How to Apply for Express Entry Canada 2026: Complete Step-by-Step Application Guide

Applying for Canadian permanent residence through Express Entry might seem complicated, but with the right guidance, you can navigate the entire process confidently. This complete step-by-step guide walks you through every stage of the Express Entry application process—from checking your eligibility to landing in Canada as a permanent resident.

Whether you’re a first-time applicant or need clarification on the online portal, document requirements, or application timelines, this guide provides everything you need to successfully apply for Express Entry in 2026.


Understanding Express Entry: What You Need to Know Before Applying

Express Entry is Canada’s electronic immigration management system for three federal economic immigration programs:

  1. Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP)
  2. Federal Skilled Trades Program (FSTP)
  3. Canadian Experience Class (CEC)

Important Distinction: Express Entry is not an immigration program itself—it’s a selection and application management system. You don’t “apply” to Express Entry directly. Instead, you:

  1. Create an Express Entry profile (free)
  2. Enter the candidate pool
  3. Receive a Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score
  4. Wait for an Invitation to Apply (ITA)
  5. Submit your permanent residence application (if invited)

This process is fundamentally different from traditional immigration applications, where you apply first and wait for processing. With Express Entry, you wait in the pool, and only invited candidates can submit applications.


Express Entry Application Process: Complete Overview

Here’s the entire Express Entry journey from start to finish:

StageWhat HappensTimeline
Pre-ApplicationCheck eligibility, gather documents, take language tests2-6 months
Profile CreationCreate Express Entry profile online1-3 hours
Pool EntryProfile enters pool, receive CRS scoreImmediate
Waiting PeriodWait for ITA, improve score if neededVaries (weeks to years)
ITA ReceivedInvitation to Apply issued during drawDraw day
PR ApplicationSubmit complete application with documents60 days from ITA
Application ProcessingIRCC reviews application, requests biometrics/medical6 months (standard)
DecisionApplication approved or refusedAt end of processing
LandingTravel to Canada, become permanent residentWithin 12 months of medical exam

Total Timeline: Most successful candidates complete the entire journey in 12-24 months from starting their profile, though this varies significantly based on individual circumstances.


Step 1: Determine Your Eligibility for Express Entry

Before creating your profile, you must qualify for at least one of the three Express Entry programs.

Check Eligibility for Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP)

Minimum Requirements:

Work Experience: At least 1 year (1,560 hours total, or 30 hours/week for 12 months) of continuous full-time or equivalent part-time paid work in the last 10 years

Occupation: Work must be in a skilled occupation (NOC TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3)

Language: Minimum CLB 7 in English or French in all four abilities (reading, writing, speaking, listening)

Education: Canadian secondary (high school) diploma OR foreign credential with Educational Credential Assessment (ECA)

Points: Score at least 67 points out of 100 on the FSWP selection grid

Proof of Funds: Sufficient settlement funds (unless you have valid job offer or work authorization in Canada)

Admissibility: Pass medical and security checks

FSWP Points Grid (67 minimum required):

FactorMaximum Points
Education25
Language (first language)28
Language (second language)4
Work Experience15
Age12
Arranged Employment10
Adaptability10
Total100

Use IRCC’s online tool to check if you meet the 67-point requirement before proceeding.

Check Eligibility for Federal Skilled Trades Program (FSTP)

Minimum Requirements:

Work Experience: At least 2 years (minimum 30 hours/week) of full-time work experience in a skilled trade within the last 5 years

Occupation: Must be in specific eligible skilled trades (NOC TEER 2 or 3):

  • Industrial, electrical, and construction trades (Major Group 72)
  • Maintenance and equipment operation trades (Major Group 73)
  • Supervisors and technical jobs in natural resources, agriculture (Major Groups 82, 92)
  • Processing, manufacturing, utilities supervisors (Major Group 92)
  • Chefs and cooks (NOC 62200, 63200)

Language: CLB 5 for speaking and listening, CLB 4 for reading and writing

Job Offer OR Certificate: Either:

  • Valid full-time job offer for at least 1 year from up to two Canadian employers, OR
  • Certificate of qualification in your skilled trade from Canadian provincial/territorial authority

Admissibility: Pass medical and security checks

Check Eligibility for Canadian Experience Class (CEC)

Minimum Requirements:

Canadian Work Experience: At least 1 year (1,560 hours total, minimum 15 hours/week) of skilled Canadian work experience within the last 3 years

Occupation: Work must be in NOC TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3

Language:

  • NOC TEER 0 or 1: CLB 7 in all four abilities
  • NOC TEER 2 or 3: CLB 5 in all four abilities

Work Authorization: Experience must have been gained with proper authorization (valid work permit)

Admissibility: Pass medical and security checks

Note: CEC does not require proof of funds if you’re currently authorized to work in Canada.

Quick Eligibility Check

Use IRCC’s “Come to Canada” Tool:

  • Visit: canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/come-canada/wizard-about
  • Answer questions about your situation
  • Receive immediate feedback on which programs you might qualify for

Common Eligibility Mistakes to Avoid:

❌ Claiming work experience in NOC TEER 4 or 5 (not eligible)
❌ Counting unpaid work, internships, or volunteer experience
❌ Including work done without authorization
❌ Not meeting minimum language requirements
❌ Assuming language ability without taking official tests


Step 2: Gather Required Documents Before Creating Your Profile

Preparing documents before starting your profile saves time and prevents delays. Here’s everything you’ll need:

Essential Documents for Profile Creation

1. Valid Passport

  • Must be valid for at least 6 months
  • You’ll need passport number, issue date, and expiry date
  • If your family is accompanying you, their passports too

2. Language Test Results

Take an approved language test within the last 2 years:

For English:

  • IELTS General Training
  • CELPIP-General (Canadian English Language Proficiency Index Program)

For French:

  • TEF Canada (Test d’évaluation de français)
  • TCF Canada (Test de connaissance du français)

What You Need:

  • Test reference number or result form number
  • Test date
  • Scores for all four abilities (reading, writing, listening, speaking)

Booking Timeline: Book your test at least 1-2 months in advance as spots fill quickly.

3. Educational Credential Assessment (ECA) – If Foreign Education

If you completed education outside Canada, get an ECA from a designated organization:

Approved Organizations:

  • World Education Services (WES) – Most popular
  • International Credential Assessment Service of Canada (ICAS)
  • Comparative Education Service (CES) – University of Toronto
  • International Qualifications Assessment Service (IQAS) – Alberta
  • Medical Council of Canada (physicians only)
  • Pharmacy Examining Board of Canada (pharmacists only)

What You Need:

  • ECA reference number
  • ECA report showing Canadian equivalency
  • Date of issue

Processing Time: 4-8 weeks on average

Cost: $200-300 CAD depending on organization

Important: Not all foreign degrees are recognized at the same level. A Bachelor’s degree in one country might only equal a 3-year diploma in Canadian terms. The ECA determines this.

4. Proof of Work Experience

For each position you’re claiming:

Employment Reference Letters Must Include:

  • Your full name and date of birth
  • Company’s official contact information (address, phone, email)
  • Company letterhead and stamp
  • Your job title(s)
  • Employment dates (start and end dates with month and year)
  • Number of hours worked per week
  • Annual salary plus benefits
  • Detailed list of your main duties and responsibilities
  • Supervisor’s name, title, and signature
  • Date letter was issued

Supporting Documents:

  • Pay stubs
  • Tax documents (T4s for Canadian work, equivalents for foreign work)
  • Employment contracts
  • Job offer letters
  • Records of Employment (ROEs) for Canadian jobs

Critical Requirement: The duties listed must match your claimed NOC code. Generic letters like “performed various administrative duties” will be rejected.

5. Proof of Funds (If Required)

Required for FSWP applicants without valid job offers or Canadian work authorization.

