🎯 What Happened Today — Explained Simply
- 01🎯 What Happened Today — Explained Simply
- 02📊 What Does a CRS Score of 393 Mean?
- 03🇮🇳 What This Means If You Are From India (or Another Country)
- 04✅ What To Do If You Got An Invitation (ITA)
- 05📈 What To Do If You Did NOT Get Invited
- 06🔍 Understanding French Language Requirements
- 07🌍 Why Canada Wants French Speakers
- 08📋 Document Checklist for ITA Holders
- 09💰 Cost Breakdown for PR Application
- 10❓ Frequently Asked Questions
French-Language Proficiency Draw
Only for candidates with strong French skills — all three Express Entry programs included
Today's draw was special. IRCC held draw #405 at 10:33 AM UTC on March 18, 2026 — and it was exclusively for French speakers. Here's why this matters:
Regular all-program draws often cut off above 480–490. French draws are dramatically more accessible.
If you had exactly 393 points, only profiles submitted before this date received invitations.
Federal Skilled Worker, Canadian Experience Class, and Federal Skilled Trades all qualified — if you met the French requirement.
Speaking, listening, reading, and writing. This is intermediate-high level — conversational and professional, not native speaker.
📊 What Does a CRS Score of 393 Mean?
A score of 393 is very achievable — especially compared to regular draws that require 480+. Here's how a typical applicant could hit 393:
You needed CLB 7+ in French in all four skill areas for this draw. This is not native-speaker level — it's solid conversational French. Many people who studied French in school can reach this with 6–12 months of dedicated practice.
🇮🇳 What This Means If You Are From India (or Another Country)
🚨 This is the most important number in today's draw:
French draw cutoff
Typical all-program cutoff
Points easier with French
If you're from India, Nigeria, Philippines, or another country — French is your shortcut to PR. Here's the honest breakdown:
For someone from India, getting to CRS 480+ usually requires near-perfect IELTS, Canadian education AND Canadian work experience. Very hard for most people.
With strong French (CLB 7+), you could get an ITA with just 393 points. You don't need Canadian experience or education necessarily. French alone unlocks the door.
TEF Canada and TCF Canada are the approved tests. Start with basic French courses, aim for CLB 7. With dedicated practice, many people reach this in 12–18 months.
✅ What To Do If You Got An Invitation (ITA)
You have 60 days to submit your complete PR application. That sounds like a lot — but it goes fast. Start immediately. Here's your step-by-step action plan:
Take a breath. You have 60 days. But that clock starts right now, and document gathering takes longer than you think. The worst thing you can do is wait a week before starting.
IRCC emailed it to the address in your Express Entry profile. The letter tells you exactly what documents you need and how to submit them. Read every word. Don't skim it.
These three items take the longest — start them today:
If you have a job in Canada, keep working. Your work permit is still valid. IRCC may verify your employment status when they process your application. Quitting now can raise questions.
One missing document or a single mistake can delay your application by months. Use the document checklist in your invitation letter. Better yet — have a licensed immigration consultant review it before you submit.
IRCC will not extend this deadline under any circumstances. If you miss it, your ITA is cancelled and you go back to the pool. Start gathering documents the day you receive your invitation.
📈 What To Do If You Did NOT Get Invited
Missing this draw stings — but here's the honest truth: today's draw proves French is your most powerful tool. If you don't speak French, today is the day to start planning. Here's your roadmap:
Today's draw cutoff was 393. Regular draws cut off at 480+. That's an 87-point gap you can close with French alone. Start with Duolingo daily, then move to formal classes. Aim for TEF Canada or TCF Canada certification.
Every point counts. Re-take IELTS if your English score has room to improve. Complete another degree or diploma. Get more Canadian work experience — each year adds significant points.
A PNP nomination adds 600 points to your CRS — almost guaranteeing an ITA in the next draw. Research which province fits your occupation and experience. Many provinces run their own streams with lower requirements than federal Express Entry.
IRCC typically runs 2–3 draws per month. French-language draws specifically have become more frequent. Keep your profile updated, your documents ready, and your score as high as possible. The next draw could be yours.
🔍 Understanding French Language Requirements
To qualify for a French-language Express Entry draw, you need to prove your French skills with an approved test. Here's exactly what you need:
CLB 7 is intermediate-high level French. It's not native-speaker level — it means you can hold professional conversations, understand most everyday topics, and read/write clearly. Many people who studied French in school or lived in a French-speaking region can reach this with dedicated practice.
🌍 Why Canada Wants French Speakers
Canada has a constitutional obligation to support French outside Quebec.
The federal government has committed to increasing francophone immigration to 8.5% of all admissions by 2036. That means more French-language draws — and they're only going to get bigger.
Ontario, New Brunswick, Manitoba, and other provinces have growing francophone communities. They need workers, teachers, healthcare staff — all French speakers.
According to Statistics Canada, francophone immigration outside Quebec has been growing. IRCC is responding by running more French-language draws each year.
For immigrants who can invest 12–18 months learning French, it's one of the most reliable PR pathways available. The competition is lower, the cutoffs are much lower, and draws are frequent.
📋 Document Checklist for ITA Holders
Start collecting these immediately — some take weeks to arrive. Use this as your master checklist:
- Required from every country you lived in for 6+ months since age 18
- Must be original — not photocopies
- Some countries require in-person visits to police stations
- Get certified translations if not in English or French
- Must be done by an IRCC-approved panel physician
- Results sent directly to IRCC — you don't submit them yourself
- Valid for 12 months from exam date
- Find a panel physician at canada.ca/en/immigration
- Valid passport — must not expire during processing
- Current immigration status documents (work permit, study permit, etc.)
- Birth certificate
- Marriage certificate (if applicable)
- Employment reference letters — company letterhead, job duties, salary, dates
- Educational credential assessment (ECA) if educated outside Canada
- Degree/diploma certificates and transcripts
- Language test results (IELTS/CELPIP for English, TEF/TCF for French)
- Proof of funds — bank statements for the last 6 months
- If you have a valid Canadian job offer, you may not need proof of funds
- Statements must show consistent balance, not a sudden large deposit
List every document, who you requested it from, the date requested, expected arrival, and status. This prevents anything from slipping through the cracks when time is short.
💰 Cost Breakdown for PR Application
Applying for permanent residence costs money. Here's exactly what to budget so there are no surprises:
The Right of Permanent Residence Fee ($515 per adult) can be paid at the time of application or later when you receive final approval. Paying upfront speeds up processing slightly.