
| Apparel 62.01 – Men's or boys' overcoats car coats, capes, cloaks, anoraks (including ski-jackets), windcheaters, wind-jackets and similar articles, not knitted or crocheted, other than those of heading 6203 | 111,291 (U) | 82,541 | |
| Apparel 6102.30 – Women's or girls' overcoats, car coats, capes, cloaks, anoraks, ski-jackets and similar articles of manmade fibres, knitted or crocheted | 17,000 (U) | 1,342 | |
| Apparel 6108.92 – Women's or girls' negligees, bathrobes, dressing gowns and similar articles of manmade fibres, knitted or crocheted | 39,000 (U) | 0 | |
| Apparel 62.05 – Men's or boys' shirts, not knitted or crocheted | 15,000 (U) | 0 | |
| Vehicles | 100,000 (U) | 0 |
*Canadian exit date between January 1 and December 31, 2025.
3.4 General Export Permits
The EIPA provides for the issuance of general permits authorizing the export of certain designated goods or technology to specified destinations. Exporters may use these general permits without seeking prior approval from Global Affairs Canada as long as all conditions set out in these regulatory permits are met. General Export Permits (GEPs) are intended to facilitate exports by enabling exporters to export certain items without the need to obtain individual permits.
The following GEPs were in effect during 2025:
- GEP No. Ex. 1: Export of Goods for Special and Personal Use Permit
- GEP No. Ex. 3: Export of Consumable Stores Supplied to Vessels and Aircraft Permit
- GEP No. Ex. 5: Export of Logs Permit
- GEP No. 12: United States Origin Goods
- GEP No. Ex. 18: Portable Personal Computers and Associated Software
- GEP No. 37: Toxic Chemicals and Precursors to the United States
- GEP No. 38: Chemical Weapons Convention Toxic Chemical and Precursor Mixtures
- GEP No. 41: Dual-Use Goods and Technology to Certain Destinations
- GEP No. 43: Nuclear Goods and Technology to Certain Destinations
- GEP No. 44: Nuclear-Related Dual-Use Goods and Technology to Certain Destinations
- GEP No. 45: Cryptography for the Development or Production of a Product
- GEP No. 46: Cryptography for Use by Certain Consignees
- GEP No. 47: Export of Arms Trade Treaty Items to the United States
4.0 Import controls
Section 3 of the EIPA provides that the Governor in Council may establish a list of goods, to be called an Import Control List (ICL), including therein any article the import of which the Governor in Council deems necessary to control for purposes specified in the EIPA.
Figure 1: Number of import permits for controlled goods in 2025*

Text version - Figure 1
- Applications rejected: 1,836
- Permits issued: 46,019
- Permits cancelled: 2,816
*Between January 1 and December 31, 2025 (data based on submission of applications).
Figure 2: Number of import permits issued by sector in 2025*

Text version - Figure 2
- Wheat & barley: 4
- Arms & ammunition: 333
- Poultry - turkey: 359
- Beef & veal: 2,301
- CETA textile and apparel: 2,621
- Clothing & textile: 4,099
- Eggs: 4,200
- Poultry-chicken: 6,413
- Dairy: 7,013
- Steel TRQs: 8,259
- Cheese: 10,417
- Total issued: 46,019
*Between January 1 and December 31, 2025 (data based on submission of applications).
4.1 Textiles and clothing - Tariff preference levels
Textile and clothing imports are controlled by various free trade agreements. These include CUSMA and FTAs with Chile, Costa Rica and Honduras. The agreements provide for preferential access for certain non-originating products through TPLs.
All TPLs, for imports, are offered on a first-come, first-served basis. Once the specified annual quantity under an FTA has been fully utilized, non-originating apparel, textiles and made-up goods are subject to the Most Favored Nation tariff rate for the remainder of that TPL year.
Canadian importers require a shipment-specific import permit for all TPL imports into Canada within the negotiated quantity. TPL-eligible shipments entering Canada under a shipment-specific import permit can receive the same preferential tariff treatment as originating products, up to a negotiated quantity, as long as they are both cut (or knit to shape) and sewn or otherwise assembled in the territory of a Party from fabric or yarn produced or obtained outside the territories of the Parties.
Table 10: Textiles and clothing: CUSMA tariff preference levels and utilization for imports to Canada in 2025*
| Textile and clothing | United States | Mexico | Honduras | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Square meter equivalents (SME) or kilograms (KG) | Access level | Utilization | Access level | Utilization | Access level | Utilization |
| Wool apparel (SME) | 700,000 | 395,422 | 250,000 | 18,956 | NA | NA |
| Cotton or man-made fibre apparel (SME) | 20,000,000 | 790,156 | 6,000,000 | 1,078,893 | NA | NA |
| Cotton or man-made fibre Fabrics and made-up goods (SME) | 15,000,000 | 0 | 7,000,000 | 0 | NA | NA |
| Cotton or man-made fibre spun yarn (SME) | 1,000,000 | 10,082 | 1,000,000 | 0 | NA | NA |
| Wool fabrics and made-up goods (KG) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Fabrics and made-up goods (KG) | NA | NA | NA | NA | 1,000,000 | 0 |
| Apparel (SME) | NA | NA | NA | NA | 4,000,000 | 2,684,724 |
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025 for CUSMA, and Honduras imports.
There were no TPL imports from Chile or Costa Rica in 2025.
CETA textiles and apparel
Imports of textiles and apparel from the EU and its Member States to Canada that are eligible under CETA origin quotas are subject to import controls under the EIPA. Accordingly, import permits are required for imports of these products in order to obtain the preferential tariff rate under CETA. The origin quotas specify the annual quantity of a product that can qualify as originating and receive preferential CETA tariff treatment. In order to receive this treatment, the product must meet the product description and undergo sufficient production to satisfy the applicable product-specific rule of origin associated with that origin quota. CETA contains growth factors for the textiles and apparel origin quotas that provide for an increase in the volume of the origin quotas if certain conditions are met.