Minimum Funds Required (2026):

Family SizeRequired Funds (CAD)
1 person$14,690
2 persons$18,288
3 persons$22,483
4 persons$27,297
5 persons$30,690
6 persons$34,917
7 persons$38,875
Each additional personAdd $3,958

Acceptable Proof:

  • Bank statements (last 6 months showing consistent balance)
  • Bank letters on official letterhead
  • Fixed deposits or term deposits
  • Guaranteed Investment Certificates (GICs)
  • Mutual funds

NOT Acceptable:

  • Borrowed money or loans
  • Property equity
  • Jewelry or valuable items
  • Cryptocurrency

6. Provincial Nomination Certificate (If Applicable)

If you received a nomination through a Provincial Nominee Program, you’ll need:

  • Nomination certificate with reference number
  • Letter from the province confirming your nomination
  • Details about the nomination stream

7. Job Offer Letter (If Applicable)

If claiming points for arranged employment:

  • Job offer letter on company letterhead
  • Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) number (if required)
  • Details about the position, salary, and duration
  • Confirmation the position is permanent and full-time

Documents Checklist for Profile Creation

Before You Start, Have Ready:

□ Valid passport
□ Language test results (reference number and scores)
□ ECA report (reference number) – if foreign education
□ Employment reference letters from all relevant positions
□ Proof of funds documentation – if required
□ Provincial nomination details – if applicable
□ Job offer and LMIA – if applicable
□ National Identity Document – if from country that issues them
□ Spouse/partner information and documents – if applicable

Pro Tip: Create a digital folder with scanned copies of all documents. You won’t upload them during profile creation, but having them organized helps you answer questions accurately.


Step 3: Create Your Express Entry Profile Online

Now you’re ready to create your Express Entry profile in the IRCC online portal.

Accessing the IRCC Online Portal

Portal Address: canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/account.html

Step-by-Step Portal Access:

A. Create Your IRCC Secure Account

  1. Visit the IRCC portal and click “Sign in to your IRCC secure account”
  2. Select “GCKey” as your sign-in method (recommended for most users)
  3. Click “Sign Up” if you don’t have an account
  4. Create a username (8-16 characters)
  5. Create a password (must include uppercase, lowercase, and numbers)
  6. Set up security questions and answers
  7. Accept terms and conditions
  8. Record your username and password securely

Alternative: You can also use “Sign-In Partner” if you have online banking with participating Canadian banks or provincial credentials.

Security Tip: Use a strong, unique password and store it in a password manager. You’ll need this account throughout the entire process.

B. Access Express Entry Section

  1. Log into your IRCC secure account
  2. Click “Apply to come to Canada”
  3. Select “Express Entry”
  4. Click “Get Started”

Completing Your Express Entry Profile

The profile has multiple sections. Here’s what each section requires:

Section 1: Personal Details

Information Required:

  • Full legal name (exactly as on passport)
  • Date of birth
  • Country of birth
  • Country of citizenship/nationality
  • Current country of residence
  • Marital status
  • National Identity Document number (if applicable)

Common Mistakes:

  • Using nicknames instead of legal names
  • Entering passport number instead of national ID
  • Forgetting to include maiden names if applicable

Section 2: Contact Information

Information Required:

  • Email address (this is critical—all correspondence comes via email)
  • Confirm email address
  • Preferred language for correspondence (English or French)

Important: Use an email address you check regularly. IRCC will send your ITA notification here, and you have limited time to respond.

Section 3: Passport Information

For Each Family Member:

  • Passport number
  • Country that issued passport
  • Issue date
  • Expiry date

Note: Your passport must be valid for at least 6 months. If it expires soon, renew it before creating your profile.

Section 4: National Identity Document (If Applicable)

Some countries issue national identity cards or documents:

  • Document number
  • Country of issue
  • Issue date
  • Expiry date

Skip this section if: Your country doesn’t issue national identity documents (like Canada or USA citizens).

Section 5: Language Test Results

For Each Official Language Test:

Test Information:

  • Which test you took (IELTS, CELPIP, TEF, TCF)
  • Test date
  • Test reference number or result form number

Test Scores:

  • Listening score
  • Reading score
  • Writing score
  • Speaking score

Critical: Enter scores exactly as they appear on your test report. The system will automatically convert them to CLB levels.

Test Validity: Results must be less than 2 years old from the date you create your profile AND from the date you submit your PR application (if you receive an ITA).

Second Official Language: If you took tests in both English and French, you can enter both to earn additional CRS points.

Section 6: Education History

For Each Educational Credential:

Canadian Education:

  • Level of education
  • Name of institution
  • Province/territory
  • Field of study
  • Date credential received

Foreign Education:

  • Level of education
  • Name of institution
  • Country of study
  • Field of study
  • Date credential received
  • ECA reference number
  • Canadian equivalency level (from ECA report)
  • Name of organization that issued ECA
  • ECA issue date

Important: List your highest completed credential first. You can list multiple credentials.

Common Mistake: Claiming foreign education without an ECA. Without an ECA reference number, foreign education receives 0 CRS points.

Section 7: Work History

This is one of the most critical and detailed sections.

For Each Job:

Basic Information:

  • Employer name
  • Country
  • Job title
  • Employment status (current or past)
  • Employment dates (start month/year and end month/year)

Work Details:

  • Number of hours worked per week
  • Type of job (continuous full-time, continuous part-time, or non-continuous/casual)
  • Primary NOC code for this position
  • Specific job duties (matching NOC code)

Critical Requirements:

NOC Code Selection:

  • Research your NOC code thoroughly before entering it
  • Read the main duties in the NOC description
  • Ensure your actual job duties match (not just the job title)
  • Only NOC TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 qualifies for Express Entry

Job Duties Description:

  • Be specific and detailed
  • List 6-10 main responsibilities
  • Use action verbs (managed, analyzed, designed, implemented)
  • Match the language in the NOC description where accurate
  • Avoid generic phrases like “performed various duties”

Example – Good Job Duties (Software Developer – NOC 21232):

  • Designed and developed web applications using React and Node.js
  • Wrote clean, maintainable code following industry best practices
  • Collaborated with cross-functional teams to define project requirements
  • Conducted code reviews and provided constructive feedback to junior developers
  • Debugged and resolved software defects in production environments
  • Participated in Agile ceremonies including sprint planning and retrospectives

Example – Bad Job Duties:

  • Worked on various IT projects
  • Helped the team with coding tasks
  • Attended meetings
  • Performed other duties as assigned

Section 8: Personal History

Provide a complete history of what you’ve been doing for the last 10 years (or since age 18, whichever is more recent):

Include:

  • Employment (already covered in work history section)
  • Education periods
  • Unemployment gaps
  • Travel (if significant periods)
  • Military service

No Gaps: Account for every month. If you were unemployed, say so with explanation.

Section 9: Provincial Nomination (If Applicable)

If you have a provincial nomination:

  • Province that nominated you
  • Nomination certificate number
  • Issue date
  • Nomination stream/category

Section 10: Arranged Employment (If Applicable)

If you have a valid job offer:

  • Employer name and location
  • Job title and NOC code
  • LMIA number (if required)
  • LMIA exemption code (if LMIA-exempt)
  • Whether you’re currently working for this employer
  • Job offer details (duration, salary, full-time/part-time)

Section 11: Family Information

Spouse or Common-Law Partner:

If you have a spouse/partner, decide whether they’re:

  • Accompanying: Coming to Canada with you (they need their own language tests, ECA if claiming points)
  • Non-accompanying: Not included in application (you can sponsor them later)

For Accompanying Spouse:

  • Personal details
  • Passport information
  • Education history
  • Language test results (if claiming points)
  • Work history (if claiming points)

Children (Dependent Children):

For each dependent child:

  • Personal information
  • Whether they’re accompanying or not
  • Citizenship status

Dependent Child Definition:

  • Under 22 years old and not married or in common-law relationship, OR
  • 22+ years old who have depended substantially on parental financial support since before age 22 due to physical or mental condition

Section 12: Proof of Funds

If Required (FSWP without job offer):

  • How much money you have available
  • Currency
  • Source of funds
  • Date funds became available

Note: You don’t upload documents at this stage—just declare the amount.

Section 13: Background and Security Questions

Answer honestly about:

  • Criminal history
  • Medical conditions
  • Previous visa refusals
  • Military service
  • Membership in organizations
  • Government positions held

Critical: Answer truthfully. Misrepresentation can result in a 5-year ban from Canada.

Review and Submit Your Profile

Before Submitting:

✅ Review every section carefully
✅ Double-check all dates, numbers, and spellings
✅ Ensure NOC codes accurately match your work duties
✅ Verify language test reference numbers
✅ Confirm ECA reference number is correct
✅ Check that passport information is accurate

Electronic Signature:

Once satisfied:

  1. Check the box confirming information is complete and accurate
  2. Enter your full name as electronic signature
  3. Click “Submit”

What Happens Next:

  • Your profile is instantly added to the Express Entry pool
  • You receive a CRS score immediately
  • You receive a confirmation email with your Express Entry profile number
  • Your profile remains active in the pool for 12 months

Profile Number: Save this number. You’ll need it to access and update your profile.


Step 4: Receive and Review Your CRS Score

Immediately after submitting your profile, the system calculates your Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score.

