Instant CRS Score calculator — Free, Instant, No Fluff

Express Entry

Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS)

Find out exactly where you stand in Canada’s Express Entry pool. No guesswork, no signup, no waiting. Just your real CRS score in about 2 minutes.\

What’s a CRS Score — and Why Should You Care?

Your CRS score is basically Canada’s way of ranking you against everyone else in the Express Entry pool. Think of it like an immigration GPA. The higher it is, the sooner you get invited to apply for permanent residence.

IRCC runs draws regularly — sometimes every two weeks — and invites the top candidates. Miss the cutoff by 5 points? You wait. Beat it? You’re one step closer to Canadian PR.

Here’s what most people don’t realize: your score isn’t fixed. Age, language results, a job offer, a provincial nomination — all of it can move the needle significantly. That’s why calculating your CRS score before you do anything else is so important. You need to know your number. And honestly, more importantly — you need to know what’s dragging it down

Want to see official CRS cutoffs and draw results? Check the latest Express Entry rounds published by IRCC here.

Express Entry – CRS Score Calculator
Canada Immigration Tool

Express Entry
CRS Score Calculator

Calculate your Comprehensive Ranking System score for Canada’s Express Entry pool based on official government criteria.

1

Marital / Partner Status

What is your marital status?
Spouse / Common-law Partner Information
Is your spouse or common-law partner a Canadian citizen or permanent resident?
Spouse / Partner Education Level
Has your spouse/partner completed official language testing?
Spouse / Partner CLB Level (English or French — 1st Official Language)
Spouse / Partner Canadian Work Experience
2

Age

How old are you?
3

Education

What is the highest level of education for which you have received a credential (degree, diploma, certificate, etc.)?
Did you earn a Canadian degree, diploma, or certificate? This may qualify you for the Canadian education factor.
4

Language Proficiency

Did you take an approved official language test?
First Official Language (English or French)
Which test did you take for your first official language?
Reading — CLB/NCLC Level
Writing — CLB/NCLC Level
Listening — CLB/NCLC Level
Speaking — CLB/NCLC Level
Second Official Language (Optional)
Did you take a test for a second official language?
Second Language — Minimum CLB Level (all 4 skills)
5

Work Experience

How many years of skilled work experience do you have in Canada? NOC TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 — within the last 10 years
How many years of foreign skilled work experience do you have? NOC TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 — within the last 10 years
6

Certificate of Qualification

Do you have a certificate of qualification from a Canadian province or territory in a trade occupation? This is issued by a province/territory to skilled trade workers.
7

Job Offer

Do you have a valid job offer supported by a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) or exempt from LMIA?
8

Provincial Nomination

Do you have a provincial or territorial nomination?
9

Siblings in Canada

Do you or your spouse / common-law partner have a sibling living in Canada who is a citizen or permanent resident of Canada?
10

French Language Skills

Do you have strong French language proficiency (NCLC 7 or higher in all 4 skills)?
Do you have strong English skills as well (CLB 5 or higher in all 4 skills)?
Your Estimated CRS Score
out of 1,200 points

Score Breakdown

Disclaimer: This calculator provides an estimate only. Actual CRS scores are calculated by IRCC and may differ. This tool is not a substitute for professional immigration advice. Please consult a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) or immigration lawyer for guidance specific to your situation.

The Most Complete CRS Calculator You’ll Find — Here’s What We Actually Cover

Most free tools online cut corners. They skip spouse factors, ignore skill transferability, or don’t account for French language bonuses. Ours doesn’t.

Our express entry points calculator walks you through every factor IRCC actually uses — nothing skipped, nothing simplified to the point of being wrong.

Core Human Capital

  • Age — yes, it starts penalizing you after 29. Feels unfair, but that’s the system
  • Education level and whether it’s Canadian
  • Language scores across all 4 skills (Reading, Writing, Listening, Speaking)
  • Canadian work experience

Spouse / Partner Factors If your partner is coming with you and they’re not already a Canadian citizen or PR, their education, language scores, and Canadian work experience all factor into your total. A lot of calculators quietly ignore this. Big mistake.

Skill Transferability This is where it gets interesting. Combinations matter — strong language scores plus foreign work experience? Extra points. Canadian education plus skilled work history? More points. Our CRS points calculator runs all 5 transferability combinations automatically.

