July 10, 2026

Canada’s French-Language Express Entry draw sends 5,000 invitations as CRS hits 420

Dear future neighbour,

Canada is still betting big on French-speaking newcomers, and the numbers from this week prove it. On July 9, 2026, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) sent out 5,000 invitations to apply (ITAs) for permanent residence through a French-language proficiency draw and the score needed to get one just reached its highest point all year.

For anyone who’s been improving their French to boost their Express Entry chances, this draw is proof that the strategy is paying off. But it also comes with a catch: getting in now takes a stronger profile than it did just a few months ago.

Details of July 9 draw

Draw Date: July 9, 2026

Category: French-Language Proficiency 2026-Version 2

CRS Cutoff Score: 420

No. of Invitations Issued: 5,000

Tie-Breaking Rule: May 15, 2026

This wasn’t a standalone event either. It’s the third Express Entry draw in just four days, following a Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) round on July 6 and a Canadian Experience Class (CEC) round on July 7. Together, these three draws pushed out 7,534 invitations in the first nine days of July alone.


Why the cutoff keeps climbing

Here’s the pattern worth paying attention to: French-language cutoffs bottomed out at 393 back in March, then started a steady climb. IRCC also increased the invitation count in this round; up from 4,500 in the previous French draw in May, yet the score requirement still jumped 11 points, from 409 to 420.

That combination (more invitations and a higher cutoff) tells its own story. A wave of stronger-scoring French-speaking candidates has joined the pool since May, while everyone who had scores between 409 and 419 already got invited and left the pool. The floor keeps rising because the competition at the top keeps getting tougher.

This is the seventh French-language draw of the year, and IRCC has now issued 35,500 invitations through this category alone in 2026 which is a clear sign that Francophone immigration remains a national priority, not a one-off initiative.

Summary of Express Entry draws in 2026

This was IRCC’s 37th Express Entry draw of the year, bringing the 2026 ITA total to 96,601 across every category.

Date Draw Type CRS Cut-off Score ITAs Issued
July 9 French-Language proficiency 420 5,000
July 7 Canadian Experience Class 517 2,000
July 6 Provincial Nominee Program 708 534
June 25 Healthcare and social services 475 4,000
June 24 Physicians with Canadian Work Experience 223 271
June 23 Canadian Experience Class 516 4,000
June 22 Provincial Nominee Program 730 955
May 28 French-Language proficiency 409 4,500
May 27 Canadian Experience Class 518 3,000
May 25 Provincial Nominee Program 805 334
May 11 Provincial Nominee Program 798 380
April 29 French-Language proficiency 400 4,000
April 28 Canadian Experience Class 514 2,000
April 27 Provincial Nominee Program 795 473
April 15 French-Language proficiency 419 4,000
April 14 Canadian Experience Class 515 2,000
April 13 Provincial Nominee Program 786 324
April 2 Trades 477 3,000
March 31 Canadian Experience Class 509 2,250
March 30 Provincial Nominee Program 802 356
March 18 French-Language proficiency 393 4,000
March 17 Canadian Experience Class 507 4,000
March 16 Provincial Nominee Program 742 362
March 5 Senior Managers with Canadian Work Experience 429 250
March 4 French-Language proficiency 397 5,500
March 3 Canadian Experience Class 508 4,000
March 2 Provincial Nominee Program 710 264
February 20 Healthcare and social services 467 4,000
February 19 Physicians with Canadian work experience 169 391
February 17 Canadian Experience Class 508 6,000
February 16 Provincial Nominee Program 789 279
February 6 French-Language proficiency 400 8,500
February 3 Provincial Nominee Program 749 423
January 21 Canadian Experience Class 509 6,000
January 20 Provincial Nominee Program 746 681
January 7 Canadian Experience Class 511 8,000
January 5 Provincial Nominee Program 711 574

Looking at the year as a whole, PNP and CEC draws have made up the bulk of Express Entry activity, but French-language draws aren’t far behind and continue to offer some of the most accessible cutoffs on the board, even at a “high” of 420, it’s still well below what most CEC and PNP rounds demand.


What this means if you’re building your profile

If your French isn’t strong yet, this is your sign to start working on it. A recognized test like the TEF Canada or TCF Canada, mapped to the NCLC benchmarks IRCC uses, can unlock category-based draws with far friendlier cutoffs than the general pool ever offers. And if you’re already bilingual, make sure both your French and English results are current in your profile as that bonus can be the difference between watching from the sidelines and getting your invitation.


Ready to Turn This Draw Into Your Invitation?

Numbers and cutoffs only mean something once they’re applied to your actual situation; your CRS score, your language results, your work history, and the pathway that fits you best. Whether you’re looking at Express Entry through French-language proficiency, aiming for a provincial nomination, applying for a work permit or postgraduate work permit, sponsoring a spouse, planning a visit or a super visa application, working toward citizenship, or exploring school admissions in Canada, the right guidance now can save you months of guesswork later.

Book a one-on-one consultation with our team at https://euiacademy.selar.com/60minutes and let’s map out exactly where you stand and what your next move should be.

 

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