Understanding Your CRS Score

Your CRS score determines:

  • Your ranking among all candidates in the pool
  • Your likelihood of receiving an Invitation to Apply (ITA)
  • Which draw types you might qualify for

CRS Score Range: 0-1,200 points possible

Where to Find Your Score:

  1. Log into your IRCC account
  2. Click on your Express Entry profile
  3. Your CRS score appears at the top of your profile summary

CRS Score Breakdown:

The system shows you exactly how many points you earned in each category:

  • Age
  • Education
  • Language proficiency
  • Canadian work experience
  • Spouse factors (if applicable)
  • Skill transferability
  • Additional points (provincial nomination, job offer, etc.)

Comparing Your Score to Recent Draws

Check Recent Cut-Off Scores:

  • Visit: canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/mandate/policies-operational-instructions-agreements/ministerial-instructions/express-entry-rounds.html
  • Review the last 10-15 draws
  • Note the cut-off scores for different draw types

Assess Your Competitiveness:

Your CRS ScoreStatusAction Needed
500+Highly competitiveLikely to receive ITA soon in general draws
480-499CompetitiveGood chance in general or program-specific draws
450-479ModerateCompetitive for category-based draws or with improvements
400-449Below averageTarget category draws, PNPs, or significant improvements needed
Below 400LowFocus on major improvements: PNP, French, education, or Canadian experience

Remember: Different draw types have different cut-offs:

  • General draws: 480-505
  • Category-based draws: 350-470 depending on category
  • French language draws: 350-380

Step 5: Wait in the Pool and Monitor Draws

After profile submission, you enter a waiting period. This stage requires strategy and patience.

How Long Will You Wait?

Wait times vary dramatically:

High scorers (500+): Usually 2-8 weeks
Competitive scores (480-500): 1-4 months
Moderate scores (450-479): 3-12 months
Lower scores (below 450): Could be 12+ months or need improvements

Factors Affecting Wait Time:

  • Your CRS score relative to recent cut-offs
  • Frequency and type of draws IRCC conducts
  • Number of candidates in the pool
  • Canada’s annual immigration targets
  • Your eligibility for category-based draws

Monitor Express Entry Draws

IRCC conducts draws approximately every 2 weeks. Stay informed:

Official Source: canada.ca/express-entry-rounds

What to Check:

  • Draw date
  • Draw type (general, CEC, FSW, FST, category-based)
  • Number of ITAs issued
  • Lowest CRS score invited (cut-off)
  • Tie-breaking rule (date and time)

Set Up Notifications:

  • Check IRCC website weekly
  • Follow IRCC on social media
  • Join Express Entry forums or groups
  • Set Google Alerts for “Express Entry draw”

Example Recent Draw (January 2026):

Draw #289: January 15, 2026
Draw Type: General All-Program
ITAs Issued: 4,500
CRS Cut-Off: 488
Tie-Break: November 3, 2025 at 14:23:17 UTC

What This Means: All candidates with CRS scores of 488 or higher received ITAs. Candidates with exactly 488 who entered the pool before November 3, 2025 at 14:23:17 UTC also received ITAs.

Update Your Profile Regularly

Your profile should be a living document. Update it whenever circumstances improve:

Update For:

  • New language test results
  • Additional work experience (every few months add newly completed months)
  • Completed education credentials
  • New ECA received
  • Provincial nomination received
  • Valid job offer obtained
  • Marriage or change in family status
  • Improved French language proficiency

How to Update:

  1. Log into IRCC account
  2. Click on your Express Entry profile
  3. Select “Update Details”
  4. Make changes to relevant sections
  5. Submit updated profile

Important: Your CRS score updates immediately after you save changes. Your ranking in the pool adjusts automatically.

Profile Creation Date: This doesn’t change when you update. Your original submission date is used for tie-breaking rules, which is advantageous.

Profile Expiration

Profiles expire after 12 months if you don’t receive an ITA.

What Happens:

  • You receive email notification before expiration
  • Profile is automatically removed from pool after 12 months
  • You can create a new profile if still eligible
  • There’s no penalty for creating a new profile

Strategy: If your profile is about to expire and you haven’t improved your score significantly, consider whether you need to make changes before creating a new profile.


Step 6: Receive Your Invitation to Apply (ITA)

If your CRS score meets or exceeds the cut-off in a draw, you’ll receive an Invitation to Apply for permanent residence.

How You’ll Be Notified

Email Notification:

  • IRCC sends an email to the address in your profile
  • Email subject: “Invitation to Apply for Permanent Residence”
  • Email includes your ITA number and instructions

IRCC Account:

  • Message appears in your IRCC account
  • Status changes to “You have been invited to apply”
  • ITA letter available for download

Check Both: Always check your IRCC account on draw days, even if you don’t receive email (emails sometimes go to spam).

What Your ITA Contains

Your ITA includes:

  • Confirmation you’ve been invited
  • ITA number (save this)
  • Date you were invited
  • Program you’re invited under (FSWP, CEC, or FSTP)
  • Deadline to submit your application (60 days from ITA date)
  • Instructions for next steps
  • Link to application portal

Critical: The 60-Day Deadline

You have exactly 60 days from the date of your ITA to submit a complete application.

This deadline is ABSOLUTE:

  • No extensions are granted
  • Technical issues are not grounds for extension
  • Missing the deadline means your ITA is cancelled
  • You’ll need to re-enter the pool and wait for another ITA

Timeline Management:

Days RemainingAction Priority
60-45 daysGather all documents, order police certificates, book medical exam
45-30 daysComplete medical exam, obtain final documents, scan everything
30-15 daysReview all documents, fill out online forms, prepare uploads
15-7 daysUpload all documents, review application thoroughly
7-1 daysFinal review, submit application, pay fees
Day 60ABSOLUTE DEADLINE – Submit before 11:59 PM EST

Pro Tip: Aim to submit by day 45-50. This gives you buffer time for unexpected issues.

Can You Decline an ITA?

Yes, you can decline if:

  • You’re no longer eligible
  • You’re not ready with documents
  • Your circumstances have changed

How to Decline:

  1. Log into your IRCC account
  2. Click on your application
  3. Select “Decline this invitation”
  4. Provide reason (optional)

What Happens:

  • Your profile returns to the pool automatically
  • You keep the same profile creation date (good for tie-breaking)
  • You can receive another ITA in future draws if your score qualifies
  • There’s no penalty for declining

Important: Only decline if you have a valid reason. If you’re simply not ready with documents, try to gather them quickly rather than declining.


Step 7: Submit Your Permanent Residence Application

Once you accept your ITA, you begin the actual permanent residence application process.

Access Your PR Application Portal

Steps to Start:

  1. Log into your IRCC secure account
  2. Click on “Continue Application” under Express Entry
  3. Review the application guide provided
  4. Click “Apply for Permanent Residence”
  5. Complete personal details verification
  6. Begin filling out forms

New Application Portal: As of 2024-2026, IRCC uses a modernized online portal with improved navigation and document upload features.

Complete Online Application Forms

The PR application consists of several detailed forms. Here’s what each requires:

Form 1: Generic Application Form for Canada (IMM 0008)

Information Required:

Personal Details:

  • Full name (current and any previous names)
  • Date and place of birth
  • Gender
  • Current marital status and date
  • Current country of residence
  • Citizenship(s)

Contact Information:

  • Current mailing address
  • Phone numbers (home and mobile)
  • Email address
  • Language preference for correspondence

Passport Details:

  • All passport information
  • Travel documents if applicable

National Identity Documents:

  • If applicable to your country

Details about Residence:

  • Where you intend to live in Canada (city/province)
  • Current address
  • Previous addresses for last 10 years

Family Members:

For each family member (accompanying or not):

  • Full name and relationship
  • Date and place of birth
  • Current marital status
  • Whether accompanying you to Canada

Important: You must declare ALL family members, even if they’re not accompanying you. Failure to declare family members can result in permanent inability to sponsor them later.

Form 2: Schedule A – Background/Declaration (IMM 5669)

This form covers your personal history and background.

Personal History:

Account for all time since age 18 (or past 10 years, whichever is longer):

  • Education periods
  • Employment
  • Unemployment (with explanation)
  • Travel
  • Any gaps must be explained

No gaps allowed. Every single month must be accounted for.

Addresses:

List all addresses where you’ve lived for 6+ months since age 18:

  • Street address
  • City and country
  • Dates (from/to)

Government Positions:

Have you ever held any government position or served in military/security organization?

