From Work Permit to PR: How Express Entry Category-Based Draws Are Changing Everything in 2026
If you are a temporary resident in Canada — whether on a PGWP, open work permit, or closed work permit — 2026 is the year the immigration game has been fundamentally rewritten.
IRCC has shifted from recruiting candidates overseas to prioritizing those already in Canada. The mechanism driving this shift is Express Entry category-based draws, and the results are staggering: Canadian Experience Class (CEC) draws alone have issued over 37,000 invitations to apply for permanent residence in the first five months of 2026.
This is not a theoretical opportunity. It is happening right now, and temporary residents who understand how the system works are converting to PR at unprecedented rates.
The 2026 “In-Canada Transition” Strategy
Canada’s immigration policy has undergone a fundamental pivot. Here is the strategic context:
| Metric | 2026 Target/Status |
|---|---|
| Permanent resident admissions | 380,000 (unchanged from 2025) |
| New temporary residents (workers + students) | 385,000 |
| Temporary resident population goal | Below 5% by late 2027 |
| Primary transition mechanism | Express Entry category-based draws + CEC |
The bottom line: The government is reducing new temporary entries while prioritizing those already in Canada for permanent residence. If you hold a PGWP or valid work permit, 2026 is your window.
Express Entry Draw Performance 2026: CEC Dominates
IRCC data from January through May 2026 shows clear prioritization of in-Canada candidates across all category-based draw types.
| Draw Type | Number of Draws | ITAs Issued | CRS Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canadian Experience Class (CEC) | 9+ | 37,250 | 507-518 |
| French-Language Proficiency | 6+ | 30,500 | 393-419 |
| Provincial Nominee Program | 11+ | 4,450 | 710-805 |
| Healthcare & Social Services | 1 | 4,000 | 467 |
| Trades | 1 | 3,000 | 477 |
| Physicians (Canadian experience) | 1 | 391 | 169 |
| Senior Managers (Canadian experience) | 1 | 250 | 429 |
Key observation: CEC and French-language draws account for over 67,000 ITAs — approximately 85% of all category-based invitations. This is where temporary residents have the highest chance.
CEC Draw Frequency Throughout 2026
| Date | ITAs Issued | CRS Cut-Off |
|---|---|---|
| January 7 | 8,000 | 511 |
| January 21 | 6,000 | 509 |
| February 17 | 6,000 | 508 |
| March 17 | 4,000 | 507 |
| March 31 | 2,250 | 509 |
| April 14 | 2,000 | 515 |
| April 28 | 2,000 | 514 |
| May 27 | 3,000 | 518 |
CEC draws have occurred consistently every 1-2 weeks throughout 2026. The CRS cut-off has remained remarkably stable between 507-518, making it highly predictable for candidates in that range.
CEC: The Primary Pathway for Temporary Residents
The Canadian Experience Class is the Express Entry program specifically designed for temporary foreign workers and international graduates with Canadian skilled work experience. It recognizes that individuals who have already worked in Canada — adapting to workplace culture and demonstrating economic contribution — are ideal PR candidates.
Key Features of CEC
| Feature | Benefit |
|---|---|
| No job offer required | Apply based solely on past Canadian experience |
| No foreign work experience needed | Though it adds CRS points |
| Fast processing | 6 months from ITA to PR decision |
| Lower CRS thresholds | CEC-specific draws typically 507-518 vs. general draws 540+ |
| No minimum education requirement | Though education boosts CRS |
CEC Eligibility Requirements
To qualify for CEC, you must meet three core requirements:
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Canadian work experience | Minimum 1 year (1,560 hours) in TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 occupation within last 3 years |
| Work authorization | Must have had valid work permit during the work experience |
| Language proficiency | CLB 7 for TEER 0/1, CLB 5 for TEER 2/3 |
| Intent to live outside Quebec | CEC is for provinces other than Quebec |
What Counts as “Canadian Work Experience”?
| Scenario | Counts for CEC? |
|---|---|
| PGWP holder working full-time | ✅ Yes |
| Open work permit (spousal) | ✅ Yes |
| Closed work permit (LMIA) | ✅ Yes |
| Work permit expiring during employment | ⚠️ Must have been valid during work period |
| Working without valid permit | ❌ No — illegal work does not count |
| Self-employment in Canada | ❌ No — must be employed by another entity |
| Internship/co-op (paid) | ⚠️ Only if work permit was valid |
The French-Language Shortcut
If you speak French, 2026 is arguably the best year in recent history to apply for PR through Express Entry. French-language draws have issued over 30,500 ITAs with CRS cut-offs between 393-419 — dramatically lower than CEC draws.
This means a candidate with a CRS score of 400 in the general draw would be miles behind the cutoff. But in a French-language draw, that same score could secure an ITA.
| Draw Type | Average CRS Cut-Off | ITAs Issued (Jan-May 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| General Express Entry | 540+ | Varies |
| CEC-specific | 507-518 | 37,250 |
| French-language | 393-419 | 30,500 |
| Healthcare | 467 | 4,000 |
| Trades | 477 | 3,000 |
Strategic insight: Even intermediate French (CLB 7 in all abilities) can add significant CRS points through the language bonus alone, potentially moving you from “not competitive” to “invited in next draw.”