Table 11: CETA origin quotas: textiles and apparel 2025*
| HS classification U = units / KG = kilograms / DZN = dozens | Access level | Utilization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CETA origin textiles & apparel | Apparel 61.06 (U) – Blouses, shirts and shirt blouses, knitted or crocheted (excluding T-shirts and vests.) | 126,000 | 6,441 |
| Apparel 61.09 (U) – T-Shirts, singlets and other vests knitted or crocheted | 722,000 | 19,505 | |
| Apparel 61.10 (U) – Jerseys, pullovers, cardigans, waistcoats and similar articles knitted or crocheted (excluding wadded waistcoats) | 537,000 | 90,993 | |
| Apparel 61.14 (KG) – Other garments not elsewhere specified or included, knitted or crocheted | 58,000 | 5,044 | |
| Apparel 61.15 (Pairs) – Pantyhose, tights, stockings, socks and other hosiery, including graduated compression hosiery (for example, stockings for varicose veins) and footwear without applied soles, knitted or crocheted (excluding for babies) | 1,691,000 | 421 | |
| Apparel 6105.10 (U) – Men’s or boys’ shirts of cotton knitted or crocheted (excluding nightshirts, t-shirts, singlets and other vests) | 46,000 | 94 | |
| Apparel 62.04 (U) – Women’s or girls’ suits, ensembles, jackets, blazers, dresses etc. (excluding knitted or crocheted and swimwear) | 586,795 | 420,730 | |
| Apparel 62.10 (U) – Garments made up of fabrics of heading 56.02, 56.03, 59.03, 59.06 or 59.07 (excluding knitted or crocheted and babies' garments) | 19,000 | 16,903 | |
| Apparel 62.11 (KG) – Tracksuits, ski suits, swimwear and other garments, not elsewhere specified or included (excluding knitted or crocheted) | 85,000 | 32,718 | |
| Apparel 62.12 (U) | 26,000 | 49 | |
| Apparel 6202.11 (U) – Women’s or girls’ overcoats, raincoats, car coats, capes, cloaks and similar articles of wool or fine animal hair, not knitted or crocheted. | 15,000 | 235 | |
| Apparel 6202.93 (U) | 18,010 | 12,441 | |
| Apparel 6203.12-6203.49 (U) – Men's or boys' suits (excluding wool or fine animal hair), ensembles, jackets, blazers, trousers, bib and brace overalls, breeches and shorts (excluding knitted or crocheted, and swimwear) | 281,000 | 5,809 | |
| Apparel 6205.20 (U) – Men’s or boys’ shirts of cotton, not knitted or crocheted | 182,000 | 13,574 | |
| Textiles 6302.31 (KG) – Bed linen (other than printed) of cotton, not knitted or crocheted | 216,000 | 216,000 |
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025. Origin quotas with utilization of zero for the year 2025 are not included in the table.
4.2 Supply-managed products
Dairy, poultry and egg imports to Canada are subject to import controls under the EIPA. Preferential access is provided for imports of these products through TRQs.
Under these TRQs, imports are subject to zero or low within-access rates of duty up to a predetermined limit (i.e. until the import access quantity has been reached), while imports over this limit are subject to higher over-access rates of duty. Only eligible applicants who apply to receive an import quota allocation are able to obtain shipment-specific permits to import goods at the within-access rates of duty.
In 2025, there were no changes in allocation policies for the TRQs under CETA, CUSMA and WTO; however, some changes were implemented to Canada’s CPTPP dairy TRQ policies.
WTO TRQs
In 1995, Canada converted its existing quantitative agricultural import controls to a system of TRQs, with the coming into effect of the WTO.
All TRQs are based on Customs Tariff item numbers. When the TRQs came into effect in 1995, the ICL was amended to replace named products (e.g. turkey and turkey products) with tariff item numbers. For ease of understanding, the older product descriptions continue to be used in this report.
Poultry and eggs
Effective January 1, 1995, Canada's chicken, turkey, broiler hatching eggs and chicks, shell egg and egg product quantitative restrictions were converted to TRQs and were maintained on the ICL in order to support supply management under the Farm Products Marketing Act and to support action taken under the WTO Agreement Implementation Act.
Chicken and chicken products: The WTO chicken and chicken products TRQ import access level is set at 39,843,700 kilograms.
Turkey and turkey products: Pursuant to CUSMA, the WTO turkey and turkey products TRQ import access level is set at the higher of:
- 3.5% of the previous year’s domestic production or 3.5% of the current year’s domestic production quota + 1,000 tonnes, whichever is lower; and
- The WTO level of 5,588,000 kilograms, expressed in EE weight.
Eggs and egg products: The WTO egg and egg products TRQ access level is set at 21,370,000 dozen on an egg equivalent basis. The access level is set in accordance with the following breakdown: 11,779,247 dozen for shell eggs; 5,106,486 dozen for liquid, frozen or further-processed egg products; and 4,484,267 dozen for egg powder.
Broiler hatching eggs and chicks: Pursuant to CUSMA, the combined import access level for the WTO broiler hatching eggs and chicks TRQ is 21.1% of the estimated domestic production of broiler hatching eggs for the calendar year to which the TRQ applies. The combined annual import access level is divided into separate levels of 17.4% for broiler hatching eggs and 3.7% for egg-equivalent chicks.
Table 12: Poultry and eggs: WTO TRQs*
| Product | Unit of measure | Access level | Within-access imports |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicken and chicken products | Eviscerated equivalent kilograms | 39,843,700 | 39,172,823 |
| Broiler hatching eggs and chicks | Egg equivalent | 187,829,158 | 169,659,155 |
| Turkey and turkey products | Eviscerated equivalent kilograms | 5,588,000 | 4,696,842 |
| Eggs and egg products | Dozens | 21,370,000 | 14,474,504 |
| Shell eggs | Dozens | 11,779,247 | 7,768,457 |
| Shell eggs for breaking | Dozens | 0 | 0 |
| Egg powder | Dozens | 4,484,267 | 1,752,649 |
| Egg products (liquid, frozen or further processed egg products) | Dozens | 5,106,486 | 4,953,398 |
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025.
Dairy products
Quantitative restrictions in 12 categories of dairy products were converted to TRQs in support of supply management under the Canadian Dairy Commission Act.
