How to Immigrate to Canada from the United States: The Complete 2026 Guide

Hussein Zarif
Hussein Zarif

I personally guarantee that we will honestly and decently do our job!

Share:

Canada and the United States share the longest undefended border in the world. But moving across it permanently is not as simple as driving north. Canada’s immigration system is points-based, competitive, and built around skilled work — and there is no special lane for Americans.

That said, US citizens do have real advantages that most guides don’t cover clearly. And there are legitimate shortcuts that can get you here faster than you’d expect. This guide walks through every realistic way to immigrate to Canada from the United States in 2026: what each pathway involves, what your actual odds look like, and how to figure out which route fits your situation.

Do Americans Get Any Special Treatment in Canadian Immigration?

For permanent residence: not really. Americans compete in the same global pool as everyone else, and being American does not add points to your application. For work permits, however, US citizens have a meaningful advantage most people don’t know about.

Under CUSMA (the Canada–United States–Mexico Agreement, formerly NAFTA), professionals in 63 designated occupations can obtain a Canadian work permit without a Labour Market Impact Assessment — a process that normally takes months and requires a Canadian employer to prove no Canadian citizen or permanent resident could fill the role. For CUSMA-eligible professionals, all you need is a job offer from a Canadian employer and proof of your credentials. That is a significant shortcut compared to what most other nationalities face.

Americans under 35 also have access to the International Experience Canada (IEC) Working Holiday — an open work permit that lets you live and work anywhere in Canada for up to a year, with no job offer required before arrival.

Being a native English speaker is also a genuine advantage. English is one of Canada’s official languages, and strong language test scores directly boost your Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score — the number that determines your competitiveness in the Express Entry pool. Most Americans score well here without much preparation.

Temporary vs. Permanent: The First Decision You Need to Make

Before looking at specific programs, you need to decide whether you want to move to Canada temporarily or permanently — because that choice shapes everything else.

Temporary immigration means a work permit or study permit. You are authorised to live and work in Canada for a fixed period, but you are not a permanent resident. Temporary status is generally faster and easier to obtain. It does not, on its own, lead to citizenship.

Permanent immigration means applying for permanent residence (PR). As a PR holder, you can live and work anywhere in Canada indefinitely, sponsor eligible family members to join you, and eventually apply for Canadian citizenship. Most PR pathways are more competitive and take longer to complete.

Here is something worth knowing before you decide: the majority of Americans who successfully immigrate to Canada do not go directly from the US to permanent residence. They come first on a work permit — often through CUSMA or the Working Holiday program — spend a year or two building Canadian work experience, and then apply for PR with a significantly stronger profile. Canadian work experience dramatically improves your CRS score and opens access to the Canadian Experience Class (CEC), one of the most accessible PR pathways available. For most Americans, the two-stage approach is not a workaround — it is the strategically sound play.

What’s Your TEER Level? Why Your Job Title Matters More Than You Think

One of the most important things to understand before doing anything else is Canada’s TEER system — and most Americans have never heard of it.

Canada classifies all occupations using the National Occupational Classification (NOC) system. Each job is assigned a Training, Education, Experience, and Responsibilities (TEER) category from 0 to 5. TEER 0 through 3 are considered skilled occupations, and most immigration pathways — including Express Entry — are available to you. TEER 4 and 5 are lower-skilled occupations, and many of the main PR pathways, including the Federal Skilled Worker Program, are not available to you if your job falls here.

Here are some common American job examples and their TEER levels:

  • Software engineer: TEER 1
  • Registered nurse: TEER 1
  • Accountant: TEER 1
  • Teacher (K–12): TEER 1
  • Electrician or plumber: TEER 2
  • Administrative assistant: TEER 3
  • Retail salesperson: TEER 4
  • Food service worker: TEER 5

You can look up your occupation using the Government of Canada’s NOC lookup tool. Find your TEER level before going any further — it determines which doors are open to you.

The 6 Ways Americans Immigrate to Canada

There is no single immigration pathway. Which route fits you depends on your occupation, your timeline, your family situation, and how competitive your profile is. Here are the six most realistic options for US citizens.

1. Express Entry — For Skilled Workers Applying from the US

Express Entry is Canada’s primary system for economic permanent residence. It manages three federal programs: the Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSW), the Federal Skilled Trades Program (FST), and the Canadian Experience Class (CEC). As an American applying from the US, you would most likely enter through the Federal Skilled Worker Program.