  • Position details
  • Dates
  • Country

Membership in Organizations:

List any professional or social organizations you belong to

Background Questions:

Answer all questions truthfully about:

  • Serious diseases requiring social/health services
  • Criminal offenses
  • Immigration or visa refusals
  • Involvement in activities listed (war crimes, terrorism, etc.)

Critical: This form must be truthful and complete. Misrepresentation has serious consequences.

Form 3: Additional Family Information (IMM 5406)

Required for:

  • Principal applicant (you)
  • Your spouse/partner (if applicable)
  • Each dependent child 18 or older

Information Required:

List details about:

  • Your parents (mother and father)
  • Your siblings (brothers and sisters)
  • Your children (sons and daughters)
  • Your spouse/partner

For each person:

  • Full name
  • Relationship to you
  • Date of birth
  • Place of birth
  • Current address
  • Whether deceased (date of death if applicable)

Important: Include ALL family members, even if:

  • They’re deceased
  • You’re estranged from them
  • They won’t be coming to Canada
  • They’re already Canadian citizens or PRs

Form 4: Schedule 4 – Economic Classes (For Principal Applicant Only)

This form captures your work experience and education details for Express Entry.

Work Experience Section:

For each position claimed in your Express Entry profile:

  • Employer name and address
  • Your job title
  • Dates of employment
  • NOC code
  • Number of hours per week
  • Detailed description of duties

Important: Information must match what you provided in your Express Entry profile. Discrepancies can cause delays or refusal.

Education Section:

For each credential:

  • Name of institution
  • Field of study
  • Level of education
  • Dates attended
  • Credential received

Form 5: Document Checklist (IMM 5690)

This is your master checklist ensuring you upload all required documents.

Use this to track:

  • Identity documents ✓
  • Language test results ✓
  • Education credentials ✓
  • Proof of work experience ✓
  • Proof of funds ✓
  • Police certificates ✓
  • Medical exam results ✓
  • Additional documents ✓

Upload Supporting Documents

This is the most critical part of your application. Missing documents = delays or refusal.

Document Requirements by Category

1. Identity and Civil Status Documents

For Each Family Member:

Passport:

  • Biographical pages showing photo, name, DOB, passport number
  • All valid passport pages
  • Any previous passports used during eligibility period

Birth Certificate:

  • Original or certified copy
  • If not in English/French, provide certified translation

Marriage Certificate (if married):

  • Original or certified copy
  • Certified translation if not in English/French

Common-Law Union Form (if common-law):

  • IMM 5409 form completed and signed
  • Supporting proof of 12+ months cohabitation

Divorce or Death Certificates:

  • If previously married
  • Required even if remarried

Adoption Papers:

  • For any adopted dependent children

2. Proof of Relationship (for accompanying family)

For Spouse/Partner:

  • Marriage certificate or common-law declaration
  • Joint bank account statements
  • Joint lease/mortgage
  • Utility bills in both names
  • Photos together spanning your relationship
  • Affidavits from friends/family
  • Communication history (emails, messages) – select samples

For Dependent Children:

  • Birth certificates listing you as parent
  • Adoption papers (if applicable)
  • Custody documents (if parents are separated)
  • Proof child depends on you financially (if 22+)

3. Language Test Results

Official Test Results:

  • Complete test result document showing all four skills
  • Test must be less than 2 years old at time of application submission
  • Must match test reference number in Express Entry profile

Acceptable Tests:

  • IELTS General Training (TRF – Test Report Form)
  • CELPIP-General (online results)
  • TEF Canada (attestation)
  • TCF Canada (attestation)

Upload: Full test result page/PDF from testing organization

4. Educational Credentials

Canadian Education:

For each Canadian credential:

  • Diploma or degree certificate
  • Official transcripts in sealed envelope from institution

Foreign Education:

For each foreign credential:

  • ECA report from designated organization
  • Original diploma/degree (certified copy)
  • Official transcripts
  • Certified English/French translation if documents in other language

Important: Must match what you claimed in Express Entry profile. If you claimed Master’s degree, you must provide Master’s degree documentation.

5. Proof of Work Experience

This is where many applications face issues. Be extremely thorough.

For Each Position:

Employment Reference Letter (MANDATORY):

Must include:

  • Written on company letterhead
  • Employer’s contact information (address, phone, email)
  • Your full name and DOB
  • Your job title
  • Employment dates (start and end with month/year)
  • Number of hours worked per week
  • Annual salary plus benefits
  • List of your main duties and responsibilities (detailed)
  • Supervisor’s name, title, and signature
  • Company stamp/seal (if applicable in country)
  • Date letter was issued

Additional Supporting Documents:

  • Pay stubs (at least 3-4 throughout employment period)
  • Tax documents:
    • Canadian work: T4 slips, Notice of Assessment
    • Foreign work: tax returns, income statements
  • Employment contract
  • Job offer letter
  • Records of Employment (ROE) for Canadian jobs
  • Resignation letter (if applicable)
  • Bank statements showing salary deposits

Self-Employment:

If self-employed, provide:

  • Business registration documents
  • Tax returns showing business income
  • Contracts with clients
  • Invoices and payment records
  • Letter from accountant
  • Business bank statements

Critical Guidelines:

✅ Letters must be recent (within 6 months of application)
✅ Duties must match NOC code in detail
✅ Include specific responsibilities, not vague descriptions
✅ If employer refuses to provide letter, include explanation and alternative proof
✅ Cannot use colleagues’ or personal references – must be from employer/HR

If Employer Won’t Provide Reference Letter:

  • Write a letter of explanation
  • Provide as much alternative documentation as possible
  • Include contact information for employer
  • IRCC may contact employer directly to verify

6. Proof of Funds

Required for: FSWP applicants without valid job offer or Canadian work authorization

Acceptable Documents:

Bank Statements:

  • Last 6 months from each account
  • Must show consistent balance above minimum requirement
  • Clearly show bank name, your name, and account number

Bank Letter:

  • On official letterhead
  • Your name and account number
  • Date opened
  • Current balance
  • Average balance for past 6 months

Fixed Deposits/GICs:

  • Certificates showing amount and maturity date
  • Must be convertible to cash

Mutual Funds/Securities:

  • Statements showing current value
  • Must be easily convertible

Format Requirements:

  • Must be in your name or jointly with spouse
  • If in foreign currency, convert to CAD using Bank of Canada exchange rate
  • Provide proof of exchange rate used
  • Balance must meet minimum throughout 6-month period

What NOT to Include:

  • Property valuations
  • Vehicle ownership
  • Jewelry appraisals
  • Borrowed money
  • Loans (will be deducted from total if detected)

7. Police Certificates (Criminal Record Checks)

Required From:

  • Country of current residence (if you’ve lived there 6+ months)
  • Every country where you’ve lived 6+ consecutive months since age 18
  • Countries where you’ve spent significant time (even if less than 6 months in some cases)

Timing:

  • Must be issued AFTER your 18th birthday
  • Must be issued within the last 6 months (some countries have specific validity periods)
  • Don’t order until after you receive ITA (they have limited validity)

For Canada:

  • RCMP certified criminal record check
  • Request through RCMP website or accredited agencies
  • Fingerprints required
  • Processing: 8-10 weeks

For Other Countries:

  • Research specific requirements for each country
  • Some require fingerprints
  • Some must be obtained while in that country
  • Processing times vary widely (2 weeks to 6 months)

If You Cannot Obtain Police Certificate:

  • Provide detailed explanation
  • Show evidence you tried (emails, rejections, country-specific issues)
  • IRCC will provide guidance on alternatives

For Each Family Member 18+:

  • All accompanying family members need police certificates
  • Non-accompanying family members also need them

8. Medical Examination

When to Complete:

  • After receiving ITA but well before submission deadline
  • Book appointment within 1-2 weeks of receiving ITA
  • Allows time for results to reach IRCC

Approved Panel Physicians:

  • Must be completed by IRCC-approved panel physician
  • Find approved physicians: canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/medical-police/medical-exams/requirements-temporary-residents.html
  • Book appointment as soon as you receive ITA

What’s Included:

  • Physical examination
  • Chest X-ray (if 11 years or older)
  • Blood tests (if required)
  • Urine tests (if required)
  • Additional tests based on health history

For Each Family Member:

  • All accompanying family members (including children)
  • Non-accompanying family members may also need exams depending on country

Required Documents:

  • Passport or photo ID
  • Glasses/contact lenses (if worn)
  • Previous medical records (if available)
  • List of current medications
  • Vaccination records

Cost: $200-450 CAD per adult (varies by country and physician)

Results:

  • Physician uploads results directly to IRCC (eMedical)
  • You receive IMM 1017B form with information sheet
  • Valid for 12 months from exam date
  • You must land in Canada before medical expires

Medical Inadmissibility Concerns:

Canada may refuse entry if your condition:

  • Poses public health risk
  • Poses public safety risk
  • Would cause excessive demand on health/social services

Common Issues:

  • Active tuberculosis
  • Untreated syphilis
  • Serious mental health conditions
  • Conditions requiring extensive ongoing treatment

If concerns arise, IRCC may request additional medical information or examinations.