Table 13: WTO TRQs*
| Product | Unit of measure | Description/tariff item number | Access level | Within-access imports |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Butter (Aug. 1, 2024 - Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | TRQ allocated to Canadian Dairy Commission with 2,000,000 reserved for New Zealand | 3,274,000 | 3,268,865 |
| Cheeses of all types | Kilograms | 20,411,866 | 20,217,044 | |
| Concentrated or condensed milk/cream | Kilograms | TRQ reserved for imports from Australia | 11,700 | 0 |
| Ice cream and ice cream novelties | Kilograms | 484,000 | 457,421 | |
| Milk (Aug. 1, 2024 - Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 64,500,000 | 0** | |
| Milk protein substances*** (Apr. 1, 2024 – Mar. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 10,000,000 | 2,794,135 | |
| Other dairy (food preparations) | Kilograms | 70,000 | 66,570 | |
| Powdered buttermilk | Kilograms | Reserved for imports from New Zealand | 908,000 | 0 |
| Powdered whey (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 3,198,000 | 290,586 | |
| Products of natural milk constituents | Kilograms | 4,345,000 | 3,669,054 | |
| Specialty creams (Aug. 1, 2024 - Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | TRQ reserved for cream that is sterilized, minimum 23% butterfat and sold in cans with volume less than 200 millilitres | 394,000 | 256,328 |
| Yogurt | Kilograms | 332,000 | 176,072 |
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025 unless otherwise stated.
**Reserved for cross-border shopping and it is considered to be fully used.
***Milk protein substances, that do not originate in the U.S., Mexico, Chile, Costa Rica, an EU country or other CETA beneficiary, or Israel.
CETA TRQs
As a result of the provisional application of CETA, Canada established two TRQs in 2017 for cheese originating from an EU country or other CETA beneficiary.
Table 14: CETA TRQs*
| Product | Unit of measure | Access level | Within-access imports |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cheese of all types | Kilograms | 16,000,000 | 15,578,873 |
| Industrial cheese | Kilograms | 1,700,000 | 1,053,518 |
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025.
CPTPP TRQs
As a result of the coming into force of the CPTPP, Canada established 20 TRQs for various supply-managed products (dairy, poultry and eggs) originating from a CPTPP member state. In accordance with CPTPP, certain TRQs are administered on different TRQ years, with some being based on a calendar year and others on a dairy or marketing year.
Table 15: CPTPP TRQs*
| Product | Unit of measure | Access level | Within-access imports |
|---|---|---|---|
| Broiler hatching eggs and chicks | Dozen eggs equivalent | 1,020,100 | 0 |
| Chicken | Eviscerated equivalent kilograms | 23,972,000 | 23,675,228 |
| Eggs | Dozen eggs equivalent | 17,035,670 | 0 |
| Turkey (May 1, 2024 – Apr. 30, 2025) | Eviscerated equivalent kilograms | 3,535,000 | 0 |
| Butter (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 4,545,000 | 4,388,245 |
| Cheeses of all types | Kilograms | 3,698,000 | 3,587,004 |
| Concentrated milk | Kilograms | 2,081,000 | 0 |
| Cream (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 597,000 | 0 |
| Cream powders (Aug.1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 106,000 | 0 |
| Ice cream and mixes | Kilograms | 1,072,000 | 55,473 |
| Industrial cheese | Kilograms | 8,135,000 | 253,800 |
| Milk (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 50,500,000 | 74,929 |
| Milk powders (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 1,062,000 | 472,540 |
| Mozzarella and prepared cheese | Kilograms | 2,958,000 | 1,329,603 |
| Other dairy | Kilograms | 1,072,000 | 0 |
| Powdered buttermilk | Kilograms | 862,000 | 0 |
| Products consisting of natural milk constituents | Kilograms | 4,080,000 | 9,571 |
| Skim milk powder (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 7,725,000 | 222,300 |
| Whey powder (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 6,060,000 | 0 |
| Yogurt and buttermilk | Kilograms | 6,242,000 | 0 |
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025 unless otherwise stated.
CUSMA TRQs
As a result of the coming into force of CUSMA, Canada established 16 TRQs in 2020 for various supply-managed products (dairy, poultry and eggs) originating from the U.S. In accordance with CUSMA, certain TRQs are administered on different TRQ years, with some being based on a calendar year and others on a dairy year.
Table 16: CUSMA TRQs*
| Product | Unit of measure | Access level | Within-access imports |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicken | Eviscerated equivalent kilograms | 57,000,000 | 56,313,781 |
| Eggs and egg products | Dozen eggs equivalent | 10,000,000 | 10,000,001 |
| Butter and cream powders (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 4,500,000 | 4,250,955 |
| Cheeses of all types | Kilograms | 6,250,000 | 6,115,642 |
| Concentrated or condensed milk | Kilograms | 1,380,000 | 33,950 |
| Cream (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 10,500,000 | 3,353,178 |
| Ice cream and ice cream mixes | Kilograms | 690,000 | 409,369 |
| Industrial cheeses | Kilograms | 6,250,000 | 4,666,098 |
| Milk (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 50,000,000 | 8,648,640 |
| Milk powders (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 690,000 | 460,724 |
| Products consisting of natural milk constituents | Kilograms | 2,760,000 | 2,036,626 |
| Other dairy | Kilograms | 690,000 | 52,171 |
| Powdered buttermilk | Kilograms | 520,000 | 4,740 |
| Skim milk powders (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 7,500,000 | 889,696 |
| Whey powder (Aug. 1, 2024 – Jul. 31, 2025) | Kilograms | 4,135,000 | 661,520 |
| Yogurt and buttermilk | Kilograms | 4,135,000 | 382,513 |
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025 unless otherwise stated.
Supplemental imports
Under the EIPA, the Minister may exercise discretion to authorize imports of products subject to TRQs apart from the import access quantity, if the Minister determines that the importation of these products is required to meet Canadian market needs. Supplemental import permits are normally issued for the following specified purposes:
- To address domestic market shortages;
- To assist Canadian manufacturers to compete with similar imported products that can enter Canada duty-free or at a low rate of duty (the Import-to-Compete Program);
- To assist Canadian manufacturers to compete in foreign markets (the Import for Re-Export Program (IREP));
- To facilitate test marketing in the Canadian market of new products that are, for example, unique or are produced with unique processes and that require a substantial capital investment for their production; or
- To address extraordinary or unusual circumstances.