To enter the pool, you need at least 67 points on the FSW selection factors grid — scored across education, language ability, work experience, age, a valid job offer, and adaptability. Once in the pool, you are assigned a CRS score and wait for a draw. Canada holds draws approximately every two weeks, inviting the highest-scoring candidates to apply for PR. After receiving an Invitation to Apply (ITA), you have 60 days to submit your complete application.

The system works — but it is competitive. We cover what CRS score you’d realistically get as an American in the next section. Learn more about Express Entry and how it works.

2. The CUSMA Work Permit — The American Shortcut

For Americans in a qualifying profession with a Canadian job offer, the CUSMA work permit is the fastest realistic route into Canada. Under CUSMA, professionals in 63 designated occupations — including engineers, accountants, lawyers, scientists, computer systems analysts, and several healthcare roles — can receive a Canadian work permit at the port of entry without an LMIA.

What you need: a job offer from a Canadian employer, proof of your professional credentials, and proof of US citizenship. Processing can happen at the port of entry on the day you arrive.

Once in Canada on a CUSMA permit, you start accumulating Canadian work experience. After 12 months of full-time skilled work, you become eligible for the Canadian Experience Class in Express Entry — a stream that regularly has lower CRS cut-offs than the general pool. This two-stage approach — CUSMA work permit first, CEC application later — is one of the most practical immigration strategies for American professionals. See how Americans can work legally in Canada.

3. Provincial Nominee Programs — If Your CRS Score Needs a Boost

Each province runs its own immigration streams targeting workers it specifically needs. If your CRS score is not high enough to receive an Invitation to Apply through a general Express Entry draw, a provincial nomination changes your situation entirely — it adds 600 points to your CRS score, which virtually guarantees the next draw you enter.

Different provinces target different occupations and types of workers. Some streams are designed for candidates already working in the province on a work permit. Others focus on entrepreneurs, business investors, or in-demand trades. The right province depends on your occupation, where you are willing to settle, and what each provincial stream requires at the time you apply.

Explore Provincial Nominee Programs and which might apply to you.

4. IEC Working Holiday — For Americans Under 35

If you are between 18 and 35, the International Experience Canada Working Holiday program is worth serious consideration. It gives you an open work permit valid for up to 12 months, authorising you to work for any employer anywhere in Canada — no job offer required before you arrive.

This is the most accessible first step into Canada for younger Americans. You use the year to experience life in Canada, build Canadian work experience, and put yourself in a much stronger position for a CEC Express Entry application afterward. As an American, you must apply through a registered organisation such as SWAP or BUNAC rather than directly through IRCC.

5. Family Sponsorship — If You Have Canadian Ties

If you have a Canadian citizen or permanent resident spouse, common-law partner, parent, or dependent child, family sponsorship is a direct route to PR that bypasses the points-based system entirely.

Your Canadian family member applies to sponsor you. Spousal sponsorship is the most common — and if your spouse is already in Canada, you can apply for an open work permit that lets you work legally while your PR application is being processed. Outland sponsorship (where the sponsored person remains outside Canada during processing) includes the right of appeal if the application is refused.

Learn about Canadian family sponsorship and eligibility.

6. Study Permit → PGWP → PR

For Americans earlier in their careers, studying in Canada is a legitimate long-game path to permanent residence. You apply for a study permit, attend a Designated Learning Institution (DLI), graduate, and then apply for a Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) — an open work permit that can last up to three years depending on the length of your programme.

That Canadian work experience makes you eligible for the Canadian Experience Class, and with a PGWP you will typically have a much stronger CRS score than you would applying from the US cold. It is not a fast path, but for Americans in their early-to-mid 20s, it can be the most strategically sound one. Explore the study visa pathway here.

What CRS Score Would an American Likely Get?

This is where most immigration guides go vague. Let’s be direct about what the numbers actually look like for an average American applicant.

Take a realistic example: you are 31 years old, hold a bachelor’s degree, score CLB 10 in English, and have six years of skilled work experience — all in the US. Your estimated CRS score would be approximately 440–465. Current general Express Entry draw cut-offs have ranged from 490 to 540.

