Category Archives: Canada

Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026: LMIA-Exempt Work Permits for French-Speaking African Professionals Outside Quebec

The Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026Mobilité Francophone in French — is the most generous Canadian work-permit stream for French-speaking African professionals from Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, Mali, Madagascar, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Benin, Togo, Niger, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, Gabon and Djibouti. It is LMIA-exempt, employer-driven and currently the federal government’s most active tool for meeting its 2026 target of 8.5% French-speaking immigration to provinces outside Quebec. This guide walks through how an Abidjan engineer, a Dakar teacher, a Yaoundé nurse or a Tunis project manager turns one French-language job offer into a Canadian work permit, and from there into PR.

What is the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026?

The Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026 is an LMIA-exempt employer-driven work-permit stream available to French-speaking foreign nationals taking up TEER 0/1/2/3 jobs anywhere in Canada outside Quebec. It is one of the few International Mobility Program (IMP) streams that lets a Canadian employer hire a foreign worker without paying the CAD 1,000 LMIA fee or going through the lengthy Service Canada labour market test. The federal rules are documented at canada.ca exemption code C16.

For 2026 the headline expansion is the broadening of eligible NOC codes to TEER 0/1/2/3 across all sectors — up from the older restriction. IRCC has also made TEF Canada and TCF Canada the only acceptable French language tests, with a Niveau 7 NCLC threshold for most occupations. Provincial settlement service organisations across Ottawa, Toronto, Manitoba, Moncton and Vancouver now have dedicated francophone-immigration desks for incoming workers.

Which African applicants benefit most

The Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026 is designed for the francophone African talent pool. An Ivorian software engineer in Abidjan, a Senegalese registered nurse in Dakar, a Cameroonian civil engineer in Douala, a Tunisian project manager in Tunis, a Beninese accountant in Cotonou, a Malagasy economist in Antananarivo, a Moroccan IT analyst in Casablanca and an Algerian dentist in Algiers are all squarely in scope — provided their target Canadian employer is outside Quebec.

The destination skew matters. Ontario receives the largest share of Mobilité Francophone arrivals, followed by Manitoba (which has invested in the Saint-Boniface francophone corridor), New Brunswick (the only officially bilingual province), British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan. Cities such as Ottawa, Sudbury, Sherbrooke-cross-border employers in Ontario, Winnipeg, Moncton and Vancouver have French-speaking workplaces. Settlement support is strongest where francophone communities have history.

Document checklist, TEF Canada minimums and the employer side

The applicant’s side is light. You need a Canadian job offer (TEER 0/1/2/3) outside Quebec, valid French-language proof at NCLC 7 minimum (TEF Canada or TCF Canada) and a CV showing the relevant experience for your NOC. The employer’s side carries more weight: they must register a job offer in the IRCC Employer Portal under exemption code C16, pay the employer compliance fee (CAD 230) and provide the offer-of-employment number to the applicant. Our Canada Express Entry 2026 round-up explains how Mobilité Francophone alumni transition into PR via the federal francophone draw category.

  • NCLC 7 minimum on TEF Canada or TCF Canada (oral comprehension, oral expression, written comprehension, written expression).
  • Job offer in TEER 0/1/2/3 outside Quebec, registered by the employer in IRCC’s Employer Portal under code C16.
  • Employer pays the CAD 230 employer compliance fee.
  • Applicant pays CAD 155 work permit fee plus CAD 100 open-work-permit fee for spouse if applicable.
  • Biometrics at VFS centres in Abidjan, Dakar, Yaoundé, Casablanca, Tunis, Algiers, Antananarivo, Cotonou or wherever IRCC accepts them.

Need help with your Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026 application?

Travel Expore helps francophone African applicants — from Abidjan to Dakar to Yaoundé to Casablanca — identify Canadian employers outside Quebec, prepare TEF Canada at NCLC 7 and walk the employer through the Mobilité Francophone employer portal. Start your free eligibility check at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Why the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026 matters for African applicants

Most francophone African applicants get rejected by Express Entry not because they are unqualified, but because their language scores favour French over English — and Express Entry until 2023 underweighted French. The Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026 is the federal government’s direct response. The 2024 introduction of category-based Express Entry draws specifically for French-speaking candidates, plus the LMIA exemption for francophone hires outside Quebec, mean francophone African applicants now face one of the most accessible Canadian routes available.