Policies governing supplemental import permits for each commodity along with any updates are published under the “Notices to Importers” link on the supply-managed tariff rate quotas (TRQs) page that may be found on the Global Affairs Canada website.
Table 17: Poultry and eggs: supplemental imports*
| Product | Unit of measure | IREP | Import-to-compete | Market shortage | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Broiler hatching eggs and chicks | Egg equivalent | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Hatching eggs, other than for broilers | Egg equivalent | 0 | 0 | 0 | 940,367 |
| Chicken and chicken products | Eviscerated equivalent kilograms | 22,163,821 | 3,104,413 | 273,602 | 69,982 |
| Turkey and turkey products | Eviscerated equivalent kilograms | 549,047 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Eggs and egg products | Dozens | 449,803 | 0 | 20,065,801 | 0 |
| Shell eggs | Dozens | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Shell eggs for breaking | Dozens | 390,600 | 0 | 20,065,801 | 0 |
| Egg powder | Kilograms | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Egg products (liquid, frozen or further processed egg products) | Kilograms | 62,792 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Import permits are required for importing inedible egg products into Canada, for monitoring purposes only. Permits were issued for 978,915 kilograms of this type of product in 2025. | |||||
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025.
Table 18: Dairy - supplemental imports*
| Product | Unit of measure | IREP | Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| Butter | Kilograms | 34,311,898 | 6 |
| Buttermilk (other than powdered buttermilk), curdled milk and cream, kephir and other fermented or acidified milk and cream | Kilograms | 16,556 | 6 |
| Cheese | Kilograms | 8,486,537 | 28,273 |
| Concentrated/condensed milk/cream | Kilograms | 322,896 | 16 |
| Cream | Kilograms | 2,651,085 | 66,043 |
| Dairy products, other than food preparations, not subject to TRQs, including, skimmed and whole milk powder, cream powder, other milk powder, other cream powder, animal feed, non-alcoholic beverages containing milk, all ice cream mix and ice milk mix | Kilograms | 2,954,945 | 0 |
| Dry whey | Kilograms | 623,854 | 0 |
| Fluid milk | Kilograms | 57,181,750 | 0 |
| Food preparations | Kilograms | 101,589 | 0 |
| Products of milk constituents | Kilograms | 1,260,665 | 0 |
| Yogurt | Kilograms | 59,840 | 0 |
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025 unless otherwise stated.
Imports in excess of TRQ access limits are permitted under General Import Permit No. 100 - Eligible Agricultural Goods, which allows unrestricted imports at the higher rate of duty.
4.3 Non-supply managed products
Other agriculture products subject to import controls are:
- Margarine;
- Wheat, barley and their products; and
- Beef and veal.
The WTO margarine TRQ was introduced on January 1, 1995. The TRQ is administered on a first-come, first-served basis using a calendar year TRQ period. Shipment specific import permits are issued on demand for each shipment, until the access quantity is fully utilized or to the end of the TRQ year, whichever occurs first.
As part of Canada’s WTO commitments, the restrictions imposed on imports of wheat, barley and their products under the Canadian Wheat Board Act were converted to TRQs on August 1, 1995. These TRQs are administered by Global Affairs Canada and the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) on a first-come, first-served basis using an August 1 to July 30 TRQ period. Importers may cite General Import Permit No. 20 - Wheat and Wheat Products, Barley and Barley Products to import goods at the lower rate of duty. Once the access levels are filled, importers must cite General Import Permit No. 100 - Eligible Agricultural Goods on customs entry documents to import goods at the higher rate of duty. Administrative measures are established to ensure full usage of quota, which sometimes results in imports at the within-access rate over the TRQ limit.
Also, as part of Canada’s WTO implementation commitments, the restrictions on imports of non-FTA beef and veal established under the Meat Import Act were converted to a TRQ on January 1, 1995. The TRQ applies to all imports of fresh, chilled and frozen beef and veal that do not originate in Chile, a CUSMA country, an EU member state, or the UK.
Table 19. Other agricultural product imports in 2025*
| Product | Tariff Rate Quotas | Supplemental imports | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tonnes (T) kilograms (KG) | Description/tariff item number | Access level | Within-access imports | Over-access imports | IREP | Import-to-compete | Market shortage | Other |
| Margarine | (KG) | 7,558,000 | 3,206,586 | 0 | N/A | N/A | 0 | 0 |
Wheat, barley and their products | Wheat (T) | 226,883 | 27,787*** | 0 | N/A | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Wheat products (T – grain equivalent | 123,557 | 141,621*** | 21,578*** | N/A | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Barley (T) | 399,000 | 52,000*** | 0 | N/A | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Barley products (T- grain equivalent) | 19,131 | 11,413*** | 0*** | N/A | 0 | 0 | 0** | |
Beef and veal WTO TRQ | Imports from Australia (T) | 35,000 | 14,983 | 0 | N/A | N/A | 0 | 3,814 |
| Imports from New Zealand (T) | 29,600 | 11,355 | 0 | |||||
| Imports from all countries certified by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) (T) | 11,809 | 11,813 | 0 | |||||
*Canadian entry date between January 1 and December 31, 2025, unless otherwise stated.
**Rounded to nearest whole amount.
***Canadian entry date between August 1, 2024 and July 31, 2025 and rounded to the nearest whole amount.
4.4 Steel
Steel monitoring
Carbon steel products were initially added to the ICL under subsection 5.1(1) of the EIPA, effective September 1, 1986, following a report by the Canadian Import Tribunal recommending the collection of information on goods of this type entering Canada. The carbon steel products are found in item 80 of the ICL and include semi-finished products (ingots, blooms, billets, slabs and sheet bars), plate, sheet and strip, wire rods, wire and wire products, railway-type products, bars, structural shapes and units, and pipes and tubes but excluding the specialty steel products referred to in item 81 of the ICL.
Specialty steel products were initially added to the ICL under subsection 5.1(1) of the EIPA, effective June 1, 1987, pursuant to an amendment to the EIPA providing for import monitoring of steel products under certain conditions. These products are found in item 81 of the ICL and include stainless steel flat-rolled products (sheet, strip and plate), stainless steel bar, stainless steel pipe and tube, stainless steel wire and wire products, stainless steel in ingots or other primary forms, semi-finished products of stainless steel, alloy tool steel, mold steel and high-speed steel.