Targeted Occupation Draws: The Hidden Opportunities
Beyond CEC and French-language draws, IRCC has introduced several occupation-specific category-based draws that temporary residents should monitor closely:
| Target Occupation | ITAs | CRS Range | Opportunity Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Healthcare & Social Services | 4,000 | 467 | High |
| Skilled Trades | 3,000 | 477 | High |
| Physicians (Canadian experience) | 391 | 169 | Very High (if eligible) |
| Senior Managers | 250 | 429 | High (if eligible) |
These draws have lower CRS cut-offs because IRCC is targeting specific labour market needs. If your occupation matches, these draws represent some of the easiest pathways to PR in 2026.
Your Step-by-Step Transition Plan
Step 1: Create Your Express Entry Profile
If you do not already have an Express Entry profile, create one immediately. The profile must include:
- Educational Credential Assessment (ECA) from designated organization
- Language test results (IELTS General or CELPIP for English; TEF/TCF for French)
- Canadian work experience details (employer, dates, TEER code, hours)
- Proof of funds (unless you have valid Canadian work experience)
Step 2: Calculate Your CRS Score
Your Comprehensive Ranking System score determines your position in the pool. Key CRS factors for temporary residents:
| Factor | Max Points | How to Maximize |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 110 | Best scores for 20-29 years old |
| Education | 150 | Master’s degree scores highest |
| Canadian education | 30 | Get ECA for Canadian credential |
| Canadian work experience | 80 | More hours = more points (max at 4+ years) |
| French language | Up to 136 extra | CLB 7+ in all abilities |
| Provincial nomination | 600 | PNP nomination adds 600 points (guaranteed ITA) |
Step 3: Target the Right Draws
Monitor IRCC’s draw results and identify which category-based draws match your profile. If your CRS is in the 500-520 range, focus on CEC draws. If you have French at CLB 7, target French-language draws. If your occupation is healthcare or trades, watch for those specific draws.
Step 4: Prepare Documents Before Your ITA
Once you receive an ITA, you have 60 days to submit your complete application. Start gathering documents now:
- Passport copies for all applicants
- Language test results (valid for 2 years)
- ECA report
- Proof of work experience (T4 slips, employment letters)
- Police certificates from every country lived in for 6+ months since age 18
- Medical exam results (can be done upfront)
Common Mistakes That Kill PR Chances
| Mistake | Consequence | How to Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Applying after work permit expires | No Canadian experience counts | Apply before expiry or during maintained status |
| Wrong TEER code on application | Ineligible for CEC | Verify TEER code on IRCC website before applying |
| Expired language test results | Profile becomes inactive | Retake tests at least 6 months before expected ITA timeline |
| Not updating profile after new job | Missing CRS points | Update profile within days of any change in work or education |
| Late document submission | ITA expires, must re-enter pool | Gather all documents before creating profile |
| Ignoring French language | Missing 30+ CRS point opportunity | Even intermediate French can dramatically change your odds |
Quebec-Specific Considerations
If you are working in Quebec, the CEC pathway does not apply because Quebec selects its own economic immigrants through the Regular Skilled Worker Program (RSWP). However, Quebec workers can still benefit from:
- Quebec Experience Program (PEQ): Direct PR pathway for workers with 12+ months of Quebec work experience
- French-language Express Entry: Quebec workers with strong French can still target French-language draws
- PNP through other provinces: Some provincial nominees work in Quebec but apply through their home province’s PNP
Before vs. After: The 2026 PR Landscape
| Aspect | Before 2026 | 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Primary PR pathway | General Express Entry (CRS 540+) | Category-based draws (CEC/French/Trades) |
| CEC CRS cut-off | 540+ | 507-518 |
| French-language CRS | 430+ | 393-419 |
| Draw frequency | Irregular | CEC: every 1-2 weeks |
| Focus | Overseas recruitment | In-Canada transition |
| Processing time | 8-12 months | 6 months (target) |
Three Things Every Temporary Resident Must Do Now
| # | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Create or update your Express Entry profile — if you have Canadian work experience, you are already in the pool that IRCC is prioritizing |
| 2 | Assess your French language ability — even intermediate French can add 30+ CRS points and open access to lower-cut-off draws |
| 3 | Verify your TEER code and work experience — ensure your job is correctly classified as TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 before applying |
FAQ: Common Questions
Q: How long does it take from ITA to PR decision?
A: IRCC’s target is 6 months from ITA to final decision. Most CEC applications are processed within this timeframe.
Q: Can I work while waiting for my PR decision?
A: Yes — if you apply for an extension before your work permit expires, you can continue working under maintained status with the same conditions as your current permit.
Q: What if my CRS score is below 500?
A: Consider French-language draws (cut-offs around 393-419), PNP nominations (add 600 points), or improving your score through additional Canadian work experience or language tests.
Q: Does my PGWP need to be valid when I apply?
A: You must have had a valid work permit during the work experience period. You can apply for PR while on maintained status if your PGWP has expired.
Q: Can I apply for PR and stay in Canada if my PGWP expires?
A: Yes — submit your PR application before your PGWP expires. Once submitted, you maintain status and can continue working under the same conditions until a decision is made.