The second reason it matters is the bridge to PR. After 12 months of Canadian work experience earned on a Mobilité Francophone work permit, the applicant qualifies for the Canadian Experience Class (CEC) under Express Entry. CEC applicants with strong French scores typically clear the 410-440 CRS cut-off in the francophone-only draws. See the IRCC draw history for current cut-offs. Internal next read: our Canada AIP 2026 guide for the parallel employer-driven Atlantic Canada route.

Frequently asked questions about the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026

Do I need to speak English for the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026?

No. French is sufficient. The programme is designed exactly for French-speaking applicants. NCLC 7 in French is the threshold.

Which African countries qualify under the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026?

All francophone African countries: Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal, Cameroon, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Benin, Togo, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Madagascar, Republic of the Congo, DRC, Rwanda, Burundi, Gabon, Djibouti and any African applicant who can prove NCLC 7 French.

Can I work in Quebec under the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026?

No. The programme is explicitly for French-speaking workers settling outside Quebec to support francophone immigration in the rest of Canada.

How long does the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026 work permit last?

Up to three years, extendable. After 12 months you can apply for PR via Express Entry under the Canadian Experience Class.

Can I bring my family on the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026?

Yes. Spouse can apply for an open work permit, dependent children can attend Canadian schools.

Is there a salary minimum on the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026?

No fixed federal salary minimum, but the wage must match the prevailing wage for your NOC and region as published by Job Bank.

Key takeaways

  • The Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026 is LMIA-exempt under exemption code C16.
  • NCLC 7 French (TEF Canada or TCF Canada) is the binding threshold.
  • TEER 0/1/2/3 occupations outside Quebec are eligible.
  • 12 months of work under the programme unlocks Canadian Experience Class PR pathway.
  • Strongest destinations for francophone Africans: Ontario, Manitoba, New Brunswick, British Columbia — the Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026 is the federal government’s most active francophone hiring lever.

Get expert help with your Canada Francophone Mobility Program 2026 application

Travel Explore helps francophone African applicants — from Abidjan, Dakar, Yaoundé, Casablanca, Tunis, Antananarivo and beyond — line up TEF Canada and target francophone-friendly Canadian employers. Talk to a consultant at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Related reads on Travel Explore

Share this story

  • From Abidjan engineer to Ottawa work permit in 90 days — the LMIA-exempt route francophone Africans miss
  • Why French-speaking Senegalese applicants now have the easiest path to Canada in 2026
  • The Mobilité Francophone playbook: TEF Canada, NCLC 7 and one Ontario job offer

Canada Home Care Worker Pilots 2026 Closed Until 2027: Alternatives African Carers Should File Now

For African nurses, personal support workers and home aides, the Canada Home Care Worker Pilots 2026 were the most direct PR-leading route into Canadian healthcare — until IRCC closed the next intake. The Workers in Canada stream ran from 31 March 2025 to 30 March 2026 and hit caps within hours. The Ministerial Instructions in the Canada Gazette confirm that no fresh applications will be accepted from 31 March 2026 to 30 March 2027. This is a recap and a guide to where African carers should apply now.

What changed in the Canada Home Care Worker Pilots 2026

IRCC launched two pilots in March 2025: the Home Care Worker Immigration Pilot for Child Care (HCWIP-CC) and for Home Support (HCWIP-HSW). Together they replaced the old Caregiver Pilots and built a faster PR path with a CLB 4 language floor and a one-year Canadian work-experience option. Annual intakes were planned through 2030.

Demand crushed the caps in 2025. The Workers in Canada stream that ran from 10am EDT on 31 March 2025 to 30 March 2026 closed within hours of opening. Outside Canada streams have not yet been opened. According to IRCC’s official page and the Canada Gazette Ministerial Instructions, no applications will be accepted from 31 March 2026 to 30 March 2027.

The closure is a year-long pause, not a cancellation. IRCC has signalled that intake will resume on 31 March 2027, with revised caps. African applicants should plan for a Q1 2027 application sprint, not give up on the pathway.

Who the closure hits and who can still benefit

The pause hits African applicants who were lining up to file under the Workers in Canada stream — Ghanaian PSWs already in Toronto on a closed work permit, Nigerian nurses on the National Occupational Classification 31301 / 33102 codes working in Vancouver, Kenyan home support workers in Calgary, Cameroonian carers in Montreal, and Senegalese personal aides in Quebec City.

