Express Entry

A photograph of a couple holding hands and standing on a bridge at sunset, looking out at the Toronto city skyline and the river below. The woman wears a beige coat and the man a dark grey coat, and both are smiling gently. The sun casts a warm golden light over the buildings and the water.
A photograph of a couple holding hands and standing on a bridge at sunset, looking out at the Toronto city skyline and the river below. The woman wears a beige coat and the man a dark grey coat, and both are smiling gently. The sun casts a warm golden light over the buildings and the water.
Abstract flowing waves in grayscale creating a smooth, undulating pattern with light and shadow gradients

Overview

Express Entry is Canada's main pathway to permanent residency for skilled workers — but it's no longer just a numbers game.

The system has fundamentally shifted toward category-based draws, meaning which category your profile falls into matters as much as your CRS score.

Knowing where you stand, which draws you're eligible for, and how to position your profile can make the difference between waiting years and receiving an ITA in months. That's where an experienced RCIC makes the difference.

Is it for you?

You have Canadian work experience and want to apply for PR through the Canadian Experience Class.

You are in the Express Entry pool but haven't been selected and aren't sure why.

You want to understand your CRS score, which draws you qualify for, and what to do next.

You are ready to apply but want a licensed RCIC to handle your profile and application correctly.

In Canada

Immigration Consultation

Permanent Residence

Outside Canada

Work in Canada

Frequently Asked Questions

  • How does Express Entry actually work?

    You create a profile in the Express Entry pool and receive a CRS score based on factors like age, education, language ability, and work experience. IRCC holds draws regularly — inviting the highest-ranking candidates from specific categories. If your score meets the cut-off for a draw you're eligible for, you receive an Invitation to Apply for permanent residency.

  • What can I do to improve my chances?

    The most impactful factors are Canadian work experience, language scores, and category eligibility. Many clients sit in the pool for months without realizing that improving their English test score or qualifying for a different category could have gotten them selected much earlier. The earlier you understand your profile's strengths and gaps, the better positioned you are.

  • Why haven't I been selected even though my score seems high enough?

    Two reasons. First, the system now runs heavily on category-based draws — which categories your profile qualifies for can matter more than your score alone. Second, general draw cut-offs have been high for some time now. Improving your score often means retaking your English test, gaining more Canadian work experience, or getting a foreign education evaluated — steps many candidates delay without realizing the impact. Knowing exactly where you stand and what to improve is where we come in.

  • Are draws happening regularly right now?

    Yes. In 2026, draws are being held regularly across CEC, PNP, French language proficiency, and new targeted categories including new streams for healthcare professionals and physicians. The system is active — the key is making sure your profile is in the right position when the next relevant draw happens.

  • How does Express Entry actually work?

    You create a profile in the Express Entry pool and receive a CRS score based on factors like age, education, language ability, and work experience. IRCC holds draws regularly — inviting the highest-ranking candidates from specific categories. If your score meets the cut-off for a draw you're eligible for, you receive an Invitation to Apply for permanent residency.

  • What can I do to improve my chances?

    The most impactful factors are Canadian work experience, language scores, and category eligibility. Many clients sit in the pool for months without realizing that improving their English test score or qualifying for a different category could have gotten them selected much earlier. The earlier you understand your profile's strengths and gaps, the better positioned you are.

  • Why haven't I been selected even though my score seems high enough?

    Two reasons. First, the system now runs heavily on category-based draws — which categories your profile qualifies for can matter more than your score alone. Second, general draw cut-offs have been high for some time now. Improving your score often means retaking your English test, gaining more Canadian work experience, or getting a foreign education evaluated — steps many candidates delay without realizing the impact. Knowing exactly where you stand and what to improve is where we come in.

  • Are draws happening regularly right now?

    Yes. In 2026, draws are being held regularly across CEC, PNP, French language proficiency, and new targeted categories including new streams for healthcare professionals and physicians. The system is active — the key is making sure your profile is in the right position when the next relevant draw happens.