| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Draw Number | 419 |
| Draw Category | Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) |
| Date and Time of Round | June 22, 2026 at 04:06:26 UTC |
| Invitations Issued | 955 |
| Minimum CRS Score | 730 |
| Tie-Breaking Rule | March 09, 2026 at 01:02:28 UTC |
| Issuing Authority | Minister Lena Metlege Diab |
Canada ran Express Entry draw #419 on June 22, 2026. This was a dedicated Provincial Nominee Program draw. IRCC issued 955 invitations to apply for permanent residence. The minimum Comprehensive Ranking System score required was 730.
Only candidates who are eligible for a provincial nomination through the Express Entry system were considered. This is a specific pool, not a general draw open to all Express Entry candidates. If you had a provincial nomination and a CRS score at or above 730, and your profile was active before the tie-breaking date, you may have received an invitation today.
The tie-breaking rule matters when more than one candidate sits at exactly 730 points. In that case, IRCC looks at when you submitted your Express Entry profile. Candidates who submitted before March 09, 2026 at 01:02:28 UTC had priority over those who submitted later on the same score.
What Happened, Explained Simply
Draw #419 was a PNP-only round. That means IRCC only looked at candidates in the Express Entry pool who already hold a valid nomination from a Canadian province or territory. A provincial nomination adds 600 points to your CRS score automatically. That is why the CRS cutoff in PNP draws is always much higher than in general draws, the 600-point boost lifts almost every nominated candidate well above the typical general-round cutoffs.
To understand who qualified: imagine a candidate with a base CRS score of 130 from their age, education, language, and work experience. Once they receive a provincial nomination, their score jumps to 730. That candidate would sit exactly at today's cutoff. Anyone with a base score of 131 or higher, combined with a nomination, would be comfortably above the cutoff.
The draw was conducted under Ministerial Instructions signed by Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Lena Metlege Diab. The instructions were issued under subparagraph 10.3(1)(h.1)(ii) and paragraphs 10.3(1)(i) and (j) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. The invitation period runs from June 22, 2026 to June 23, 2026, meaning all 955 ITAs were issued within that 24-hour window.
If you received an ITA today, you now have 60 days to submit a complete application for permanent residence. The clock starts from the moment the invitation lands in your IRCC account. Missing that deadline means the ITA expires and you return to the pool, so check your account now if you have an active Express Entry profile with a provincial nomination.
You can check current IRCC processing times on the official government website to understand how long your PR application may take once submitted.
What Does a CRS Score of 730 Mean?
A score of 730 sounds extremely high. But in a PNP draw, it is almost entirely explained by the 600-point provincial nomination bonus. Here is how a typical candidate reaches 730 in this type of draw:
| Factor | Points |
|---|---|
| Age (between 20 and 29) | 100 |
| Education (Canadian bachelor's degree or equivalent) | 120 |
| First official language (CLB 9 in all four abilities) | 124 |
| Canadian work experience (1 year) | 40 |
| Skill transferability bonus | 50 |
| Provincial Nomination bonus | 600 |
| Approximate Total | 1,034+ |
As the table shows, a well-qualified candidate with a nomination can score well above 730. The cutoff of 730 tells you that even candidates with a relatively modest base score, around 130 core points before the nomination bonus, received an invitation today. That is actually good news. It means the threshold was not restrictive. Most people holding a valid Express Entry-linked provincial nomination who had an active profile qualified.
The key variable is whether your provincial nomination is linked to your Express Entry profile. Some provinces issue nominations outside the Express Entry system. Those nominations do not add 600 points and do not make you eligible for an Express Entry PNP draw. You need an enhanced nomination specifically tied to your Express Entry profile. Check your IRCC account to confirm your nomination status and your current CRS score.
For more detail on how the CRS score is calculated, visit the IRCC official website, where you can also find the official CRS tool to estimate your own score.
What This Means For You
If your CRS score is 730 or above and you hold an Express Entry-linked provincial nomination, check your IRCC secure account immediately. Invitations are delivered there, not by email. If an ITA is waiting, your 60-day countdown has already started. Do not wait.
If your score is just below 730 and you already have a provincial nomination, the gap is likely small. A single point difference at the cutoff level can determine eligibility in a tie-breaking situation. Review the profile information you submitted and confirm it is accurate and up to date. Even minor improvements, like retaking a language test to push your CLB score from 8 to 9, can shift your base score meaningfully.
If you do not yet have a provincial nomination and your base CRS score is well below 130, this draw does not directly affect you. But it is a reminder that the PNP pathway is one of the most reliable routes to an ITA in the current Express Entry environment. Research which provinces align with your occupation and qualifications. Many provincial programs have their own expression of interest pools that run separately from the federal Express Entry pool.
