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Oct 30, 2025

IRCC issues 1,000 Canadian Experience Class invitations with high CRS cut-off

IRCC issues 1,000 Canadian Experience Class invitations with high CRS cut-off
Just 24 hours after its francophone mega-draw, IRCC released the details of another invitation round—this time for the Canadian Experience Class (CEC). Published on October 30 2025, the draw invited 1,000 skilled workers already living and working in Canada to apply for permanent residence. The CRS cut-off was 533, only two points below the year’s peak for CEC-specific rounds, signalling continued competition within the domestic talent pool despite broader efforts to moderate overall immigration levels.

CEC draws are critically important for employers because they reward candidates who have accumulated at least one year of full-time skilled work experience in Canada. Those selected can typically switch to a Bridging Open Work Permit within six months, avoiding the administrative burden and cost of new employer-specific permits. For HR departments, the draw provides a retention mechanism for valued foreign workers whose temporary status may be expiring in 2026 under the new five-year cumulative cap on LMIA-based permits.

The relatively high CRS threshold reflects recent reductions in job-offer bonus points and the removal of automatic CRS boosts for arranged employment, part of IRCC’s July 2025 integrity reforms. International graduates, who once dominated CEC invitations, may find themselves squeezed unless they accumulate additional skilled work or French-language points.

Employers are advised to support staff in re-taking language tests, claiming spousal factors and maximizing provincial nominee points where available. Candidates whose CRS scores hover below 530 should monitor upcoming provincial nominee category rounds—particularly in Ontario and Alberta—which could provide alternative pathways to permanent residence.

IRCC’s back-to-back draws confirm that the department is willing to hold multiple program-specific rounds in the same week, adding unpredictability to an already dynamic selection system. Immigration practitioners recommend maintaining complete, up-to-date Express Entry profiles and securing language tests or Educational Credential Assessments (ECAs) well before they expire.
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