9. Digital Photo Specifications

Requirements:

  • Taken within last 6 months
  • Passport-style photo
  • 35mm x 45mm in size
  • Plain white or light-colored background
  • Neutral facial expression
  • No glasses (unless medical reason with doctor’s note)
  • Religious headwear permitted if face clearly visible
  • No shadows on face or background

Digital Format:

  • JPEG format
  • File size: 240 KB maximum per photo
  • Minimum 420 x 540 pixels
  • Maximum 4000 x 6000 pixels

Upload:

  • One photo per family member
  • Follow exact specifications or application may be rejected

10. Additional Documents (If Applicable)

Provincial Nomination:

  • Complete nomination certificate
  • Letter from province
  • All supporting documentation from PNP application

Job Offer:

  • Job offer letter on company letterhead
  • LMIA approval letter (if required)
  • LMIA exemption documentation (if applicable)
  • Employment contract

Canadian Work Experience:

  • All supporting documents for Canadian work
  • Work permits
  • T4 slips
  • ROEs
  • Reference letters

Proof of Relationship to Canadian Sibling:

  • Birth certificates showing common parent
  • Sibling’s citizenship certificate or PR card
  • Proof sibling resides in Canada

Use of Representative (If Applicable):

  • IMM 5476 form (Use of Representative)
  • Representative’s contact information
  • Signed authorization

Document Formatting and Upload Guidelines

File Format:

  • PDF format strongly preferred
  • JPEG for photos only
  • Maximum file size: 4 MB per document

Scanning Quality:

  • Clear and legible
  • 300 DPI minimum
  • Color scan for documents with stamps/seals
  • Entire document visible (no cut-off edges)

Organization:

  • Combine related documents into single PDF where logical
  • Label files clearly (e.g., “Passport_JohnSmith.pdf”)
  • Follow checklist order when uploading

Translations:

  • Must be certified translations
  • Include both original document and translation
  • Translator’s certification and contact information
  • Both documents in same PDF file

Common Upload Mistakes:

❌ Files too large (compress if needed)
❌ Blurry or illegible scans
❌ Missing pages
❌ Wrong file format
❌ Uploading to wrong category
❌ Forgetting to upload certified translations


Step 8: Pay Application Fees

You must pay all fees before submitting your application.

Fee Breakdown 2026

Processing Fees:

Fee TypeAmount (CAD)
Principal Applicant – Processing Fee$850
Principal Applicant – Right of PR Fee (RPRF)$515
Spouse/Partner – Processing Fee$850
Spouse/Partner – Right of PR Fee (RPRF)$515
Dependent Child – Processing Fee$230
Biometrics – Single Applicant$85
Biometrics – Family (2+ people)$170
Biometrics – Group (3+ people)$255

Total Examples:

Single applicant:

  • Processing: $850
  • RPRF: $515
  • Biometrics: $85
  • Total: $1,450

Couple with no children:

  • Processing (both): $1,700
  • RPRF (both): $1,030
  • Biometrics: $170
  • Total: $2,900

Family of four (2 adults, 2 children under 22):

  • Processing (adults): $1,700
  • Processing (children): $460
  • RPRF (adults only): $1,030
  • Biometrics: $255
  • Total: $3,445

Right of PR Fee (RPRF):

  • Required for principal applicant and accompanying spouse/partner
  • NOT required for dependent children
  • Can be paid upfront or later (before visa issuance)
  • Refundable if application is refused or withdrawn

Payment Methods

Online Payment (Recommended):

  1. Log into your application
  2. Navigate to “Pay Your Fees”
  3. Select fees to pay
  4. Choose payment method:
    • Credit card (Visa, MasterCard, American Express, JCB)
    • Visa Debit or Debit MasterCard
    • Interac Online (Canadian bank accounts only)
    • UnionPay (Chinese bank cards)

Steps:

  • Enter payment information
  • Review amounts
  • Complete payment
  • Save receipt (PDF downloads automatically)
  • Receipt number appears in your application

Important: Keep payment receipt. You’ll need the receipt number.

Bank Draft/Money Order:

  • Not recommended (causes delays)
  • Available if online payment fails
  • Payable to “Receiver General for Canada”
  • Include receipt with application

Step 9: Submit Your Application

After completing all forms and uploading all documents, you’re ready to submit.

Final Application Review Checklist

Before clicking submit, verify:

Forms Completed: □ IMM 0008 (Generic Application) – signed
□ IMM 5669 (Schedule A) – signed and dated
□ IMM 5406 (Additional Family Info) – for each applicable family member
□ Schedule 4 (Economic Classes) – completed
□ Document checklist completed

Documents Uploaded: □ Passports (all family members)
□ Birth certificates (all family members)
□ Marriage certificate / common-law proof
□ Language test results
□ ECA report (if foreign education)
□ Educational credentials and transcripts
□ Employment reference letters (all positions)
□ Pay stubs and tax documents
□ Proof of funds (if required)
□ Police certificates (all family 18+)
□ Medical exam confirmation (IMM 1017B)
□ Photos (all family members)
□ Provincial nomination (if applicable)
□ Job offer and LMIA (if applicable)
□ Any other supporting documents

Fees Paid: □ Processing fees paid
□ RPRF paid (or will pay later)
□ Biometrics fee paid
□ Payment receipt saved

Quality Checks: □ All scans are clear and legible
□ All documents are complete (no missing pages)
□ All translations are certified
□ All forms are signed and dated
□ Information matches Express Entry profile
□ No discrepancies in dates or details

Submitting Your Application

Final Steps:

  1. Click “Review and Submit”
  2. System performs automatic checks for:
    • Missing mandatory fields
    • Missing required documents
    • Unpaid fees
  3. Review submission summary carefully
  4. Check “I certify that…” declaration box
  5. Type your full name as electronic signature
  6. Click “Submit Application”

Confirmation:

After submission:

  • Confirmation message appears on screen
  • Application Reference Number generated
  • Confirmation email sent to your registered email
  • Application status changes to “Submitted”

Save:

  • Screenshot confirmation page
  • Save confirmation email
  • Record Application Reference Number
  • Download copy of submitted application (if available)

What Happens Next:

  • IRCC begins processing your application
  • You’ll receive Acknowledgement of Receipt (AOR) email within 24-48 hours
  • AOR includes your application number (starts with letter E followed by numbers)
  • Your application enters processing queue

Step 10: After Submission – What to Expect

After submitting your application, the processing phase begins.

Acknowledgement of Receipt (AOR)

Within 24-48 hours:

  • You’ll receive AOR email from IRCC
  • Subject line: “Confirmation of Permanent Residence Application”
  • Contains your Application Number (E-number: E000000000)

AOR Indicates:

  • IRCC has received your application
  • Your application has passed initial completeness check
  • Processing has officially begun
  • Your 6-month processing clock starts from AOR date

Save This Email: Your application number is critical for all future correspondence and tracking.

