How does the current system compare to the proposed one?
The current system has three programs with program-specific work and language requirements, no job-offer points, a 600-point provincial nomination bonus, and bonuses for a sibling in Canada, study in Canada, and French. The proposed system has one Federal High-Skilled Class, a single set of minimum requirements, restored job-offer points only for high-wage occupations, a provincial bonus under review, the weaker bonuses cut, and a new high-wage occupation factor. The table below puts the two side by side.
| Factor | Current System | Proposed System |
|---|
| Programs | Three separate streams | Single high-skilled stream |
| Work experience | Varies by program (1-3 years, continuous) | 1 year cumulative, TEER 0-3, last 3 years |
| Language minimum |
What should you do right now?
Take five steps. Apply now if your current CRS is competitive, because existing bonuses may disappear. Get your profile complete and accurate. Check your current CRS score against recent draw cut-offs. Secure a provincial nomination while the 600-point bonus is intact. Read IRCC's published consultation material so you understand the proposed direction in the government's own words. Each step is detailed below, and a licensed advisor can assess your specific profile.
1. Do Not Wait
If you are eligible under the current system and your CRS score is competitive, apply now. The current rules are more favourable for candidates with Canadian experience, French skills, or sibling ties. These advantages may not exist under the new system.
2. Get Your Profile In Order
Make sure your Express Entry profile is complete, accurate, and up to date. If your language test scores are about to expire, retake them. If your Educational Credential Assessment (ECA) is pending, follow up.
3. Check Your CRS Score
Use our CRS calculator to see where you stand under the current system. If you are close to recent draw cutoffs, the window to get invited under the current rules may close.
4. Consider a Provincial Nomination
Even if the PNP bonus is reduced, provincial nominations will still carry significant weight. If you can secure a nomination now, do it. A 600-point bonus under the current system is more certain than whatever the reduced value might be.
5. Read the Consultation Material
IRCC's public consultation closed May 24, 2026, but its discussion paper and consultation page remain online and set out the proposed direction in IRCC's own words. The final regulations may look different from the initial proposals, so the official material is the most reliable guide to what is actually on the table.
Who can legally advise you on these changes?
In Canada, only three types of professionals can give full paid immigration advice and representation: Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultants (RCICs) licensed by the College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants (CICC), lawyers in good standing with a provincial or territorial law society, and Quebec notaries. Ontario paralegals are limited to representation before the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) and cannot give general paid immigration advice. A major regulatory change is exactly when unauthorized "agents" surface with paid promises, so verify credentials first.
If you pay someone for immigration advice or to represent you, confirm they are an RCIC in the CICC public register, a lawyer with a provincial law society, or a Quebec notary. This protects you and keeps your application clean. No legitimate advisor can promise you points or an invitation under rules that do not yet exist.
What is Go Far Global's take on the overhaul?
The overhaul signals that Canada wants higher-earning immigrants in specific occupations. Engineering, medicine, finance, and technology professionals from Iran, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and the wider Middle East may find the new system more accessible. Those planning to study in Canada first and use the experience-based pathway may need to reconsider their strategy. The shift away from rewarding time in Canada and French language ability is a clear departure from the priorities of the last decade.
For many of our clients from Iran, the UAE, and the Middle East, the high-wage occupation focus could be positive. Professionals in engineering, medicine, finance, and technology may find the new system more accessible. One caution for newcomers weighing a career pivot or self-employment: self-employed income does not count as skilled work experience for the Canadian Experience Class, and it would not count toward the proposed Federal High-Skilled Class either, which requires TEER 0-3 employee experience. If you are planning your immigration to Canada and want to understand how these proposed changes affect your specific situation, book a consultation with our RCIC-licensed team. We can assess your profile under both the current and proposed systems.
Frequently Asked Questions
These are the questions readers ask most. The public consultation ran April 23 to May 24, 2026, and is now closed. Full regulatory implementation is expected over many months, with late 2027 the earliest realistic date. Existing profiles in the pool continue under current rules until the new class takes effect, with transitional measures expected. For case-specific guidance, book a consultation with a Go Far Global RCIC at https://www.gofarglobal.com/appointment.
What is the 2026 Express Entry overhaul?
IRCC has proposed merging the three federal Express Entry programs (Federal Skilled Worker, Canadian Experience Class, Federal Skilled Trades) into a single Federal High-Skilled Class. The overhaul shifts the Comprehensive Ranking System to prioritize earnings, high-wage occupations, and demonstrated economic contribution.
When will the Express Entry overhaul take effect?
The public consultation ran from April 23 to May 24, 2026, and is now closed. Any program changes will be published in the Canada Gazette, followed by a comment period. The earliest realistic implementation is late 2027. Some CRS scoring changes could come sooner via Ministerial Instructions.
Will my current Express Entry profile still work after the overhaul?
Existing profiles in the pool will continue to be assessed under current rules until the new class takes effect. Transitional measures are expected but the exact rules were part of the open consultation and are not yet confirmed.
What CRS factors are changing under the overhaul?
Job offer points (removed in March 2025) would return, but only for high-wage occupations above the median wage of all Canadians. Sibling-in-Canada points, education-in-Canada points, and French bonus points are listed as weaker predictors and may be reduced or eliminated. Language skills and earnings would be weighted more heavily.
Are the three Express Entry programs being abolished?
Under the proposed regulations, yes. The Federal Skilled Worker, Canadian Experience Class, and Federal Skilled Trades programs would all be repealed and replaced by the unified Federal High-Skilled Class. Workers already invited to apply under the existing programs are not affected by the proposal during the rule-making period.
Is the Canadian Experience Class being removed in 2026?
Not yet. The CEC program is proposed for repeal, but no regulation has been published and it remains a live program. Candidates already eligible keep that eligibility, and related draws can still run until the new class is in force.
Sources
- 2026 consultations on potential Express Entry reforms - Government of Canada / IRCC, consultation open April 23 to May 24, 2026 (eligibility, CRS predictor groupings, high-wage occupation factor)
- IRCC Forward Regulatory Plan: modernize the federal high skilled classes - Government of Canada, repeal of the three programs and the single high-skilled class
- Express Entry rounds of invitations (Ministerial instructions) - Government of Canada, official record of every draw, date, program, invitations, and CRS cut-off
- Express Entry: Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) criteria - Government of Canada, current CRS point grid
Published April 11, 2026. Last updated June 9, 2026. This article reflects proposed changes that are not yet law. Current Express Entry draws continue under existing rules.