✅ If You Got an ITA, What To Do Now
Congratulations. Receiving an invitation to apply is a major milestone. Now the work begins. You have 60 days from the date your ITA was issued to submit a complete, accurate permanent residence application through your IRCC secure account. Here is exactly what you need to do:
- Log into your IRCC account right now: Confirm you have received the ITA and note the exact expiry date. You have 60 calendar days, count carefully and set a reminder for the submission deadline.
- Gather your identity documents: You need valid passports for you and any family members included in your application. Passports must be valid for the expected duration of processing.
- Get police certificates: You need police certificates from every country where you have lived for six months or more since the age of 18. Processing times for these vary widely by country, start immediately.
- Complete your medical exam: Book an appointment with an IRCC-designated physician. You cannot substitute a regular doctor. Results are submitted directly to IRCC by the physician, so book this early in your 60-day window.
- Prepare employment and education documents: Gather reference letters from employers, pay stubs, tax documents, and official transcripts. These verify the work experience and education you declared in your profile.
- Confirm your provincial nomination is valid: Do not let your nomination expire before you submit. Contact your province if you have any questions about the validity period.
- Pay the application fees: The right of permanent residence fee is $515 per adult. The processing fee for a principal applicant is $850. Spouse or partner fees apply if applicable. Have your payment method ready before you submit.
- Keep your current job: IRCC may request updated employment information during processing. If your job situation changes significantly, update your profile and notify IRCC. Misrepresentation can result in refusal.
Do not submit an incomplete application hoping to add documents later. IRCC expects a complete package. A missing document can result in a refusal or a procedural fairness letter that delays your file significantly. Take the full 60 days if you need them, but do not go past the deadline by even one day.
📈 If You Didn't Get Invited
Not receiving an invitation today does not mean your path to Canada is closed. It means today was not your draw. PNP draws like this one are category-specific, and the federal Express Entry system runs multiple draws each month across different categories. Here are concrete steps you can take to improve your position.
The most powerful thing you can do right now is pursue a provincial nomination if you do not already have one. Research the Express Entry-aligned streams in provinces that match your occupation. Alberta, Ontario, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Nova Scotia all run active streams. Each province has its own criteria and its own expression of interest system. A nomination adds 600 points instantly, that is the single biggest boost available to any Express Entry candidate.
If you are not yet eligible for a PNP stream, focus on boosting your core CRS score. Retaking your IELTS or CELPIP language test is often the fastest route. Moving from CLB 8 to CLB 9 in even one ability adds several points. Achieving CLB 10 across all four abilities can add more than 30 points compared to CLB 8. That difference can matter in a general draw where cutoffs fluctuate by 10 to 20 points between rounds.
Another option worth exploring is French-language proficiency. IRCC has been running dedicated draws for candidates with strong French skills. If you can reach a Niveaux de compétence linguistique canadiens (NCLC) level 7 or higher in French, you become eligible for those category-based draws, which have historically had lower CRS cutoffs than general rounds.
Finally, consider whether your work experience qualifies you for any category-based draws. IRCC periodically runs draws targeted at specific NOC codes in sectors like healthcare, trades, and STEM. Check the IRCC website regularly for upcoming draw categories and results. Staying informed is half the strategy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Was draw #419 open to all Express Entry candidates?
No. Draw #419 was exclusively for candidates eligible for the Provincial Nominee Program through Express Entry. Only those with an Express Entry-linked provincial nomination were considered.
Why is the CRS cutoff 730 if most candidates score much lower?
Provincial nominations add 600 points to a candidate's CRS score automatically. A base score of just 130 points, combined with the 600-point bonus, puts a candidate at exactly 730. This is why PNP draw cutoffs always appear very high compared to general draws.
What was the tie-breaking date for draw #419?
The tie-breaking date was March 09, 2026 at 01:02:28 UTC. If two candidates both scored exactly 730, the one who submitted their Express Entry profile before that date and time received the invitation.
How long do I have to submit my application after receiving an ITA?
You have 60 days from the date IRCC issues the ITA. In draw #419, invitations were issued on June 22, 2026. Count 60 calendar days from that date to find your submission deadline.
I have a provincial nomination but did not receive an ITA. What should I check?
First, confirm your nomination is linked to your Express Entry profile and is still valid. Second, check your CRS score in your IRCC account. If your score is below 730 and the tie-breaking date has passed, you were not ranked in the top 955. Continue waiting for future PNP draws or contact your province about the status of your nomination.
Sources: Government of Canada (canada.ca), IRCC Help Centre. Last verified: June 22, 2026. This article is general information, not legal advice. Consult IRCC or a qualified legal aid service for guidance on your specific situation.
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