If You Don’t Receive AOR:

  • Check spam/junk folder
  • Check your IRCC account dashboard
  • Wait 7 days, then contact IRCC if still no AOR

Biometrics Collection

Biometrics Instruction Letter (BIL):

Usually within 2-4 weeks of AOR, you’ll receive:

  • Biometrics Instruction Letter
  • Instructions on where to give biometrics
  • 30-day deadline to complete biometrics

What Are Biometrics:

  • Fingerprints (all 10 fingers)
  • Digital photograph
  • Required for most applicants 14-79 years old

Where to Give Biometrics:

In Canada:

  • Service Canada locations
  • Find nearest location: canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/campaigns/biometrics/where-to-give-biometrics.html

Outside Canada:

  • Visa Application Centres (VACs)
  • Some embassies/consulates
  • Find location in your country on IRCC website

Booking Appointment:

  • Some locations require appointments
  • Some accept walk-ins
  • Book as soon as you receive BIL

What to Bring:

  • Biometrics Instruction Letter
  • Valid passport
  • Payment receipt (if paying on-site, though usually prepaid)

Processing:

  • Takes 10-15 minutes
  • Results sent directly to IRCC
  • Valid for 10 years

Children Under 14:

  • Exempt from biometrics
  • No biometrics fee charged

Medical Examination Updates

eMedical System:

  • Your panel physician uploads results directly to IRCC
  • You don’t need to submit medical results
  • IRCC receives them automatically within 1-2 weeks of exam

Status Updates:

  • “Medical results have been received” appears in your account
  • If additional tests needed, physician will contact you
  • If medical issues detected, IRCC may request more information

Validity:

  • Medical exam valid for 12 months from exam date
  • You must land in Canada before medical expires
  • If processing takes longer, you may need to redo medical

Application Processing Timeline

Standard Processing Time: 6 months from AOR

What Happens During Processing:

Weeks 1-4:

  • Completeness check
  • Background verification begins
  • Biometrics instruction letter issued
  • Medical results received and reviewed

Weeks 5-12:

  • Detailed review of work experience
  • Education credential verification
  • Language test validation
  • Employment reference verification (may contact employers)

Weeks 13-20:

  • Security screening
  • Background checks (criminal, travel history)
  • Police certificate verification
  • Cross-referencing information

Weeks 21-24:

  • Final review by officer
  • Decision made (approved or refused)
  • If approved: Confirmation of Permanent Residence (COPR) issued

Factors Affecting Processing Time:

Faster Processing:

  • Complete, well-organized application
  • All documents clear and legitimate
  • Simple background (limited travel history)
  • Single applicant
  • No red flags in background

Slower Processing:

  • Missing or unclear documents
  • Complex work history
  • Extensive travel history
  • Large family
  • Security screening delays
  • Need for additional verification

Tracking Your Application Status

IRCC Online Account:

Log in regularly to check:

  • Application status
  • Messages from IRCC
  • Document requests
  • Next steps

Status Updates You’ll See:

“Submitted”

  • Application received, awaiting processing

“We are processing your application”

  • Active processing underway

“We need additional documents”

  • IRCC has sent request for more information

“Medical results have been received”

  • Medical exam completed and results uploaded

“Biometrics completed”

  • Biometrics successfully collected

“Background check in progress”

  • Security and background verification underway

“Your application was approved”

  • Decision made, COPR being prepared

Detailed Status Tracker:

Some applications show detailed progress:

  • Eligibility: In progress / Completed
  • Medical: In progress / Completed / Passed
  • Criminality: In progress / Completed / Passed
  • Security: In progress / Not started / Completed
  • Final Decision: In progress / Approved

GCMS Notes (Optional):

To see detailed internal notes on your application:

  • Order GCMS (Global Case Management System) notes
  • Submit Access to Information request
  • Fee: $5 CAD
  • Receive notes 30-40 days after request
  • Shows officer notes, concerns, verification status

How to Order:

  • Visit: atip-aiprp.apps.gc.ca/atip/welcome.do
  • Complete request form
  • Pay $5 fee
  • Wait for notes

When to Use: If your application exceeds standard processing time or if you want detailed insight into progress.

Additional Document Requests (ADR)

If IRCC Needs More Information:

You’ll receive:

  • Message in IRCC account
  • Email notification
  • Specific list of documents needed
  • Deadline to submit (usually 30 days)

Common Additional Requests:

  • Updated police certificates (if originals expired)
  • Additional proof of funds (if balance decreased)
  • More detailed employment reference letters
  • Proof of relationship (for spouse/children)
  • Updated travel history
  • Explanation of specific circumstances
  • Updated forms with corrected information

How to Respond:

  1. Read request carefully
  2. Gather requested documents promptly
  3. Upload through IRCC account
  4. Use “Upload Additional Documents” option
  5. Clearly label each document
  6. Submit before deadline

Never Ignore ADR:

  • Missing the deadline can result in refusal
  • If you need more time, explain why and request extension
  • Respond even if you can’t provide exactly what’s requested (with explanation)

Avoiding Refusal: Common Issues

Top Refusal Reasons:

1. Incomplete or Insufficient Work Experience Documentation

  • Solution: Provide detailed reference letters matching NOC duties

2. Misrepresentation

  • Solution: Be completely honest in all forms and documents

3. Insufficient Proof of Funds

  • Solution: Maintain required funds throughout processing

4. Failed to Respond to ADR

  • Solution: Check IRCC account daily, respond promptly

5. Medical Inadmissibility

  • Solution: Provide all requested medical information, consider medical appeal if necessary

6. Criminal Inadmissibility

  • Solution: Disclose all criminal history upfront, provide rehabilitation evidence if applicable

7. Changed Circumstances (no longer eligible)

  • Solution: Update IRCC immediately if circumstances change

Notification of Refusal:

If refused:

  • You’ll receive detailed refusal letter
  • Reasons for refusal explained
  • Your options (reapply, appeal, reconsideration)
  • All fees except RPRF are non-refundable

After Refusal:

  • Review refusal reasons carefully
  • Address issues that led to refusal
  • Can create new Express Entry profile and reapply
  • May need legal consultation for complex cases

Step 11: Receive Your Confirmation of Permanent Residence (COPR)

When your application is approved, you’ll receive your COPR.

Approval Notification

How You’ll Know:

Email:

  • Subject: “Ready for Visa / Prêt pour Visa”
  • Instructions for next steps
  • Portal link (for applicants in Canada) OR
  • Request to send passport (for applicants outside Canada)

IRCC Account:

  • Status changes to “Approved”
  • Message with instructions
  • COPR letter (for inland applicants)

For Applicants Inside Canada

Portal Process (PR Confirmation):

  1. Portal Invitation Email
    • You’ll receive portal credentials
    • Link to PR Confirmation Portal
    • Create password and login
  2. Confirm Information
    • Verify address in Canada
    • Confirm presence in Canada
    • Upload digital photo (per specifications)
    • Declare any changes in circumstances
  3. Receive COPR
    • COPR generated and sent via email (PDF)
    • Usually within 2-7 days of submitting portal info
    • COPR includes:
      • Your photo
      • Personal details
      • Expiry date (usually based on medical exam)
      • Conditions (if any)
  4. Receive PR Card
    • Mailed to your Canadian address
    • Arrives 4-6 weeks after COPR
    • Valid for 5 years

Important: Applicants inside Canada don’t need to leave and re-enter. You become a PR when COPR is issued.

For Applicants Outside Canada

Passport Request (PPR):

  1. PPR Email Received
    • Instructions to submit passport
    • Visa Application Centre (VAC) location
    • Documents to submit
    • Deadline (usually 30 days)
  2. Submit Passport
    • Valid passport (with at least 6 months validity)
    • Two photos (per specifications)
    • PPR letter
    • Completed forms (if requested)
    • Fees (if applicable at VAC)
  3. Processing at VAC
    • VAC forwards passport to visa office
    • PR visa stamped in passport
    • COPR document issued
    • Processing: 2-4 weeks typically
  4. Receive Passport Back
    • Passport returned with:
      • PR visa (counterfoil)
      • COPR document
    • Check all details carefully

COPR Document Contains:

  • Personal information
  • Photo
  • UCI (Unique Client Identifier) number
  • Application number
  • IMM visa type
  • Category (e.g., FSW)
  • Date of landing (expiry date)
  • Destination address in Canada

Validity Period

Critical: COPR and PR visa have expiry dates:

  • Usually one year from medical exam date OR
  • Passport expiry (whichever comes first)

You must land in Canada before COPR expires.

If expiry is approaching and you can’t travel:

  • Contact IRCC immediately
  • May need to redo medical exam
  • New COPR will be issued

Step 12: Landing in Canada as a Permanent Resident

The final step is your landing—officially becoming a Canadian permanent resident.

Preparing for Your Landing

Documents to Bring:

Essential Documents: □ Valid passport with PR visa
□ COPR document (both copies – you keep one, officer keeps one)
□ Proof of funds (cash, bank statements, traveler’s checks)
□ List of goods accompanying you (Form BSF186)
□ List of goods to follow later (Form BSF186A) – if applicable

Recommended Documents: □ Job offer letter (if you have one)
□ Educational credentials
□ Birth certificates (family members)
□ Marriage certificate
□ Children’s school records
□ Medical prescriptions
□ Driver’s license (international or from home country)

What NOT to Bring: ❌ Prohibited items (weapons, drugs, certain foods)
❌ More than $10,000 CAD without declaring it
❌ Expired documents

Landing Process at Port of Entry

Steps at Arrival:

1. Arrival at Canadian Port of Entry

  • Airport, land border, or seaport
  • Proceed to Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) area
  • Follow signs for “New Immigrants” or “CBSA”

2. Primary Inspection

  • Present passport, COPR, and visa
  • Officer asks basic questions:
    • Purpose of visit
    • How much money you’re bringing
    • Whether you’re bringing prohibited items
  • Directs you to immigration office for PR processing

3. Secondary Processing (Immigration Office)

This is where you officially become a permanent resident.

