The quarantine requirement is only for people who enter Canada. There will be Provincial requirements too. However, there is no rule as such to quarantine with IFM, however, if you are living in the same household with people who came from a different Province or out of Canada, without separate living conditions, you will be bette foo quarantining to help spread COVID.
See
https://www.canada.ca/en/public-hea...fection/latest-travel-health-advice.html#a1.5
For those in isolation, you're required to stay inside.
You're strongly urged to make housing arrangements for quarantine or isolation before you arrive in Canada. In most cases, this can be in your own home or in the same place you're visiting in Canada.
If this isn't possible, you should consider making alternative arrangements that are within your own financial means. A suitable place is one where you:
- won't have contact with people who are vulnerable, such as those who:
- are 65 years or older
- have underlying medical conditions
- have compromised immune systems
- aren't in a group living environment, such as:
- student residences
- long-term care facilities
- industrial camps
- living in the same household with large families or many people where there's close contact and you share common spaces
- can stay for at least 14 days (and possibly longer)
- have access to basic necessities, including water, food, medication and heat during the winter months
Exceptions to staying with a vulnerable person include if:
- they're a consenting adult
- they're either the parent or the minor in a parent-minor relationship
Before you travel, you must plan to quarantine or isolate in a suitable place. If you don't, you may be assessed further by a government representative at the border. If you can't quarantine in your own home, consider other options within your financial means, such as:
- hotel
- motel
- other paid housing
- friends or family, as long as you won't expose anyone who:
- is not part of your travel group
- is at risk of more severe outcomes of COVID-19