The Steel Import Monitoring Program provides more timely steel import data than data available via the regular import reports produced by Statistics Canada. The online reports are available on the Steel import monitoring reports webpage. Steel products covered by these items must be imported under the authority of GIP No. 80 - Carbon Steel or GIP No. 81 - Specialty Steel Products, as applicable. There are no quantitative restrictions for imports of these products under GIPs No. 80 and No. 81 and there are no permit fees for using the GIPs.
On August 23, 2019, the steel GIPs were amended to include reporting and recordkeeping conditions. These amendments require importers to provide, upon request, documents and records to enable the verification of import data. Global Affairs Canada analyzes the information found on the customs declarations and shipping documents to identify inconsistencies in the declared information and facilitate the correction of potential errors.
Further to the Joint Statement by Canada and the United States on Section 232 Duties on Steel and Aluminum, issued on May 17, 2019, carbon and specialty steel products were re-added to the ICL on November 2, 2020, pursuant to paragraph 5(1)(e) of the EIPA. This eliminated the need for these products to be re-added to the ICL every three years for the program to continue and for an annual statistical summary to be tabled in Parliament. The information contained in the annual statistical summary is publicly available through the aforementioned online reports.
Additional regulatory amendments to GIPs No. 80 and No. 81 came into effect on November 5, 2024, which required importers to report COM information for the covered steel products as a term and condition of using the GIPs when submitting their customs declarations to the CBSA. Following a period of initial data collection and analysis, public reports containing COM information became available on the Steel import monitoring website in spring 2025. The COM reports provide aggregate information based on the product category, product grouping and HS-6 classification of the goods.
Steel TRQs
For the purpose of facilitating the implementation of the Order Imposing a Surtax on the Importation of Certain Steel Goods (SOR/2025-148) (Surtax Order), taken under paragraph 53(2)(d) of the Customs Tariff, item 82 (certain steel goods) was added to the ICL on June 27, 2025, under paragraph 5(1)(e), subsection 5(6) and section 6 of the EIPA. The Surtax Order established TRQs for the subject steel goods under five product categories (flat, long, pipe and tube, semi-finished and stainless) originating from non-FTA partner countries to 100% of 2024 import levels.
On August 1, 2025, the Surtax Order was amended to bring steel goods originating from non-CUSMA FTA partner countries in-scope to 100% of 2024 import levels and to reduce quota volumes for goods originating from non-FTA partner countries to 50% of 2024 import levels. The TRQs were also subdivided into 23 more detailed product categories. Item 82 of the ICL was amended accordingly.
The Surtax Order was further amended on December 26, 2025, to adjust the product scope, and to reduce quota volumes for non–FTA partners to 20% of 2024 import levels and non-CUSMA FTA partner countries to 75% of 2024 import levels. Item 82 of the ICL was amended accordingly to reflect the product changes.
Since June 27, 2025, the steel TRQs have been administered on a quarterly and first-come, first-served basis. Shipment-specific permits are issued automatically until a quota has been filled. Subject steel products can continue to be imported under the GIPs No. 80 and 81 after the quotas have been filled, or if quantities exceed the single country or overall quota volumes, but are subject to the 50% surtax.
Table 20: Non-FTA steel TRQ utilization in 2025
| Product category | Quarter 1* | Quarter 2** | Quarter 3*** | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maximum quota (KGM) | Total utilization (KGM) | Maximum quota (KGM) | Total utilization (KGM) | Maximum quota (KGM) | Total utilization (KGM) | ||
| 1 | Carbon steel ingots | 14,000 | 7,020 | 14,000 | 0 | 5,600 | 0 |
| 2 | Steel billets and blooms | 76,181,000 | 37,554,093 | 76,181,000 | 74,019,773 | 30,472,500 | 0 |
| 3 | Hot-rolled sheets | 5,926,000 | 3,753,795 | 5,926,000 | 2,464,532 | 2,370,500 | 969,615 |
| 4 | Floor plate | 6,000 | Max utilized | 6,000 | 0 | 2,400 | 0 |
| 5 | Steel plate | 13,003,000 | 7,875,388 | 13,003,000 | 12,122,076 | 5,201,200 | 2,851,544 |
| 6 | Cold-rolled sheet | 15,411,000 | 1,081,929 | 15,411,000 | 6,363,148 | 6,164,400 | 7,781 |
| 7 | Tin | 957,000 | 591,662 | 957,000 | 845,900 | 382,900 | 305,121 |
| 8 | Coated steel sheet | 46,832,000 | 13,695,498 | 46,832,000 | 34,667,786 | 18,732,800 | 1,392,435 |
| 9 | Pre-painted | 8,665,000 | 4,811,337 | 8,665,000 | 5,197,484 | 3,466,000 | 2,172,354 |
| 10 | Rebar | 33,613,000 | 33,613,000 | 33,613,000 | 33,613,000 | 13,445,100 | 10,729,047 |
| 11 | Hot-rolled bar | 18,204,000 | 7,487,826 | 18,204,000 | 4,275,159 | 7,281,700 | 998,386 |
| 12 | Wire rod | 3,929,000 | 3,520,948 | 3,929,000 | 2,148,176 | 1,571,700 | 0 |
| 13 | Cold finished bars | 536,000 | 406,929 | 536,000 | 535,429 | 214,400 | 170,038 |
| 14 | Structural steel | 11,711,000 | 3,163,432 | 11,711,000 | 7,937,061 | 4,674,200 | 957,365 |
| 15 | Steel wire | 10,286,000 | 6,422,956 | 10,286,000 | 5,780,973 | 4,114,600 | 295,229 |
| 16 | Stainless steel ingots | 250 | Max utilized | 250 | 0 | 100 | 0 |
| 17 | Stainless steel billets and blooms | 2,232,000 | 600 | 2,232,000 | 17,169 | 892,900 | 0 |
| 18 | Line pipe | 5,433,000 | 4,429,537 | 5,433,000 | 5,430,295 | 2,472,000 | 1,542,052 |
| 19 | Oil country tubular goods | 7,816,000 | 6,322,812 | 7,816,000 | 7,238,791 | 3,126,500 | 761,632 |
| 20 | Standard pipe | 23,906,000 | 18,809,815 | 23,906,000 | 23,905,335 | 10,369,200 | 6,260,322 |
| 21 | Large diameter line pipe | 5,086,000 | 3,821,676 | 5,086,000 | 5,086,000 | 927,900 | 0 |
| 22 | Piling pipe | 6,724,000 | 6,186,080 | 6,724,000 | 6,186,080 | 2,689,800 | 0 |
| 23 | Hollow structural sections | 5,996,000 | 2,655,256 | 5,996,000 | 4,005,201 | 2,398,500 | 1,223,501 |
*Canadian entry date between June 27 and September 25, 2025.