Additional Points

  • Provincial Nomination (PNP) — a massive 600 points. Life-changing, really
  • Valid job offer — 50 to 200 points depending on NOC level
  • Sibling in Canada who’s a citizen or PR — 15 points (small, but free)
  • French language proficiency — up to 50 points
  • Canadian post-secondary education — up to 30 points

First-Timer or Already in the Pool — This Tool Works for Both

Just starting out? You’ve heard about Express Entry but have no idea what your score might be. Drop your details into our PR points calculator and you’ll have a baseline in minutes. From there, you’ll know exactly which factors to focus on before submitting your profile.

Already in the pool? Scores shift. A new language test, a birthday, a job change — all of it affects your ranking. Use our instant CRS calculator to check where you stand relative to recent draw cutoffs. Checking regularly is genuinely worth the 2 minutes.

Applying through CEC? The Canadian Experience Class has its own weighting. Our CEC calculator is built to reflect how IRCC scores candidates who already have Canadian work experience — which is different from how it works for overseas applicants.

Got a provincial nomination? That’s 600 automatic points. Run it through our calculator and watch the number jump. It’s honestly wild how much it moves the dial.

What CRS Score Do You Need for Canadian PR?

Honestly — it depends on the draw type.

For all-program draws, recent cutoffs have been roughly in the 480–550 range. CEC-specific draws tend to be lower, sometimes 430–480. French-language draws? Sometimes as low as the mid-300s. So context matters a lot.

Here’s a rough breakdown:

CRS ScoreWhat It Realistically Means
600+PNP or a truly exceptional profile
500–599Very competitive — likely to get an ITA in most draws
450–499Competitive — especially strong for category-based draws
400–449Below average — worth identifying what to improve
Under 400Consider provincial pathways or retaking language tests

Cutoffs change every draw — always cross-check with IRCC’s latest results.

One thing I’d add here: a lot of people obsess over the total number without understanding where it’s coming from. Our CRS score calculator breaks it down by category — which matters, because if 200 of your points come from a job offer that expires next year, your strategy looks completely different than someone whose score is built on permanent factors like education and language.

6 Ways to Improve Your CRS Score (That Actually Work)

1. Retake your language test. Genuinely the highest-ROI move for most people. Going from CLB 8 to CLB 9 across all four skills can add 20–30+ points — sometimes more. Use our IELTS CRS score calculator to see exactly how your scores translate before you book a retest.

2. Get a provincial nomination. 600 points. That’s basically a guaranteed ITA. Research which provinces align with your occupation and experience. It takes time, but it’s one of the most reliable paths out there.

3. Find a job offer with LMIA support. A valid job offer adds 50–200 points depending on your NOC level. Yes, competitive to land. But worth actively pursuing alongside your profile.

4. Build more Canadian work experience. Already working in Canada? Every additional year in a TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 occupation adds to your score. If you’re at 2 years, getting to 3 is worth the wait.

5. Take a French language test. Even moderate French skills are worth testing. Scoring NCLC 7+ across all four skills adds up to 50 points — especially if you also have English at CLB 5+. People sleep on this one.

6. Claim your Canadian education points. Studied in Canada? A surprising number of applicants forget to claim this. Depending on the program length, it’s worth 15–30 extra points. Don’t leave them on the table.

Questions We Get Asked About CRS Score Calculation

How do I calculate my CRS score?

Use the free calculator at the top of this page. Enter your age, education, language scores, work experience, and any bonus factors. You’ll get a full breakdown instantly — no email, no account needed.

How often does IRCC run Express Entry draws?

Usually every two weeks, though it varies. Some months see more frequent draws, some fewer. Cutoff scores shift too — which is exactly why checking your number regularly matters.

Can I estimate my CRS score without IELTS results yet?

Yes — you can model different score scenarios to see how much a higher language result would help. But to actually submit an Express Entry profile, you’ll need official test results. Think of it as planning ahead.

What’s the difference between CRS and NOC?

Your NOC (National Occupational Classification) determines which Express Entry programs you’re eligible for. Your CRS score determines when — and whether — you get invited. You need to qualify first, then your score does the work.

Is this the same as the official IRCC calculator?

We use the same official IRCC formula. That said, your official score is only generated when you submit an actual profile through your IRCC account. Our tool is for planning, estimating, and figuring out your strategy — and it’s a lot faster to use.

What’s a CEC-specific draw?

Canadian Experience Class draws only invite candidates eligible under CEC — meaning they already have skilled Canadian work experience. These draws often have lower cutoffs than all-program draws, which is great news if you’re already working in Canada.

Know Your Number. Build Your Strategy.

A lot of applicants lose months — sometimes years — because they didn’t know their score or didn’t know which factor to fix first. Two minutes with our calculator changes that.

And if you want someone to actually look at your profile and help you build a real plan around your score? That’s what we’re here for.