Applicants already submitted before 31 March 2026 are still being processed. Their files sit in the queue and are not affected by the next-intake pause. African carers outside Canada should pivot — the UK Health and Care Worker route, Ireland General Employment Permit, Germany Pflegefachkraft programme, and Belgium Single Permit are all open.

What African carers should do during the 2026-27 pause

Use the year to bank requirements rather than wait. Keep your IELTS or CELPIP test current at CLB 4 or higher, gather a full National Occupational Classification reference letter from your current employer, complete relevant care certifications (PSW, HHA, ECCE), and keep your medical clearances and police certificates fresh. The official IRCC HCWP page publishes intake notices.

In parallel, file an active permit elsewhere. The UK route in particular accepts NOC-coded carers from Lagos, Accra, Nairobi, Yaoundé and Cape Town with a sponsor licence. Read our European health worker visa roundup for the cleanest active alternatives.

  • Workers in Canada stream: closed since 30 March 2026; next intake 31 March 2027
  • In-process applicants: not affected by the pause — files still being assessed
  • Outside Canada stream: never opened in 2026; status TBD when intake resumes
  • Language: CLB 4 minimum across all four skills via IELTS or CELPIP
  • Eligible NOC codes: 31301 (registered nurses for some streams), 33102 (home support workers), 44100 (home child care providers)
  • Job offer: full-time (30+ hours per week) from an eligible private employer or agency

Need help with your application?

Travel Expore helps African applicants navigate this process end-to-end — from documents to consulate appointments — with consultants serving applicants from Lagos to Nairobi to Johannesburg. Start your free eligibility check at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Why the Canada Home Care Worker Pilots 2026 closure matters for African carers

Canada is one of the few major destinations that grants PR on arrival to home-care workers without a degree, and African carers are some of the largest beneficiaries. The pause does not change that long-term picture — it changes the short-term timing. Applicants who use the year well will be ready to file on day one of the 2027 intake.

The companion routes — Ireland Critical Skills, Germany’s Pflegefachkraft pathway, the UK Health and Care Worker visa, and the European health worker comparison — remain open. African carers can stack experience on those routes and apply to Canada when intake resumes.

Frequently asked questions about Canada Home Care Worker Pilots 2026

When does the next intake open for the Canada Home Care Worker Pilots?

31 March 2027 according to the Ministerial Instructions published in the Canada Gazette and IRCC’s official page. The 2026 intake will not run; applications submitted between 31 March 2026 and 30 March 2027 are not accepted.

Can I still file from Lagos, Accra, Nairobi or Cape Town?

Not under the Home Care Worker Pilots until 31 March 2027. African carers should use the gap year to file under active routes — UK Health and Care Worker, Ireland General Employment Permit, Belgium Single Permit, Germany Pflegefachkraft — and re-file under HCWP when intake reopens.

Are applications already in the queue still being processed?

Yes. Files submitted before the 30 March 2026 cut-off are still being assessed. The pause applies to new submissions only. Track your application status via your IRCC portal.

What language test score do I need?

A minimum Canadian Language Benchmark 4 in all four skills (reading, writing, listening, speaking) on IELTS General Training or CELPIP General. Plan to retake the test if your current score is more than two years old when intake reopens.

Should I still apply to Canadian PSW courses now?

Yes. Canadian PSW certification, even taken online, strengthens any future application and helps with immediate employment if you are already in Canada. Provincial requirements differ — Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia each maintain their own credentialing standards.

Key takeaways

  • The Canada Home Care Worker Pilots 2026 are closed; the Workers in Canada stream ended on 30 March 2026.
  • Next intake: 31 March 2027, per Ministerial Instructions in the Canada Gazette.
  • In-process applications are unaffected; new submissions must wait.
  • African carers should pivot to UK, Ireland, Germany or Belgium during the pause.
  • Use the gap year to bank language tests, NOC reference letters and PSW certifications for the Canada Home Care Worker Pilots 2026 reopening.

Get expert help with your Canada Home Care Worker Pilots 2026 application

Travel Explore helps African applicants — from Lagos, Nairobi, Accra, Cape Town, Yaoundé, Dakar and beyond — navigate this process end-to-end. Talk to a consultant at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Related reads on Travel Explore

Share this story

  • Canada paused the Home Care Worker Pilots until 2027 — here is the Plan B for African carers.
  • The 31 March 2027 reopening: how African nurses should spend the next 11 months.
  • Canada Home Care Worker Pilots 2026 closed in hours — the alternative routes that are still open.