**Canadian entry date between September 26 and December 25, 2025.
***Canadian entry date between December 26 and December 31, 2025 (remainder of Quarter 3 continues into 2026).
Table 21: FTA steel TRQ utilization in 2025
| Product category | Period 1* | Quarter 2** | Quarter 3*** | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maximum quota (KGM) | Total utilization (KGM) | Maximum quota (KGM) | Total utilization (KGM) | Maximum quota (KGM) | Total utilization (KGM) | ||
| 1 | Carbon steel ingots | 76,000 | 25,380 | 123,000 | 0 | 92,400 | 0 |
| 2 | Steel billets and blooms | 14,482,000 | 54,893 | 23,533,000 | 9,531,233 | 17,649,400 | 0 |
| 3 | Hot-rolled sheets | 7,814,000 | 380,618 | 12,698,000 | 8,086,386 | 9,523,100 | 0 |
| 4 | Floor plate | 27,000 | 0 | 45,000 | 0 | 33,400 | 0 |
| 5 | Steel plate | 44,599,000 | 13,022,729 | 72,473,000 | 45,697,607 | 54,354,900 | 4,093,449 |
| 6 | Cold-rolled sheet | 1,504,000 | 397,498 | 2,444,000 | 2,196,762 | 1,832,600 | 584,820 |
| 7 | Tin | 1,769,000 | 613,164 | 2,875,000 | 158,638 | 2,156,400 | 0 |
| 8 | Coated steel sheet | 25,541,000 | 9,940,468 | 41,504,000 | 27,258,510 | 31,128,200 | 7,749,841 |
| 9 | Pre-painted | 19,498,000 | 15,303,163 | 31,685,000 | 31,582,714 | 23,763,800 | 4,502,351 |
| 10 | Rebar | 23,557,000 | 206,503 | 38,281,000 | 38,187,478 | 28,710,400 | 14,817,357 |
| 11 | Hot-rolled bar | 7,180,000 | 1,665,868 | 11,667,000 | 11,666,991 | 8,750,300 | 2,775,559 |
| 12 | Wire rod | 13,551,000 | 2,907,865 | 22,020,000 | 5,168,903 | 16,514,800 | 11,226 |
| 13 | Cold finished bars | 5,382,000 | 1,748,364 | 8,746,000 | 6,209,218 | 6,559,300 | 439,210 |
| 14 | Structural steel | 2,846,000 | 1,006,256 | 4,624,000 | 2,789,553 | 3,467,600 | 46,910 |
| 15 | Steel wire | 6,047,000 | 2,825,074 | 9,827,000 | 7,386,868 | 7,370,100 | 529,840 |
| 16 | Stainless steel ingots | 900 | 0 | 1,500 | 3 | 1,100 | 0 |
| 17 | Stainless steel billets and blooms | 5,000 | 119 | 8,000 | 129 | 5,800 | 0 |
| 18 | Line pipe | 1,845,000 | 788,556 | 2,999,000 | 2,343,893 | 6,248,600 | 3,215,980 |
| 19 | Oil country tubular goods | 8,042,000 | 4,071,444 | 13,068,000 | 12,047,099 | 9,800,800 | 1,556,630 |
| 20 | Standard pipe | 9,965,000 | 8,513,954 | 16,193,000 | 16,175,309 | 13,489,500 | 9,331,304 |
| 21 | Large diameter line pipe | 13,159,000 | 3,926,925 | 21,384,000 | 14,802,951 | 10,693,500 | 5,877,519 |
| 22 | Piling pipe | 600 | 0 | 1,000 | 770 | 800 | 0 |
| 23 | Hollow structural sections | 2,278,000 | 1,184,926 | 3,703,000 | 2,055,260 | 2,776,900 | 1,184,120 |
*Canadian entry date between August 1 and September 25, 2025.
**Canadian entry date between September 26 and December 25, 2025.
***Canadian entry date between December 26 and December 31, 2025 (remainder of Quarter 3 continues into 2026).
4.5 Aluminum monitoring
Further to the Joint Statement by Canada and the United States on Section 232 Duties on Steel and Aluminum, issued on May 17, 2019, aluminum products were added to the ICL, under item 83, on September 1, 2019, pursuant to paragraph 5(1)(e) of the EIPA. GIP No. 83 – Aluminum Products, applicable to products under item 83, was also issued on September 1, 2019. Item 83 includes the aluminum products listed below:
- Alloyed and not alloyed unwrought aluminum products
- Wrought aluminum products, limited to:
- Bars
- Rods
- Profiles
- Wires
- Plates
- Sheets
- Strips
- Foils
- Tubes and pipes
- Tube and pipe fittings
- Other articles of castings and forgings
The addition of aluminum products to the ICL enabled the implementation of the Aluminum Import Monitoring Program. The above products must be imported under the authority of the GIP No. 83 – Aluminum Products. There is no limit to the quantity of aluminum products covered under item 83 that may be imported into Canada and there are no fees for using the GIP.
The GIP allows GAC to have access to import data and make it publicly available in an expedited manner. The online reports are available on the Aluminum import monitoring reports webpage.
The GIP is also equipped with reporting and recordkeeping conditions, which require importers to provide, upon request, documents and records to enable the verification of import data. GAC analyzes the information found on the customs declarations and shipping documents to identify inconsistencies in the declared information and facilitate the correction of potential errors.
GAC held public consultations on the potential collection of country of smelt and cast (CSC) information for aluminum imports from May 21 to June 28, 2024. Stakeholder feedback was compiled and published online in a What We Heard report, which summarizes the proposed policy, implementation details, and compliance challenges noted by respondents. An approach to collect CSC information through CBSA customs declarations, similar to the method for steel COM information, would require amendments to GIP No. 83.