Officer will:

  • Review your COPR carefully
  • Ask about your address in Canada
  • Verify information on COPR
  • Ask if anything has changed since application approval
  • Ask about:
    • Criminal charges or convictions since application
    • Dependents not included in application
    • Medical conditions
  • Explain your rights and responsibilities as PR
  • Take your signature on COPR
  • Keep one copy of COPR (you keep the other – guard it carefully)
  • Stamp your passport
  • Welcome you to Canada as a permanent resident

Important Questions You Might Be Asked:

  • “Do you have any dependents not listed on this document?”
  • “Have you been convicted of any crime since your application?”
  • “Has anything changed in your circumstances?”
  • “Where will you be living in Canada?”
  • “Do you have funds available as declared in your application?”

Answer Honestly: Any misrepresentation at landing can result in loss of PR status.

4. Customs Declaration

After PR processing:

  • Proceed to baggage claim
  • Complete customs declaration card
  • Declare all goods and cash over $10,000
  • Present goods declaration forms (BSF186/186A)
  • May be selected for customs inspection

Customs Tips:

  • Declare everything accurately
  • Keep receipts for valuable items
  • Personal effects are usually duty-free
  • Be honest about goods to follow

5. Exit and Welcome to Canada

  • Collect your belongings
  • Exit to arrivals area
  • You are now officially a Canadian permanent resident!

Landing Interview: Common Questions

Prepare Answers For:

About Your Plans:

  • Where will you live in Canada?
  • Do you have a job arranged?
  • How will you support yourself initially?
  • Have you researched services in your city?

About Your Documents:

  • Is all information on COPR correct?
  • Has anything changed since your application was approved?
  • Do you have any new family members?

About Your Admissibility:

  • Any criminal charges or convictions since application?
  • Any serious medical conditions developed?
  • Any immigration violations in other countries?

About Your Finances:

  • Are you bringing the declared funds?
  • How much money are you bringing?
  • Do you have access to additional funds?

Red Flags to Avoid:

❌ Contradicting information in your application
❌ Appearing unprepared or uncertain about plans
❌ Not having proof of funds readily available
❌ Bringing undisclosed family members
❌ Failing to disclose changes in circumstances

Soft Landing vs. Final Landing

Soft Landing (Short Initial Visit):

Some new PRs do a “soft landing” – a short visit to complete landing formalities, then return to home country temporarily to wrap up affairs.

Allowed:

  • You can land and leave Canada same day
  • Officer activates your PR status
  • You can return any time before COPR expiry
  • No minimum stay required for initial landing

Considerations:

  • PR card will be mailed to Canadian address
  • Start of residence obligation (must be in Canada 730 days out of every 5 years)
  • May need someone in Canada to receive and forward PR card

Final Landing (Permanent Move):

Most new PRs complete their permanent move at landing:

  • Bring all belongings (or ship separately)
  • Settle into permanent accommodation
  • Begin job search or start employment
  • Enroll children in school
  • Start building Canadian life

After Landing: Immediate Next Steps

Within First Few Days:

1. Apply for Social Insurance Number (SIN)

  • Free service
  • Visit Service Canada office or apply online
  • Required to work in Canada
  • Brings: COPR, passport, proof of address
  • Issued immediately or mailed within weeks

2. Open Canadian Bank Account

  • Visit banks and compare options
  • Bring: passport, COPR, proof of address, SIN (if received)
  • Start building Canadian banking history
  • Consider getting credit card to build credit history

3. Apply for Provincial Health Card

  • Visit provincial health ministry office
  • Required documents vary by province
  • Some provinces have 3-month waiting period
  • Purchase private insurance for waiting period if applicable

4. Update Address for PR Card

  • If you provided temporary address, update it
  • PR card mailed within 4-6 weeks
  • Do NOT leave Canada until you have PR card (if planning to travel)

Within First Few Weeks:

5. Get Provincial Driver’s License

  • Many provinces give credit for foreign driving experience
  • May need to take written and/or road test
  • Brings: passport, COPR, foreign license, proof of driving history

6. Find Permanent Accommodation

  • Short-term: Hotel, Airbnb, stay with friends/family
  • Long-term: Rent or buy home
  • Understand tenant rights in your province

7. Research Settlement Services

  • Free newcomer services available in most cities
  • Help with: job search, language classes, credential recognition, general orientation
  • Find local immigrant serving organizations

8. Enroll Children in School

  • Public schools are free for PRs
  • Visit local school board office
  • Bring: birth certificates, vaccination records, previous school records

9. Start Job Search

  • Update resume to Canadian format
  • Register with job boards
  • Network (LinkedIn, professional associations)
  • Consider credential assessment if in regulated profession
  • Use settlement agency employment services

10. File Taxes

  • Even if you arrive late in the year
  • Establish tax residency
  • Receive Social Insurance Number
  • Essential for benefits and credits

Your PR Card

Receiving Your PR Card:

For Inland Applicants:

  • Mailed to address you provided in PR portal
  • Arrives 4-6 weeks after COPR issued
  • Valid for 5 years

For Applicants Who Landed from Abroad:

  • Must provide Canadian address at landing
  • Mailed to that address
  • Arrives 4-6 weeks after landing
  • Cannot be forwarded internationally

PR Card Specifications:

  • Wallet-sized plastic card
  • Contains: name, photo, PR status, expiry date, UCI number
  • Required to re-enter Canada by commercial vehicle (plane, bus, train, boat)

If You Need to Travel Before Receiving PR Card:

From Inside Canada:

  • Wait for PR card to arrive before traveling internationally
  • Without PR card, you’ll need Permanent Resident Travel Document (PRTD) to return
  • PRTD applications are complex and take time

Lost or Stolen PR Card:

  • Report to local police
  • Apply for replacement online
  • Fee: $50 CAD
  • Processing: 4-6 weeks

Renewing PR Card:

  • Apply 9 months before expiry
  • Must meet residence obligation (730 days in Canada in last 5 years)
  • Fee: $50 CAD
  • Processing: 4-6 weeks typically

Understanding Your Rights and Obligations as a PR

Your Rights:

✅ Live, work, or study anywhere in Canada
✅ Access public healthcare (after provincial waiting period)
✅ Access to free public education for children
✅ Protection under Canadian law and Charter of Rights
✅ Apply for Canadian citizenship (after meeting requirements)
✅ Social benefits (some require residence period)

Your Obligations:

Residence Obligation:

  • Must be physically in Canada for at least 730 days (2 years) in every 5-year period
  • Time counts from day you become PR
  • Can lose PR status if you don’t meet this
  • Exceptions exist for certain situations (working abroad for Canadian employer, accompanying Canadian citizen spouse)

Obey Canadian Laws:

  • Serious criminal offenses can result in loss of PR status
  • Follow federal, provincial, and municipal laws

Pay Taxes:

  • File Canadian tax returns if resident for tax purposes
  • Report worldwide income

Cannot Do (Require Citizenship):

  • Vote in federal, provincial, or municipal elections
  • Run for political office
  • Hold some jobs requiring high security clearance
  • Obtain Canadian passport

Path to Canadian Citizenship

After becoming a PR, many choose to apply for citizenship.

Eligibility Requirements:

  • Physically present in Canada for 3 years (1,095 days) out of last 5 years
  • Filed taxes for 3 years (if required)
  • Pass citizenship test (knowledge of Canada)
  • Demonstrate language ability (English or French)
  • No criminal prohibitions

Time Counting:

  • Days as PR count as full days
  • Days as temporary resident before PR count as half days (maximum 365 days)

Application Process:

  • Apply online
  • Fee: $630 CAD (adults), $100 (minors)
  • Processing: 10-12 months
  • Take citizenship test
  • Attend citizenship ceremony
  • Receive citizenship certificate

Benefits of Citizenship:

  • Canadian passport
  • Right to vote
  • No residence obligation
  • Cannot lose status (except fraud)
  • Certain government jobs open up

When to Apply:

  • Most PRs wait 3-4 years after landing
  • Ensure you meet physical presence requirement
  • Keep records of time in/out of Canada

Frequently Asked Questions About Applying for Express Entry

1. How long does the entire Express Entry process take from start to finish?

From creating your profile to landing in Canada, most successful candidates complete the journey in 12-24 months. This breaks down as: profile creation (1 day), waiting for ITA (varies widely from weeks to years depending on CRS score), PR application processing after ITA (6 months standard), and landing. The biggest variable is waiting time in the pool before receiving an ITA—high scorers (500+) might wait only weeks, while lower scorers could wait over a year or need to improve their scores.