Canada Start-Up Visa 2026 Paused: What African Tech Founders Should Do Until the New Entrepreneur Pilot Launches

If you are an African founder who pinned a Toronto, Vancouver or Montreal landing on the Canada Start-Up Visa 2026 programme, the door is now closed for new commitment certificates. IRCC stopped accepting fresh designated-organisation commitment certificates after 31 December 2025, paused the optional work permit for new applicants on 19 December 2025, and pointed founders toward a still-undefined Entrepreneur Pilot expected later in 2026. This is a recap and an alternatives guide, not an active application playbook.

What changed for the Canada Start-Up Visa in 2026?

IRCC announced the changes via the official update on immigration measures for entrepreneurs. As of 1 January 2026, the Start-up Visa Program is paused. Designated organisations could no longer issue new commitment certificates after 31 December 2025, and the optional work permit for new SUV applicants ended on 19 December 2025.

Existing 2025 commitment certificate holders have a narrow window: applications must reach IRCC by 30 June 2026. Founders already in Canada on a current SUV work permit can still file extensions while their permanent residence applications are processed, but the SUV pipeline is otherwise frozen.

IRCC has signalled a new Entrepreneur Pilot to launch later in 2026 but has not published eligibility, intake caps or processing timelines. Until rules are public, African founders cannot plan around it.

Who the SUV pause hits hardest

The freeze stings African tech founders who built their 2026 plans around incubator partnerships with Canadian designated organisations — Communitech, Innovation Factory, DMZ, Highline Beta and others. A Ghanaian fintech CEO who had a letter-of-support outline ready to convert into a commitment certificate this quarter, a Kenyan health-tech team mid-conversation with a Vancouver venture capital fund, a Nigerian SaaS founder eyeing a Canadian market entry, and a Cameroonian agritech team deep in incubator due diligence all need to pivot.

The pause does not affect those already holding a 2025 commitment certificate — their applications are still in line as long as the 30 June 2026 filing window is met. Read about active alternatives like the Canada Self-Employed Persons Program for cultural and athletic founders.

What founders should do until the new pilot opens

If you do not hold a 2025 commitment certificate, the SUV is not a route for you in 2026. African founders should pivot to active programmes — the UK Innovator Founder Visa, France Pass’Talent Tech Founder pathway, Germany self-employment under §21 AufenthG, Portugal HQA visa, or Estonia’s e-Residency-plus-Startup-Visa stack. Each gives a real path to residence today.

For founders aiming at Canada, three holding patterns work: build commercial traction at home, layer in a Canadian customer pipeline, and prepare an Express Entry profile in case the new Entrepreneur Pilot draws from it. Track the Canada Express Entry CRS trends in case you can stack work experience and language scores in the meantime.

  • New commitment certificates: closed since 31 December 2025
  • 2025 commitment-certificate holders: file by 30 June 2026 or lose the slot
  • Optional SUV work permit: closed for new applicants since 19 December 2025
  • Existing SUV work permit holders: can still extend while PR is processed
  • New Entrepreneur Pilot: announced but with no published rules — do not plan around it yet
  • Designated-organisation cap: still 10 startups per year through 2026

Need help with your application?

Travel Expore helps African applicants navigate this process end-to-end — from documents to consulate appointments — with consultants serving applicants from Lagos to Nairobi to Johannesburg. Start your free eligibility check at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Why the Canada Start-Up Visa 2026 pause matters for African founders

Canada was the most generous PR-on-arrival route for African startup founders for a decade. Its pause forces a serious rethink for any African team picking a country to scale into. Globally, the UK Innovator Founder Visa is now the cleanest English-speaking alternative; in Europe, France, Germany and Portugal each offer self-employment routes with real PR pipelines.

For African founders who hold a valid 2025 SUV commitment certificate, the priority is filing the full PR application before 30 June 2026. Solicitors recommend treating the next 8 weeks as a hard deadline: assemble the business plan, supporting evidence, language tests, settlement funds, and personal documents now — not in June.

Frequently asked questions about Canada Start-Up Visa 2026

Is the Canada Start-Up Visa 2026 still open?

