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Berry Farm Jobs in Canada 2026 – LMIA Approved

Berry Farm Jobs in Canada 2026 – LMIA Approved As of now (September 2025), 2026 berry season jobs are not yet posted, but the pattern is 99% predictable because the same farms, same recruiters, and same LMIA approvals repeat every single year. Below is exactly what will happen for 2026 and how you can position yourself to get hired fast.

Top Provinces & Crops for 2026 (Highest Hiring)

  1. British Columbia (Fraser Valley – Abbotsford, Surrey, Langley, Chilliwack)
    • Main crops: Blueberries, raspberries, strawberries
    • Peak season: May/June to September/October
    • Expected wage: $17.40–$19.50/hr + piece rate (many workers earn $22–$30/hr effective)
    • Biggest LMIA-approved farms/companies that hire foreigners every year:
      • Golden Eagle Group (Abbotsford)
      • Valley Berries
      • Bakerview Farms
      • Grewal Berries
      • Gurfateh Farms
      • Garcha Bros
      • Gills Farm
      • Gagan Farms
  2. Ontario (Niagara, Bradford, Simcoe area)
    • Strawberries, raspberries
    • Wage: $17.20–$18.50/hr + piece rate
    • Big repeat hirers:
      • Gidney Farms
      • Barrie Hill Farms
      • Tigchelaar Berry Farms
  3. Quebec (mainly for Mexicans & Guatemalans via SAWP)
    • Strawberries & blueberries
    • Wage: $15.75–$17.50/hr (lower base but lots of overtime)

How the 2026 Recruitment Timeline Will Work

  • October–December 2025: First LMIA applications submitted by farms
  • January–March 2026: Most LMIA approvals come out + job offers start being sent
  • April–May 2026: Workers start arriving in Canada

If you wait until 2026 to apply, you will be too late. The best workers are already being selected now for next year.

Proven Ways to Get Hired for 2026 (That Actually Work Right Now)

  1. Facebook Groups (this is where 70% of people get hired)
    Search these exact groups and post your details (age, nationality, experience, phone/WhatsApp):
    • “Canada Berry Farm Jobs 2025-2026 LMIA”
    • “Canada Fruit Picking Jobs 2026 LMIA Approved”
    • “Abbotsford Berry Farm Jobs 2026”
    • “Mexicanos en Canada Trabajos Agricolas” (if you are from Mexico)
    • “Jamaica Canada Farm Work Programme 2026”
    Recruiters and farm owners check these groups daily.
  2. Licensed Recruiters Who Already Have 2026 Contracts
    These agencies have contracts signed for 2026 season right now:
    • GreenTech Resources (Saskatchewan & BC)
    • Global Farm Workers (Mexico to Canada)
    • Niagara Employment Agency
    • Work Global Canada Inc.
    • Parrish & Heimbecker (P&H) – they do massive berry hiring
    Message them on WhatsApp/Facebook and say:
    “Looking for berry farm job 2026 LMIA approved – [your country] passport – available May–October – previous experience [yes/no]”
  3. Direct Farm Applications (Best for Repeat Workers)
    If you worked in Canada before, contact the same farm directly in November/December 2025 – they will give you priority and re-issue LMIA immediately.

Requirements (99% of Berry Jobs)

  • Age: 20–48 (some farms accept up to 55)
  • Passport valid until at least December 2026
  • Physically fit (lifting 20–30 kg boxes)
  • No education required
  • Basic English not always mandatory (Spanish speakers accepted in many BC farms)
  • Clean police record

Expected Salary & Benefits (2025 rates → 2026 will be ~$0.50–$1 higher)

  • Base pay: $17.40–$19.50/hr (BC)
  • Piece rate: Fast pickers earn $2,500–$4,000 CAD per month easily
  • Free shared accommodation + utilities
  • Overtime after 40–55 hours/week
  • Average worker saves $10,000–$15,000 CAD in 5–6 months

Red Flags – Avoid Scams

  • Never pay any recruiter more than $500–$700 CAD (only after you sign the contract)
  • Real LMIA jobs NEVER ask you to pay $3,000–$7,000 upfront
  • If someone says “pay me $2,000 and I guarantee visa” → scam

Bottom line for 2026:
Start contacting recruiters and joining Facebook groups RIGHT NOW (September–November 2025). The people who get hired for the best farms are the ones who apply 7–9 months early.

If you tell me your nationality and whether you have previous Canada experience, I can give you the exact recruiter contacts that are hiring from your country for 2026 berry season.

PRO TIPS for Getting Hired Fast (2026 Season)

1. Application Tips

  • ✅ Apply October–January: Don’t wait until spring 2026; farms start processing LMIAs in fall 2025
  • ✅ Target British Columbia first: 80% of berry farm LMIA jobs are in BC (Abbotsford/Surrey area)
  • ✅ Have a simple resume ready: 1 page, include any physical work experience (farming, construction, warehouse, etc.)
  • ✅ Use WhatsApp: Most recruiters prefer WhatsApp over email. Save your resume as PDF and send with short intro message
  • ✅ Follow up weekly: Recruiters get 500+ messages. Polite weekly follow-up = you stay top of mind

How To Apply

Apply Now

CONCLUSION

Is Berry Farm Work in Canada Worth It in 2026?

YES, if:

  • ✅ You need to earn $10,000–$20,000+ in 5–6 months
  • ✅ You’re physically fit and don’t mind hard outdoor work
  • ✅ You want legal work in Canada with free accommodation
  • ✅ You’re exploring long-term immigration pathways
  • ✅ Your country has limited local job opportunities

 FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQs)

General Questions

Q1: When do I apply for 2026 berry season jobs?
A: Start applying October 2025–January 2026. LMIAs are processed November–February, job offers sent January–March, workers arrive April–May.

Q2: Do I need experience?
A: No. 70% of workers are hired with zero farming experience. However, experienced workers get priority and better piece rates.

Q3: What countries are workers hired from?
A: Top hiring countries: Mexico, Jamaica, Guatemala, Philippines, India, Honduras, El Salvador, Thailand, Vietnam. Also open to workers from Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, Pakistan, Bangladesh.

Q4: How long does LMIA approval take?
A: 8–16 weeks average. Global Talent Stream (for repeat farms) = 10 business days, but berry farms usually use regular stream.

Q5: Is accommodation really free?
A: Yes, 90% of farms provide free shared accommodation (usually mobile homes or bunkhouses). Some farms deduct $50–$150/month for utilities.

News Reporter

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