Canada has issued 6,000 invitations to apply for permanent residence in a major Canadian Experience Class–only Express Entry draw (#384) held on December 10, 2025, with a CRS cut-off of 520.
Overview of Express Entry Draw 384
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) conducted Express Entry Draw #384 on December 10, 2025, exclusively targeting Canadian Experience Class (CEC) candidates. This draw stands out as one of the largest CEC-only rounds in recent years and reflects Canada’s continued reliance on candidates with proven Canadian work experience to meet labour market and immigration targets.
In this round, 6,000 invitations to apply (ITAs) were issued, making it the largest CEC draw of 2025 and one of the biggest since mid‑2024, according to multiple immigration trackers.
Official draw figures
From IRCC’s ministerial instructions and rounds-of-invitations page, the core parameters are:
- Program: Canadian Experience Class (CEC)
- Draw number: 384
- Date and time: December 10, 2025 at 12:30:46 UTC
- Number of invitations issued: 6,000
- CRS score of lowest-ranked candidate invited: 520
- Rank required to be invited: 6,000 or above
- Tie-breaking rule: July 15, 2025 at 17:30:33 UTC
The tie‑breaking rule means that if more than one candidate had a CRS score of 520, only those whose Express Entry profile was submitted before July 15, 2025 at 17:30:33 UTC received an invitation. Anyone who reached 520 later in the year but created or updated their profile after that timestamp would not have been selected in this round.
How competitive is a CRS cut-off of 520?
A CRS cut-off of 520 is still relatively high, but it is lower than several earlier CEC draws in 2025, many of which were in the 525–535 range. Analysts have noted that:
- This is the lowest CEC cut-off since around mid‑2024, suggesting increasing room for more candidates with strong but not “perfect” profiles.
- The large volume of 6,000 ITAs has pulled the cut-off down compared with smaller, targeted rounds in 2025.
In practical terms, candidates who were likely to receive an ITA in this draw include:
- Those with at least 1+ year of recent Canadian skilled work experience (NOC TEER 0–3).
- Strong language scores (CLB 9–10), often paired with a bachelor’s or higher degree.
- Candidates in their 20s or early 30s with several years of combined foreign and Canadian experience.
Candidates with CRS scores just under 520 may now see this draw as a positive signal that future CEC cut-offs could continue to soften, especially if IRCC maintains high invitation volumes.
What this means for current CEC candidates
If you received an ITA in Draw 384:
- You have 60 days from the date of invitation to submit a complete Express Entry application for permanent residence.
- You’ll need to upload police certificates, medicals (or proof of having completed them), work reference letters that match your declared NOC, education documents, and proof of funds if required.
- Any discrepancies between your Express Entry profile and documentation can lead to refusal or misrepresentation findings, so profile updates before e‑APR submission are crucial.
If you did not receive an ITA:
- Review your CRS breakdown and look for quick wins—for example, retaking language tests, getting an Educational Credential Assessment (if not already done), or accurately claiming Canadian work experience and spouse factors.
- Consider Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) options, since a nomination adds 600 CRS points and can push you well above typical CEC cut-offs in future all‑program or PNP-specific draws.
- Keep your profile active and up to date. The tie-break rule shows that earlier profiles at the same score have an advantage when cut-offs land exactly on your CRS.
Why IRCC is running large CEC draws now
Several trends help explain a large, late‑year CEC draw of this size:
- Immigration Levels Plan targets: Canada’s multi‑year immigration levels plan sets ambitious economic immigration targets, and CEC is a key channel for bringing in candidates who are already integrated into the labour market.
- Stability and retention: CEC candidates have Canadian work experience, often Canadian education, and established roots, making them more likely to stay employed, pay taxes, and settle long-term.
- System balancing: After multiple PNP-only and category-based draws earlier in 2025, larger CEC rounds help rebalance invitations across economic categories and clear the pool of strong in‑Canada candidates before year‑end.
Observers also note that a large CEC round can indirectly relieve pressure in the pool by removing thousands of high‑scoring profiles, which may open the door for slightly lower cut-offs in subsequent draws if invitation volumes remain elevated.
How to position yourself for future CEC draws
For candidates still in the pool or planning to enter:
- Maximize language scores: Each additional CLB level in IELTS/CELPIP or TEF/TCF can significantly increase CRS points and eligibility for CEC.
- Document Canadian experience carefully: Job titles, duties, and NOC codes must align; IRCC will rely heavily on reference letters and pay evidence when confirming CEC eligibility.
- Consider stacking Canadian credentials: A one‑ or two‑year Canadian diploma on top of a foreign degree can boost both CRS and employability.
- Monitor draw patterns: Tracking recent cut-offs, volumes and program‑type (CEC, PNP, category-based, all-program) helps you anticipate where your profile stands relative to upcoming rounds.
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Recent CEC draw comparison
| Feature | CEC Draw #381 – Nov 26, 2025 | CEC Draw #384 – Dec 10, 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Program | Canadian Experience Class | Canadian Experience Class |
| Invitations issued | 1,000 | 6,000 |
| CRS cut-off (lowest invited) | 531 | 520 |
| Date & time | Nov 26, 2025 – 11:59:05 UTC | Dec 10, 2025 – 12:30:46 UTC |
| Tie-breaking rule | Oct 8, 2025 – 19:02:26 UTC | July 15, 2025 – 17:30:33 UTC |
| Relative size | Smaller, targeted CEC round | Largest CEC draw of 2025, one of the largest in 16+ months |
What changed between #381 and #384?
- Volume jump: ITAs increased from 1,000 to 6,000, a six‑fold rise.
- CRS eased: The cut-off moved down from 531 to 520, giving more mid‑500 candidates a chance.
- Earlier tie-break date: The July 15, 2025 tie-break in Draw 384 favoured candidates who had been in the pool longer at 520, compared to the later October cut-off in Draw 381.
For your article series, you can frame Draw 384 as a “year-end CEC mega-draw” that lowered the bar compared to the November CEC round and may hint at slightly softer CRS thresholds if IRCC continues high-volume CEC draws into 2026.