No new applications. IRCC stopped accepting commitment certificates after 31 December 2025 and paused the SUV work permit for new applicants on 19 December 2025. Only applicants holding a valid 2025 commitment certificate can file PR applications, and those must reach IRCC by 30 June 2026.

What replaces the Canada Start-Up Visa for African founders?

A new federal Entrepreneur Pilot was announced for later in 2026, but rules are unpublished. Until then, African founders should consider the UK Innovator Founder Visa, France Pass’Talent, Germany §21 self-employment, Portugal D8 or HQA visas, and Estonia’s Startup Visa. Provincial entrepreneur streams in Ontario, Saskatchewan and BC can also fit some founders.

I have a 2025 commitment certificate — what is my deadline?

30 June 2026. You must file the full permanent residence application (with supporting documents, language tests, and settlement funds) before that date. Build in time for biometrics in Lagos, Accra, Nairobi or your local VFS Global centre.

Will the new Entrepreneur Pilot accept African founders?

IRCC has not published rules. Past pilots have prioritised Canadian designated organisations and language proficiency. Track the official IRCC update page for announcements.

Should I cancel my Canadian incubator conversations?

No — relationships still matter. Incubators may guide selection into the new Entrepreneur Pilot or partner with provincial PNP entrepreneur streams. Keep the warm contacts; just shift execution to Plan B routes.

Key takeaways

  • The Canada Start-Up Visa 2026 is paused; no new commitment certificates issued since 31 December 2025.
  • 2025 commitment-certificate holders must file PR applications by 30 June 2026.
  • New SUV work permits stopped on 19 December 2025; existing holders can still extend.
  • IRCC plans an Entrepreneur Pilot for later in 2026, but rules are not yet public.
  • African founders should pivot to UK Innovator Founder, France Pass’Talent, Germany §21, Portugal D8 or Estonia Startup Visa while the Canada Start-Up Visa 2026 freeze holds.

Get expert help with your Canada Start-Up Visa 2026 application

Travel Explore helps African applicants — from Lagos, Nairobi, Accra, Cape Town, Yaoundé, Dakar and beyond — navigate this process end-to-end. Talk to a consultant at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Related reads on Travel Explore

Share this story

  • Canada Start-Up Visa is paused — what African founders should do until 2027.
  • Toronto plans on hold? 5 alternative founder visas Africans should pivot to in 2026.
  • 30 June 2026: the deadline that decides whether your Canada SUV file even makes it to IRCC.

Canada Express Entry CRS 2026: Q2 Cut-Off Trends and What African Applicants Need to Score

The Canada Express Entry CRS 2026 picture is finally readable after a turbulent 2025. Q2 2026 has settled into a clear pattern: category-based draws for healthcare cleared at 504, Francophone draws hovered around 410, STEM draws ran at 491, Canadian Experience Class draws hit 542, and the rare general all-program draws cleared 547+. African applicants pushing for an ITA need to know which lane to chase — and how to add the 30 to 80 points that move a profile from waiting list to invitation.

What changed in Canada Express Entry CRS 2026?

Per the IRCC Express Entry rounds page, IRCC has fully integrated category-based selection into the Express Entry system. The six categories — healthcare, STEM, trades, transport, agriculture and Francophone — now account for over 60% of all ITAs issued. The general all-program draws are rare and high (CRS 547+), while category-based draws cover specific occupation lists at much lower scores (often 410-510).

The 2025 reform that removed CRS points for arranged employment (job offer points) wiped 50-200 points off many profiles — ending the practice of buying LMIAs to inflate scores. CIC News reported in late 2025 that the change rebalanced the pool toward in-Canada candidates, French speakers and category-eligible occupations.

Who is affected?

The current draw pattern fits African applicants in specific lanes. Healthcare category fits a Nigerian registered nurse with 3+ years of experience, a Ghanaian general physician, a Kenyan medical lab technologist, a Senegalese midwife, a Cameroonian dentist. STEM fits a South African software engineer, an Egyptian data scientist, a Tunisian DevOps engineer. Trades fits an Ivorian welder, a Tanzanian electrician, a Rwandan industrial mechanic. Francophone fits any French-speaking African applicant scoring NCLC 7+ on the TEF or TCF. CEC fits African graduates of Canadian programs already on PGWP. For deeper context, see our Canada Express Entry 2026 breakdown.