4.6 Weapons, munitions and chemicals
Pursuant to items 70 to 73 and 91 of the ICL, a permit is required to import into Canada all small- and large-calibre weapons, ammunition, bombs, pyrotechnics, tanks and self-propelled guns. As well, all components and parts specifically designed for these items require import permits. Firearms legally classified as non-restricted, and their parts, are exempted from the import permit requirement. Manufacturers and businesses licensed by the Provincial Chief Firearms Officers may import prohibited weapons, prohibited firearms and prohibited devices under strictly controlled conditions.
Since 2013, broad-based import permit letters were introduced for low-risk, high-volume commercial importers of firearms and related goods, leading to a significant reduction of import permit applications for weapons, munitions and chemicals issued annually.
Figure 3: Number of import permits for weapons, munitions and chemicals in 2025*

Text version - Figure 3
- Applications rejected: 88
- Applications denied: 10
- Permits issued: 333
- Permits cancelled: 6
*Between January 1 and December 31, 2025 (data based on submission of applications). Applications may be rejected for a number of administrative reasons, such as an incomplete application or no response received from an exporter within a stated period to respond to a request. On the other hand, applications may be denied if the proposed transaction is not in accordance with government policy.
4.7 International import certificates and delivery verification certificates
The issuance of International Import Certificates (IICs) and Delivery Verification Certificates (DVCs) is provided for under section 9 of the EIPA and under the Import Certificate Regulations (C.R.C., c. 603). IICs enable an importer to describe goods in detail and to certify that they will not assist in their disposal or diversion during transit. Such assurances may be required by the country of export before permitting the shipment of certain goods, most notably munitions and strategic goods. An IIC is not an import permit and does not entitle the holder to import the goods described on the certificate into Canada. DVCs may be issued following arrival of the goods in Canada to enable an exporter of goods to Canada to comply with requirements of the exporting country.
Since 2011, IIC letters have been issued to trusted high-volume importers, and this has resulted in a significant reduction in the number of individual certificates issued.
In 2025, Global Affairs Canada issued 1,143 International Import Certificates and 71 Delivery Verification Certificates.
4.8 General Import Permits
The EIPA provides for the issuance of general permits authorizing the import of certain designated goods to all destinations or to specified destinations. GIPs are intended to facilitate imports by enabling importers to import selected goods without applying for individual permits.
The following GIPs were in effect during 2025:
- GIP No. 1: Dairy Products for Personal Use
- GIP No. 2: Chickens and Chicken Products for Personal Use
- GIP No. 3: Wheat and Wheat Products and Barley and Barley Products for Personal Use
- GIP No. 6: Roses for Personal Use
- GIP No. 7: Turkeys and Turkey Products for Personal Use
- GIP No. 8: Eggs for Personal Use
- GIP No. 13: Beef and Veal for Personal Use
- GIP No. 14: Margarine for Personal Use
- GIP No. 20: Wheat and Wheat Products and Barley and Barley Products
- GIP No. 60: Import of Arms Permit
- GIP No. 80: Carbon Steel
- GIP No. 81: Specialty Steel Products
- GIP No. 83: Aluminum Products
- GIP No. 100: Eligible Agriculture Goods
- GIP No. 108: Chemical Weapons Convention Toxic Chemicals and Precursors
5.0 Offences under the Export and Import Permits Act
There were no convictions for offences under the EIPA during the 2025 calendar year.
Penalties are listed in subsection 19 of the EIPA as follows:
- Every person or organization that contravenes any provision of this Act or of the regulations is guilty of
- an offence punishable on summary conviction and liable to a fine not exceeding $250,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months, or to both; or
- an indictable offence and liable to a fine in an amount that is in the discretion of the court or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding ten years, or to both.
- A prosecution under paragraph [19](1)(a) may be instituted at any time within but not later than three years after the time when the subject-matter of the complaint arose.
Section 25 of the EIPA delegates responsibility for the enforcement of the EIPA to all officers as defined in the Customs Act (subsection 2(1)). The CBSA and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) enforce the provisions of the EIPA.
The Minister responsible for the EIPA has the authority to designate inspectors, who for any purpose related to the administration or enforcement of the EIPA may inspect, audit or examine the records of any person who has applied for an authorization under the EIPA. Such activities are conducted to ensure compliance with the EIPA, its associated regulations and established policies, including eligibility criteria associated with various TRQs.
Global Affairs Canada has verification teams deployed to four major metropolitan areas to support the administration of import and export permits: Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver. Between 150 and 200 verification inspections are conducted annually.
Export control enforcement continued to be a key element in Canada's export control system in 2025. GAC works closely with enforcement agencies, in particular the CBSA and the RCMP. Upon receipt of information relating to an unauthorized export, brokering or import of controlled items, GAC may, depending on the circumstances of the case, refer the matter to the RCMP or CBSA for investigation and decision as to whether to proceed with administrative measures and/or penalties or criminal charges. GAC also routinely provides assistance, expert advice and investigative support to the CBSA, RCMP and other investigative agencies.
In 2025, Global Affairs Canada responded to 15 formal requests for investigation support related to strategic and/or military goods and technology.
Alleged violations may come to the attention of GAC directly (e.g. a Canadian exporter or importer may bring forward a suspected violation) or indirectly, as a result of an inspection and/or audit.
Potential violations may also be identified in the course of CBSA operations at border control locations and major ports of entry and exit. CBSA may detain a shipment, referring to GAC to verify that legislative and regulatory requirements controlling exports (e.g. export controls under the EIPA and sanctions). Additionally, CBSA can enforce non-compliance penalties under the Customs Act, such as seizures, returns of goods seized, forfeitures, as well as Administrative Monetary Penalty System (AMPS) penalties.
In 2025, the CBSA referred 301 detention files to Global Affairs Canada related to strategic and/or military goods and technology. Of these, 78 were import detentions and 223 were export detentions.
GAC recognizes that, on occasion, responsible exporters and importers inadvertently fail to comply with the EIPA. Exporters and importers finding themselves in such a situation are encouraged to disclose any incidents of non-compliance to GAC as soon as possible.
