Immigration Pathway
How CRS works, who it fits, what the category-based draws mean, and how to decide if it's your strongest route to permanent residence.
Last updated: April 18, 2026
Who this is for
A skilled worker, tradesperson, or graduate who wants permanent residence in Canada, has at least some work experience, and is trying to figure out whether Express Entry is the right starting point — before spending money on a consultant, a kit, or an application.
The 2-minute version
The short answer before the detail
Build a profile. Get scored under the Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS). Wait for a draw. Draws come in three flavours: general all-program rounds, program-specific rounds, and category-based rounds that target people with skills Canada is actively looking for. A higher score gets you invited sooner. A provincial nomination adds 600 points. French-language ability, Canadian work experience, and strong language test results move the needle more than almost anything else.
You submit a profile online. It sits in a pool for up to twelve months. During that time, IRCC runs draws every two to four weeks. Each draw sets a cut-off score and invites everyone above it to apply. If you're invited, you have 60 days to submit a complete application, including medical exams, police certificates, and proof of funds. Processing then runs on published service standards — lately around six months for most files.
The profile itself is not your application. That surprises people. You can sit in the pool with a low score for a year and never be invited, or you can be invited two weeks after submitting and realize you now have 60 days to assemble documents that take three months to get in your home country. Neither scenario is rare.
For most of Express Entry's history, the game was simple: raise your CRS score as high as possible and hope the cut-off comes down. That still matters. But since mid-2023, IRCC has been running category-based draws that invite people based on what they bring to the economy rather than their raw score.
The current categories include:
For some applicants this changes the whole strategy. If your CRS is stuck at 480 but you're a registered nurse, you may be closer to an invitation than someone with a 500 in the general pool. The smarter question is no longer "what was the last cut-off" but "do I fit a category Canada is actively calling for?"
When people ask how to raise their CRS, they usually hope the answer is clever. It rarely is. The levers that move profiles the most are:
Most of the other levers are small. If your profile is stuck, the honest answer is usually: retake the language test, get a nomination, or add Canadian experience.
Things to avoid
Quick answers
No. Most people who are invited through Express Entry do not have a Canadian job offer. A qualifying offer can add points, but it is not required.
There is no official minimum. The lowest score invited in any given draw depends on the category, the program, and the number of invitations issued. Scores above 500 are competitive in most general draws. Category-based draws often invite at lower scores.
From submitting a profile to receiving permanent residence, six to twelve months is typical if you're invited quickly and your documents are ready. It can stretch longer if you wait for an invitation or have background check delays.
No. An approved language test is mandatory for every adult applicant. Results must be less than two years old when you apply.
Yes. Points start dropping after age 29 and continue dropping each year through the mid-40s. It's the one factor you cannot improve.
One next step
Not sure if Express Entry is your strongest route? Our Express Entry Application Kit walks you through the CRS factors, profile strategy, and document checklist — before you commit to the process.