Key requirements: pushing your CRS above the line

To clear the Canada Express Entry CRS 2026 bar, African applicants must understand the additive levers that still work after the LMIA points removal. Provincial nominations remain the largest single boost at 600 CRS points. Strong language scores (CLB 9+ on IELTS or NCLC 7+ on TEF) add 50-100 points. Spouse’s language and education adds 20-40. Canadian education credentials add 30-50. French at NCLC 7 in addition to English CLB 7 unlocks 50 bonus points. See the parallel Canada PNP 2026 guide for the nomination route.

  • Healthcare category — Q2 2026 cut-off ~504 CRS, NOC list includes nurses, GPs, lab techs.
  • STEM category — Q2 2026 cut-off ~491 CRS, list rotates around software, data, electrical, civil.
  • Francophone category — Q2 2026 cut-off ~410 CRS, NCLC 7+ on TEF or TCF required.
  • Canadian Experience Class — Q2 2026 cut-off ~542 CRS, in-Canada work experience.

Need help pushing your CRS above the line?

Travel Expore helps African applicants build CRS-maximised Express Entry profiles — from language strategy to provincial nomination — with consultants serving applicants from Lagos to Nairobi to Cape Town. Start your free eligibility check at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Why it matters for African applicants

The shift to category-based selection is the single most important development for African applicants in years. Before 2024, African profiles routinely got stuck in the 480-520 zone because general draws cleared at 540+. Now, an African nurse with CLB 9 English and 3 years of experience can reasonably expect an ITA at 504 CRS in a healthcare draw. A Francophone Cameroonian can land an ITA at 410 CRS via the Francophone category. The route to PR is no longer one-size-fits-all — it is occupation- and language-specific. Per CIC News, African applicants in the healthcare and Francophone lanes now have approval rates that beat 2023 averages by 18-22%.

The strategic answer for most African applicants: identify which category fits, push language scores to CLB 9+ and NCLC 7+, and pursue provincial nominations as a parallel track if your CRS sits below 480.

Frequently asked questions about Canada Express Entry CRS 2026

What is the current Canada Express Entry CRS 2026 cut-off?

Cut-offs vary by category. Q2 2026: healthcare ~504, STEM ~491, Francophone ~410, CEC ~542, trades ~436, transport ~430, agriculture ~432. General draws are rare and clear at 547+.

How do African applicants increase their CRS score?

Push English to CLB 9+ (IELTS 7.0 in each module), add French at NCLC 7+ for 50 bonus points, secure a provincial nomination for 600 points, complete a Canadian credential, and update your work experience as you accrue years.

Can African applicants apply without a job offer?

Yes. After the 2025 reform that removed CRS points for arranged employment, a job offer no longer adds CRS. The category-based draws now favour occupation-eligible profiles regardless of offer.

Do African applicants need a Canadian degree to clear CRS?

No. African degrees can be ECA-validated and earn the same education points. A Canadian credential adds bonus points but is not required.

What is the Francophone Express Entry category?

A category-based draw lane for candidates with NCLC 7+ on TEF or TCF French testing. Scores often clear at 410 CRS, dramatically lower than general draws.

How long does Express Entry take after an ITA?

IRCC’s service standard is 6 months from a complete e-APR submission. Most files decide in 4-6 months in 2026.

Key takeaways

  • The Canada Express Entry CRS 2026 picture is dominated by category-based draws, not general draws.
  • Q2 2026 cut-offs: healthcare 504, STEM 491, Francophone 410, CEC 542.
  • The 2025 LMIA points removal rebalanced the pool toward in-Canada and category-eligible candidates.
  • French at NCLC 7+ unlocks the lowest cut-off lane — often 100+ points below general draws.
  • Provincial nominations still add 600 CRS — the only route that guarantees an ITA.

Get expert help with Canada Express Entry CRS 2026

Travel Explore helps African applicants — from Lagos, Nairobi, Accra, Cape Town, Yaoundé, Dakar and beyond — navigate this process end-to-end. Talk to a consultant at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Related reads on Travel Explore

Share this story

  • African applicants — here is the Express Entry CRS map for Q2 2026
  • Why Francophone Africans now have the lowest CRS bar in Canada
  • The 2025 LMIA cut: what it means for African Express Entry profiles