Canada’s Express Entry system creates a significant and often underappreciated advantage for candidates who speak French. Beyond the general language score, French proficiency earns dedicated bonus CRS points that can be the difference between receiving an Invitation to Apply (ITA) and waiting for years. This guide explains exactly how the French language advantage works in Express Entry 2026.
Express Entry Basics – A Quick Recap
Express Entry is Canada’s primary immigration management system for three programmes:
• Federal Skilled Worker (FSW): For internationally educated professionals
• Canadian Experience Class (CEC): For candidates with Canadian work experience
• Federal Skilled Trades (FST): For skilled tradespeople
Candidates are ranked by their Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score. When IRCC holds a draw, the top-ranked candidates receive ITAs. The higher your CRS, the better your chances.
The CRS challenge: Most draws in 2024–2025 required CRS scores of 480–540+. The average applicant struggles to reach this range on human capital factors alone. French changes this entirely.
How French Language Earns CRS Points – Two Mechanisms
French adds points to your CRS score through two separate pathways:
| Pathway | Points Available | Condition |
| Pathway 1: Bilingualism (French + English) | Up to 50 points (15 or 30 depending on CLB level) | Must meet CLB 7+ in French AND have English proficiency |
| Pathway 2: French-Only Speakers (FSTP Programme) | Up to 50 points | If French is only official language — different programme |
| Human Capital Factor (French as first language) | Up to 72 extra points over English-only equivalent | If French CLB 7-9 is your primary language score |
The Bilingualism Bonus – Most Relevant for Indian Candidates
Indian candidates typically have English as their primary language and French as a second. The Bilingualism bonus rewards exactly this profile:
| French Proficiency | English Required | CRS Bilingualism Bonus |
| French CLB 7 in all 4 skills | Any English level (CLB 1+) | 30 CRS points |
| French CLB 5–6 in all 4 skills | Any English level (CLB 1+) | 15 CRS points |
What CLB 7 means in TEF Canada: Approximately 309–370 in speaking, 207–233 in reading, similar thresholds in writing and listening. Achievable with 6–9 months of focused preparation for motivated candidates.
The Full CRS Impact of French at CLB
Let us calculate the total CRS gain for a typical Indian applicant who achieves CLB 7 in French:
| CRS Component | Without French | With French CLB 7 | Gain |
| Language (first official — English) | ~120 (CLB 9 English) | ~120 (unchanged) | 0 |
| Bilingualism bonus | 0 | 30 | + 30 |
| Francophone destination (if relevant) | 0 | 0 to 25 extra | + 0–25 |
| Total estimated CRS impact | Baseline | + 30 minimum | + 30 CRS |
30 CRS points is enormous. In recent Express Entry history, the difference between an invitation and no invitation has often been 5–15 points. A 30-point boost from French can move a 470 CRS score to 500 — crossing the ITA threshold for many draws.
French-Designated Draws – Another Advantage
IRCC regularly conducts French-language draws specifically targeting candidates with French proficiency. These draws often have significantly lower CRS cut-offs than all-programme draws:
| Draw Type | Typical CRS Cut-Off | Who Can Enter |
| All-programme draw | 480–540+ | All Express Entry candidates |
| French-language proficiency draw | 375–420 | Candidates with French CLB 7+ in all 4 skills |
| Healthcare draw (some include French) | 400–440 | Healthcare workers with French proficiency |
French-language draws occur several times per year and consistently have lower cut-offs. A candidate with CLB 7 French who might not get an ITA in an all-programme draw could receive one in a French-language draw.
Which French Exam Is Accepted for Express Entry?
| Exam | Accepted by IRCC? | Notes |
| TEF Canada | Yes — designated test | Must use the Canada-specific version of TEF |
| TCF Canada | Yes — designated test | Must use the Canada-specific version of TCF |
| DELF/DALF | No | Not accepted for Express Entry (only TEF Canada or TCF Canada) |
Important: Only TEF Canada and TCF Canada are accepted for Express Entry. The DELF/DALF certifications (even though they measure the same CEFR levels) are not accepted by IRCC for immigration purposes.
Realistic Timeline: Adding French to Your Express Entry Profile
| Starting French Level | Time to CLB 7 | Strategy |
| A0 (complete beginner) | 18–24 months | Intensive daily study + tutor + immersion content |
| A2 (basic knowledge) | 12–16 months | Structured course + regular speaking practice |
| B1 (intermediate) | 6–10 months | Focus on exam format; mock tests; TEF Canada coaching |
| B2 (upper intermediate) | 3–6 months | TEF Canada-specific preparation; CLB conversion practice |
The return on investment is clear: 6–24 months of French study can add 30 CRS points, open access to low-cutoff French draws, and dramatically improve your Canada PR timeline.
Beyond Express Entry: Other Canadian French Advantages
Quebec Skilled Worker Programme (QSWP): Quebec selects its own immigrants and heavily weights French. DELF B2 or TEF B2 equivalent is typically required.
Atlantic Immigration Programme (AIP): Atlantic provinces actively recruit French speakers for designated jobs. French increases job offers in these regions.
Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot (RNIP): Several French-speaking communities across Canada (Maillardville BC, Hearst ON, etc.) specifically recruit Francophone immigrants through RNIP.
Post-graduation: Studying at a French university in Canada (Universite de Moncton, Universite d’Ottawa, UQAM) allows you to work, gain CEC eligibility, and maintain French language advantage simultaneously.
References: IRCC Express Entry: canada.ca/en/immigration/services/immigrate-skilled-workers | CRS Calculator: canada.ca | TEF Canada: lefrancaisdesaffaires.fr | languagetest.in TEF Canada and TCF Canada preparation
Each post reviewed by the languagetest.in research team.