If, after considering the information provided, GAC is satisfied that the exporter has fully cooperated, no further action may be warranted. Depending on the gravity or overall circumstances of a case, GAC may nonetheless refer disclosures to the CBSA or RCMP for further review.
In 2025, Global Affairs Canada received 35 voluntary disclosures from Canadian importers or exporters regarding the import or export of strategic and/or military goods and technology.
6.0 Performance standards
Global Affairs Canada is committed to providing clients with prompt and reliable service based on Canadian export and import controls statutes, regulations and policies.
Our aims are to:
- Foster an orderly processing of controlled imports into and exports from Canada;
- Implement our commitments under international agreements; and
- Ensure that the administration of trade controls under the authority of the EIPA is carried out smoothly and without undue hindrance to Canadian exporters, importers and consumers.
Please consult the Global Affairs Canada website for more information on our Service Pledge.
In order to fulfill our responsibilities under the EIPA, Global Affairs Canada has established service standards. In 2025, these were:
- Non-routed non-strategic permits: The target for processing import and export permit applications not automatically redirected to a permit officer (non-routed) in the New Export and Import Controls System (NEICS) - within 15 business minutes of receipt.
- Non-strategic goods: The target for processing import and export permit applications automatically redirected (routed) to a permit officer in the NEICS - within four business hours of receipt.
- Military, dual-use and strategic goods: The target for processing permit applications to export controlled strategic goods or technology in the New Export Controls Online System (NEXCOL) - within 10 business days for complete applications not requiring consultations outside the Strategic Export Controls Bureau; or, within 40 business days for complete applications that do require consultations outside the Strategic Export Controls Bureau.
- Logs: The target for processing log permit applications for log exports in NEXCOL - within three business days.
In 2025, a total of 275,805 permit applications were processed within NEICS and NEXCOL (data based on permits processed between January 1 and December 31, 2025), of which approximately 99.56% of 274,301Footnote 1 were processed within the allotted service periods. Further detail on the specific service standards for military, dual-use and strategic permits may be found in the 2025 Annual Report on Strategic Goods and Technologies Pursuant to Section 27 of the Export and Import Permits Act. Additional details concerning service standards and historical performance, by fiscal year, can also be found on GAC’s Service Standards Report in the context of its reporting on high-volume regulatory authorizations.
7.0 References
7.1 General data notes
Data discrepancies: Data presented in this report reflect a point-in-time data capture taken on January 1st, 2026. There may be discrepancies with other published data given that permits may be subsequently amended or cancelled, or issued retroactively. This results in changes to numbers pulled at different points in time.
Quota utilization: There are certain instances when quota utilization is zero. This can occur for a number of commercial reasons, including: challenging competitive market dynamics negatively impacting the commercial viability of exports/imports; more favorable business conditions in other markets; high transport costs (especially for perishable goods such as dairy); and a potential lack of awareness by Canadian exporters/importers of the opportunities presented by the quotas, especially where FTAs are relatively new.
7.2 Definitions
| Cancelled: | Permits may be cancelled for reasons such as: permit expired; goods never arrived at the border; amendments to the permit were necessary; at the request of the applicant as the permit is no longer required; policy reasons; etc. Note regarding strategic exports: Permits that have been cancelled are no longer valid for the export of goods or technology. An issued export permit can also be suspended for policy reasons and reinstated later. |
| Issued: | Total permits granted to importers or exporters to import goods into or export goods from Canada. |
Applicable to non-strategic export permits and import permits only:
| Rejected: | Permit applications are normally rejected owing to issues such as insufficient or incorrect information, insufficient quota, etc. |
Applicable to military, dual-use and strategic export permits only:
| Denied: | A permit may be denied by the Minister responsible for the EIPA. This occurs in fewer than 1% of cases annually and is generally for reasons related to Canada’s foreign and defence policies, as provided in the criteria for controlling the export of military, dual-use and strategic goods outlined in section 3.2. |
| Returned without action: | A permit application is returned without action by Global Affairs Canada if it is administratively incomplete, or if there is inconsistent information. A company that wishes to pursue the export is required to submit a new permit application. |
| Withdrawn: | Permit applications may be withdrawn either at the request of the exporter or if the exporter is advised by Global Affairs Canada that a permit is not required. An exporter may decide to withdraw their application if the permit is no longer required because the commercial contract has fallen through, if a change to the contract requires them to resubmit the information under a separate application, or if the exporter becomes aware of political, commercial, or other types of risk that may affect their application and decides not to pursue the opportunity. An application may also be withdrawn if the goods or technology proposed for export are not controlled, if the items are controlled but a permit is not required for their export to the U.S., or if a General Export Permit applies. All of these situations are captured in the category of withdrawn permits. |
7.3 Glossary
- ACL
- Area Control List
- AFCCL
- Automatic Firearms Country Control List
- ATT
- Arms Trade Treaty
- BCL
- Brokering Control List
- BTQ
- Below-threshold quantity
- CBP
- U.S. Customs and Borders Protection
- CBSA
- Canada Border Services Agency
- Canada-U.K. TCA
- Canada-United Kingdom Trade Continuity Agreement
- CETA
- Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement
- CITT
- Canadian International Trade Tribunal
- CPTPP
- Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership
- CUSMA
- Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement
- DVC
- Delivery verification certificate
- ECL
- Export Control List
- EE
- Eviscerated equivalent
- EIPA
- Export and Import Permits Act
- EU
- European Union
- FTA
- Free trade agreement
- GAC
- Global Affairs Canada
- GBP1
- General brokering permit No. 1
- GEP
- General export permit
- GIP
- General import permit
- HS
- Harmonized System
- ICL
- Import Control List
- IIC
- International Import Certificate
- IREP
- Import for Re-Export Program
- MPC
- Milk protein concentrate
- NAFTA
- North America Free Trade Agreement
- NEICS
- New Export and Import Controls System
- NEXCOL
- New Export Controls System Online
- RCMP
- Royal Canadian Mounted Police
- SCPs
- Sugar-containing products
- SME
- Square meter equivalents
- SMP
- Skim milk powder
- TPL
- Tariff preference level
- TRQs
- Tariff rate quotas
- U.K.
- United Kingdom
- U.S.
- United States
- WA
- Wassenaar Arrangement
- WTO
- World Trade Organization
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