Thursday, May 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

Government looking to give boost to high-wage workers in express entry system

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 May, 2026 09:07 AM
  • Government looking to give boost to high-wage workers in express entry system

Ottawa is looking at overhauling the express entry system to make it easier for people with high-paying job offers to apply for permanent residency.

A public consultation survey and discussion paper outline the proposed changes to the express entry system.

Express entry evaluates economic immigration applicants based on a point system that takes factors like age, education and Canadian work experience into account.

Applicants in the express entry pool with the most points are invited to apply for permanent residency. People who score the highest tend to be younger and highly educated, to possess specialized skills and to be fluent in one or both of Canada's official languages.

The government is looking to add a new category that gives additional points to workers with domestic experience or job offers that pay above the national median wage, such as doctors, engineers and heavy duty equipment operators.

This is meant to complement the International Talent Attraction Strategy first announced in the November budget, the discussion paper says. The government is focusing on bringing in doctors, researchers, senior managers, transportation professionals and skilled military recruits through this strategy.

The Canadian Armed Forces only accepts foreign skilled military recruits from NATO allies, Australia and New Zealand, according to a document tabled in Parliament on Feb. 25, 2026.

The discussion paper says the government is looking at reintroducing express entry points for job offers only in high-wage occupations because the need for specialized skills and experience associated with those jobs is easier to verify, reducing the risk of fraud.

The government eliminated the point system for job offers in March 2025.

The government is also considering combining the three express entry streams into one pathway that requires at least a Canadian high school-level education, the ability to communicate in one official language and one year of skilled work experience.

Currently, express entry applicants apply through the Canadian Experience Class, the Federal Skilled Worker Program or the Federal Skilled Trades Program.

The discussion paper says the 2023 changes to express entry — which allowed the Immigration Department to invite people with specific skills tied to economic needs to apply for permanent residency — makes the three streams redundant.

Zool Suleman, a Vancouver-based immigration lawyer, said these proposed changes likely will push high-wage earners to the front of the permanent residency line.

"So this is a way to take several lanes of traffic and put them into one lane of traffic, but there is an overflow lane. And that overflow lane is for skilled workers, or to be more specific, high-wage earning immigrants," Suleman told The Canadian Press.

"This is their way to skim off the doctors, the scientists, the executives, the computer professionals, so that we don't lose high-earning immigrants, but for the rest of them, they will all merge into one queue and that's an issue. I don't know if that's going to fix anything."

More than 110,000 people are now waiting to have their permanent residency applications processed through existing express entry streams. 

While the government's target is to process these applications within six months, the Immigration Department's processing time portal says people applying now should expect about a seven-month wait.

Immigration Minister Lena Diab's office said she is not available for an interview this week to talk about these proposed reforms due to scheduling.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette

MORE National ARTICLES

Seven candidates still in B.C. Conservative leadership race after two MLAs drop out

Seven candidates still in B.C. Conservative leadership race after two MLAs drop out
The number of candidates running for the leadership of the British Columbia Conservatives has shrunk to seven.

Seven candidates still in B.C. Conservative leadership race after two MLAs drop out

Suspects in killing of vocal critic of Iran make Vancouver court appearance

Suspects in killing of vocal critic of Iran make Vancouver court appearance
Two people accused of killing a vocal critic of Iran in British Columbia have appeared by video in a Vancouver courtroom.

Suspects in killing of vocal critic of Iran make Vancouver court appearance

'One elbow up, one down': The Carney government after its first year

'One elbow up, one down': The Carney government after its first year
If one thing is clear a year into his tenure, it's that Mark Carney is running the federal government very differently from the way Justin Trudeau did it.

'One elbow up, one down': The Carney government after its first year

Carney meets Keir Starmer in London as war in Iran disrupts shipping routes

Carney meets Keir Starmer in London as war in Iran disrupts shipping routes
Prime Minister Mark Carney and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer agreed during a meeting in London on Monday that safe passage must be restored through the Strait of Hormuz.

Carney meets Keir Starmer in London as war in Iran disrupts shipping routes

MLA wants to scrap B.C.'s Human Rights Code. Some constituents want her gone instead

MLA wants to scrap B.C.'s Human Rights Code. Some constituents want her gone instead
A B.C. legislator who has sought to scrap the province's Human Rights Code and ban land acknowledgments, and has blamed the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting on "transgender ideology," is facing a recall campaign from constituents who say she has left them without "coherent" representation.

MLA wants to scrap B.C.'s Human Rights Code. Some constituents want her gone instead

Alberta orders third-party review of Calgary's ongoing water rationing woes

Alberta orders third-party review of Calgary's ongoing water rationing woes
The Alberta government has ordered a sweeping third-party investigation into Calgary’s ongoing water main problems, which have again forced residents to ration their use.

Alberta orders third-party review of Calgary's ongoing water rationing woes