Express Entry Comprehensive Ranking Scores in 2022

Asheesh Moosapeta
Published: December 21, 2022

This July marked the return of the Express Entry system for the Federal Skilled Worker Class, as Canada invited skilled immigrants from overseas for the first time since 2020.

Get a Free Express Entry Assessment

There are three programs managed by the Express Entry system:

Candidates within the Express Entry pool are issued invitations to apply (ITAs), based on their Comprehensive Ranking Score (CRS).

Roughly every two weeks, Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) issues ITAs to candidates in the Express Entry pool who meet the CRS cut-off. This year, all Express Entry draws have been general, choosing candidates from the FSWP and the CEC.

CRS in 2022

On July 6th IRCC resumed Express Entry draws, inviting 1,500 candidates from the Express Entry pool who had a CRS score of at least 557.

As draws continued throughout the year, IRCC would increase draw sizes (eventually to 4,750 candidates in the most recent draw), while decreasing CRS cut-offs to below 500.

As Canada continues to grapple with a post-COVID reality, labour shortages remain high throughout the country. Canada has identified immigration as the primary means by which it can address urgent economic needs; likely a driving reason to Express Entry’s return, and the progressively lowering CRS score in 2022.

Can we use past scores to predict the future of CRS?

At first glance, it may seem a relatively simple task to predict future CRS scores based on previous cut-offs. As draws, increase and time elapses, the CRS cut-offs continues to drop. However, the situation is more complex in reality.

The problem with using past CRS scores to predict future ones is the lack of a clear pattern in how CRS cut-offs change. The graph below maps CRS cut-offs to their respective draws. Though we can observe a negative correlation, we cannot accurately map future CRS scores here, as there is not a consistent drop in cut-offs, from draw to draw.

Notice here how the trend line (yellow) deviates from the real-score gradient (white). This is due to irregular drop-offs in CRS (i.e.: between July 6th to the 20th CRS dropped by 15 points, however between November 9th to the 23rd CRS cut-off only dropped 3 points). If these drops were consistent, predicting CRS scores for the future would be much simpler.

Further statistical analysis shows that the standard deviation (the amount by which each score deviates from the mean) among Express Entry CRS cut-offs in 2022 was 21.6 points. As any candidate in the Express Entry pool can attest, this is a huge margin for error in prediction.

Another key reason that this is not a good method to predict CRS, is due to certain policy arrangements that impact the cut-off scores.

What impacts the CRS score cut-off?

The first, and perhaps most important thing to note, is that IRCC has complete control over what CRS cut-offs should be implemented. This means the department is under no obligation to follow patterns or trends; instead granted the freedom to choose CRS cut-offs and invite immigrants based on Canada’s economic needs.

Arguably the most dramatic example of this was in February 2021, when IRCC invited 27,000 new immigrants as part of the CEC, with a CRS cut-off of just 75—the lowest in Express Entry’s history.

The second factor to keep in mind is a rise in CRS score cut-offs due to certain kinds of applications already in process. For example, candidates in the Express Entry pool, with an enhanced provincial nomination through a Provincial Nominee Program (PNP), can earn up to 600 additional CRS points, just from their provincial nomination.

Similarly, candidates in the CEC often have both Canadian education and Canadian work experience; two factors that can dramatically increase CRS scores, and thus skew cut-offs for the entire Express Entry pool.

The future of CRS

While we cannot be exactly sure what the coming CRS cut-offs will be, there is one important policy change coming in 2023 that will make have major impact to the CRS’s impact effect on immigration: Bill C-19.

Passed in June of 2022, this bill allows the immigration minister the ability to create groups (based on policy aims) within the Express Entry pool and issue ITAs to the candidates within that group.

IRCC has already expressed its intent to pursue this measure in 2023, in order to help directly address economic needs by targeting specific in-demand professions occupations.

Under Canada’s Immigration Levels Plan, the country hopes to welcome 203,220 new immigrants under the Express Entry-managed programs, between 2023 and 2025.

Get a Free Express Entry Assessment

© CIC News All Rights Reserved. Visit CanadaVisa.com to discover your Canadian immigration options.

Share this article
Share your voice
Did you find this article helpful?
Thank you for your feedback.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Did you find this article helpful?
Please provide a response
Thank you for your helpful feedback
Please contact us if you would like to share additional feedback, have a question, or would like Canadian immigration assistance.
  • Do you need Canadian immigration assistance? Contact the Contact Cohen Immigration Law firm by completing our form
  • Send us your feedback or your non-legal assistance questions by emailing us at media@canadavisa.com
Related articles
French language proficiency will lead category-based selection Express Entry draws in 2024
Nearly 80% of all Express Entry draws in 2024 will be category-based.
These 13 colleges in Ontario will be admitting fewer international students in 2024
Two friends in a dorm room watching something on their computer screen.
Canada invites 1,400 candidates in Express Entry draw for French proficiency
More candidates have been invited in the latest Express Entry draw.
What if I am not invited to apply in an Express Entry draw?
A man looking seriously at a laptop while thinking about something.
Top Stories
French language proficiency will lead category-based selection Express Entry draws in 2024
Live Webinar: CAEL – Test Structure and Strategies to Help You Ace the Speaking Component
These 13 colleges in Ontario will be admitting fewer international students in 2024
Join our free newsletter. Get Canada's top immigration stories delivered to your inbox.
Subscribe
More in Study
These 13 colleges in Ontario will be admitting fewer international students in 2024
Two friends in a dorm room watching something on their computer screen.
IRCC releases allocation of study permits for all provinces
IRCC has released a statement explaining how it has arrived at the final allocation of study permits each Canadian province has received for 2024.
Canada increases duration of interim work authorization letters for international graduates
A woman sits at her desk in an office building.
Nova Scotia to issue 12,900 study permits to international students in 2024
Link copied to clipboard