2. Can I create my Express Entry profile while outside Canada?

Yes! You can create your Express Entry profile from anywhere in the world. You don’t need to be in Canada to apply. However, if you’re applying under Canadian Experience Class (CEC), you must have gained your Canadian work experience while authorized to work in Canada. For Federal Skilled Worker and Federal Skilled Trades programs, you can apply entirely from outside Canada.

3. What happens if I make a mistake in my Express Entry profile?

You can update your Express Entry profile at any time before receiving an ITA. Simply log into your account, make corrections, and resubmit. Your CRS score will update automatically. However, after receiving an ITA, you cannot change your Express Entry profile—you must ensure your PR application matches the profile exactly. If you discover errors after ITA, include a letter of explanation with your PR application documenting the mistake and providing correct information.

4. Do I need a job offer to apply for Express Entry?

No, a job offer is not required for most Express Entry candidates. The Federal Skilled Worker Program and Canadian Experience Class don’t require job offers (though having one adds CRS points). Only the Federal Skilled Trades Program requires either a job offer OR a certificate of qualification in your trade. Many successful Express Entry candidates receive PR without any job offer.

5. How much money do I need to show for proof of funds?

The required amount depends on your family size and ranges from $14,690 CAD for a single person to $38,875 for seven family members (2026 amounts). You only need proof of funds if you’re applying under Federal Skilled Worker Program without a valid job offer. Canadian Experience Class applicants currently working in Canada don’t need proof of funds. The funds must be readily available, not borrowed, and you need to show 6 months of banking history.

6. Can I include my spouse in my application even if they’re not coming with me?

You must declare all family members in your application, including your spouse, whether they’re accompanying you or not. However, you can choose to have them as “non-accompanying,” meaning you apply alone and don’t claim points for them. This strategy is sometimes used when a spouse has minimal credentials that would lower the overall CRS score. Important: non-accompanying spouses cannot come with you at landing and must be sponsored later through family class sponsorship.

7. What if my language test results expire before I submit my PR application?

Language test results are valid for 2 years. If your tests will expire during your PR application processing (after receiving an ITA), you should retake the tests before they expire. Your results must be valid both when you create your Express Entry profile AND when you submit your PR application after receiving an ITA. Many applicants retake tests even with valid results to improve their CRS scores.

8. How do I know which NOC code to use for my job?

Visit the official NOC website (noc.esdc.gc.ca) and search for your occupation. Read the full NOC description including main duties and employment requirements—don’t just go by job title. Your actual job duties must match the NOC description. If multiple NOCs seem to fit, choose the one that best matches your primary responsibilities. Your employment reference letter should describe duties that align with your chosen NOC code. When in doubt, consult an immigration professional.

9. What happens if I don’t receive an ITA after 12 months in the pool?

Express Entry profiles expire after 12 months. If you don’t receive an ITA, your profile is automatically removed from the pool. You can immediately create a new profile if you still meet eligibility requirements. Many candidates use this time to improve their CRS scores through better language tests, gaining additional work experience, learning French, or obtaining provincial nominations. There’s no limit to how many times you can create a new profile.

10. Can I withdraw my application after submitting it?

Yes, you can withdraw your PR application at any stage before a final decision is made. Log into your IRCC account and select “Withdraw Application.” However, application fees are non-refundable (except the Right of PR Fee if you withdraw before receiving COPR). Only withdraw if you have a serious reason—changed circumstances, no longer interested, or discovered critical errors that would result in refusal.


Conclusion: Your Express Entry Success Starts Here

Applying for Express Entry Canada in 2026 is a structured, step-by-step process that requires careful preparation, attention to detail, and patience. While the journey from profile creation to landing can take 12-24 months, understanding each stage and following proper procedures dramatically increases your chances of success.

Key Takeaways:

Eligibility is the foundation – Ensure you meet requirements for at least one program before starting

Document preparation is critical – Gather all documents before creating your profile

CRS score determines timing – Higher scores receive ITAs faster; strategic improvements help

The 60-day deadline is absolute – Submit complete applications within 60 days of receiving ITA

Honesty is non-negotiable – Misrepresentation results in refusal and potential bans

Quality over speed – Take time to submit complete, accurate applications

Stay organized – Track deadlines, save all documents, maintain records

Monitor your application – Check IRCC account regularly, respond promptly to requests

Professional help is available – Consider RCIC or lawyer for complex situations


Your Express Entry Action Plan

Ready to start your Express Entry journey? Follow this action plan:

This Week:

  1. ✅ Check your eligibility using IRCC’s eligibility tool
  2. ✅ Calculate your CRS score using the official calculator
  3. ✅ Register for language tests (IELTS, CELPIP, TEF, or TCF)
  4. ✅ Request Educational Credential Assessment if needed
  5. ✅ Create a document preparation checklist

Next 1-3 Months:

  1. ✅ Take language tests and receive results
  2. ✅ Receive ECA report for foreign education
  3. ✅ Gather employment reference letters from all relevant employers
  4. ✅ Organize proof of funds documentation
  5. ✅ Research Provincial Nominee Programs you might qualify for
  6. ✅ Create your Express Entry profile

After Profile Creation:

  1. ✅ Monitor Express Entry draws every 2 weeks
  2. ✅ Work on improving CRS score if needed
  3. ✅ Apply to relevant Provincial Nominee Programs
  4. ✅ Update profile with any improvements
  5. ✅ Prepare documents in advance for when you receive ITA

After Receiving ITA (Within 60 Days):

  1. ✅ Book medical examination immediately (within first week)
  2. ✅ Order police certificates from all required countries
  3. ✅ Complete all application forms accurately
  4. ✅ Scan and upload all supporting documents
  5. ✅ Pay all fees
  6. ✅ Review application thoroughly
  7. ✅ Submit before deadline

During Application Processing (6 months):

  1. ✅ Provide biometrics within 30 days of request
  2. ✅ Check IRCC account daily for messages
  3. ✅ Respond promptly to any additional document requests
  4. ✅ Maintain proof of funds throughout processing
  5. ✅ Keep IRCC updated on any changes in circumstances

After Approval:

  1. ✅ Submit passport for PR visa (if outside Canada)
  2. ✅ Confirm details in PR portal (if in Canada)
  3. ✅ Plan your landing in Canada
  4. ✅ Prepare documents for landing
  5. ✅ Complete landing process at port of entry
  6. ✅ Begin your new life as a Canadian permanent resident

Need Support? Resources and Professional Help

Official IRCC Resources:

  • Main website: canada.ca/ircc
  • Express Entry page: canada.ca/express-entry
  • Help Centre: ircc.canada.ca/english/helpcentre
  • IRCC Twitter: @CitImmCanada
  • IRCC Client Support Centre: 1-888-242-2100 (from Canada)

Professional Immigration Help:

Consider consulting an immigration professional if you:

  • Have complex work or education history
  • Are unsure about NOC classification or eligibility
  • Have previous refusals or admissibility concerns
  • Need help with Provincial Nominee Programs
  • Want personalized strategy for CRS improvement
  • Face tight deadlines after receiving ITA

Find Regulated Professionals:

  • Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultants (RCICs): college-ic.ca
  • Immigration Lawyers: Canadian Bar Association

Settlement Services in Canada:

  • Free newcomer services in most cities
  • Language classes (LINC/CLIC programs)
  • Employment assistance
  • Credential recognition support
  • Find services: cic.gc.ca/english/newcomers/services

Your dream of Canadian permanent residence is achievable. With thorough preparation, strategic planning, and careful attention to detail, you can successfully navigate the Express Entry application process and build your new life in Canada.

Start your Express Entry journey today—Canada is waiting to welcome you. 🇨🇦


This comprehensive guide reflects Express Entry procedures and requirements as of January 2026. Immigration policies, processing times, and fees can change. Always verify current requirements on the official IRCC website (canada.ca/ircc) and consider professional immigration advice for your specific situation.

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