
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) published new guidance on 5 February outlining how Express Entry candidates can maximise points for foreign work experience—an issue that has led to frequent application refusals. (cicnews.com)
The article explains that up to 50 Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) points are available for foreign skilled work when combined with Canadian experience, education or official-language proficiency. Crucially, IRCC emphasises that applicants must prove they performed the majority of the main duties in their declared National Occupation Classification (NOC) TEER category and provide contemporaneous pay or tax records.
At this documentation-heavy stage, many applicants and HR teams look for expert guidance. VisaHQ’s Canadian portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) supplies step-by-step checklists, sample employment letters, and live specialists who can pre-screen foreign work-experience evidence before it is submitted to IRCC, helping candidates avoid costly procedural fairness letters and maximise their CRS potential.
For global employers, the clarification is significant: assignees often rely on overseas roles to reach competitive CRS scores. Mobility teams should therefore audit job-description letters and pay slips early in the relocation process. Mistakes—such as listing managerial duties while submitting a technical NOC code—can trigger procedural fairness letters or outright refusals, delaying permanent-residence timelines by months.
The guidance comes as Express Entry pool sizes remain high—over 239,000 active profiles—and CRS cut-offs for the Canadian Experience Class hover around 509. Any additional points from foreign work can therefore be decisive, especially for mid-career professionals whose age points are declining.
IRCC’s reminder also foreshadows stricter document reviews aligned with the department’s push for program integrity. Corporations planning mass permanent-residence conversions should build extra lead time into document gathering and may consider engaging third-party credential evaluators to verify overseas employment evidence.
The article explains that up to 50 Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) points are available for foreign skilled work when combined with Canadian experience, education or official-language proficiency. Crucially, IRCC emphasises that applicants must prove they performed the majority of the main duties in their declared National Occupation Classification (NOC) TEER category and provide contemporaneous pay or tax records.
At this documentation-heavy stage, many applicants and HR teams look for expert guidance. VisaHQ’s Canadian portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) supplies step-by-step checklists, sample employment letters, and live specialists who can pre-screen foreign work-experience evidence before it is submitted to IRCC, helping candidates avoid costly procedural fairness letters and maximise their CRS potential.
For global employers, the clarification is significant: assignees often rely on overseas roles to reach competitive CRS scores. Mobility teams should therefore audit job-description letters and pay slips early in the relocation process. Mistakes—such as listing managerial duties while submitting a technical NOC code—can trigger procedural fairness letters or outright refusals, delaying permanent-residence timelines by months.
The guidance comes as Express Entry pool sizes remain high—over 239,000 active profiles—and CRS cut-offs for the Canadian Experience Class hover around 509. Any additional points from foreign work can therefore be decisive, especially for mid-career professionals whose age points are declining.
IRCC’s reminder also foreshadows stricter document reviews aligned with the department’s push for program integrity. Corporations planning mass permanent-residence conversions should build extra lead time into document gathering and may consider engaging third-party credential evaluators to verify overseas employment evidence.