That gap is real. Without Canadian work experience or a provincial nomination, most Americans are in the pool but not guaranteed a draw in the near term. Here is what would move the needle:

  • Canadian work experience — adds up to 80 CRS points via the Canadian Experience Class
  • French language ability — adds up to 50 points and opens access to French-language category draws, which have had cut-offs as low as the 300s
  • A provincial nomination — adds 600 points and virtually guarantees an ITA at the next draw
  • A sibling in Canada who is a citizen or PR — adds 15 points
  • Age — CRS scoring peaks between 20 and 29 and decreases gradually after 30

Hussein Zarif, Executive Director at Canada By Choice and a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) with over 18 years of experience, puts it plainly: “Your profile improves significantly once you have Canadian experience — but you need to be here to get it. The two-stage strategy is not a compromise. For most Americans, it is the right call.” Canada By Choice has helped tens of thousands of clients navigate exactly this kind of situation — including during the major waves of American interest that earned coverage in CBC, The New Yorker, and Fox News.

If you want to know your actual estimated score before doing anything else, the IRCC’s CRS score estimator is a free, reliable starting point.

Can Americans Claim Asylum or Refugee Status in Canada?

This is one of the most-searched immigration questions from Americans, particularly during periods of political uncertainty. The direct answer is: almost certainly not — and it is worth understanding why, so you can focus on options that are actually available to you.

Canada and the United States are both signatories to the Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA). Under this agreement, the US is formally classified as a safe country for refugee purposes. Individuals who can make a refugee claim in the United States are expected to do so there rather than in Canada. Based on statistics from the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, no asylum claims from US citizens have been accepted since 2013.

Unless something fundamentally changes in US law — to a degree that would remove its designation as a safe country under international standards — this is not a viable immigration pathway. That is not a discouraging statement; it is accurate information. And accurate information is what lets you spend your time and energy on pathways that are open.

How Long Does Each Pathway Take?

Processing times vary significantly depending on which pathway you pursue. These estimates reflect current typical ranges as of 2026 — individual timelines depend on application completeness, IRCC processing volumes, and other factors.

Pathway Estimated Timeline
CUSMA Work Permit Same day at port of entry to 4 weeks
IEC Working Holiday 4–8 weeks
Express Entry (pool entry to PR, post-ITA) 6 months; time in pool varies widely
PNP — Enhanced (linked to Express Entry) 12–18 months total
PNP — Base (direct provincial stream) 18–24 months total
Family Sponsorship — Spouse (inland) 12–18 months
Study Permit 8–16 weeks

What Does Immigrating to Canada from the USA Actually Cost?

Government fees are only one part of the real cost. Here is an honest breakdown of what Express Entry applicants typically spend.

Government fees (per adult applicant):

  • Application processing fee: $950 CAD
  • Right of Permanent Residence fee: $575 CAD
  • Total government fee: $1,525 CAD per person

Additional required costs:

  • Educational Credential Assessment (ECA): approximately $200 CAD
  • Language test (IELTS or CELPIP): approximately $300 CAD
  • Biometrics: $85 CAD per person / $170 CAD for a family
  • Medical exam: $100–$500 CAD depending on clinic and family size
  • Police clearance certificates: approximately $250 CAD per person

Settlement funds required (Federal Skilled Worker and Skilled Trades only): Canada requires proof that you can financially support yourself after arrival. For a single applicant, the minimum is $15,263 CAD. For a family of four, it is $29,380 CAD. These funds must be in your account — they are verified, not paid to the government.

Professional fees: Working with a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) typically costs $2,000–$5,000 CAD or more, depending on case complexity. This is in addition to government fees. Given how competitive the process is and how expensive errors can be, professional guidance is worth factoring in from the start.

What Changes in Your Daily Life After You Move

The immigration process gets most of the attention — but the transition itself catches a lot of Americans off guard. Here is what actually changes when you land.

Healthcare — The Waiting Period You Need to Plan For

Canada’s provincial health insurance is real and comprehensive — but most provinces impose a waiting period of up to three months before new residents are eligible. Medically necessary care during that window will come out of pocket unless you have private insurance. Get coverage before you arrive and keep it active until your provincial card is in hand. After the waiting period, provincial health covers hospital visits, doctor’s appointments, and most diagnostics. Dental and vision care require supplemental insurance regardless of how long you have been in Canada.

Taxes — The US Still Wants to Hear from You

This is the part most immigration guides skip entirely, and it catches people off guard. The United States taxes its citizens on worldwide income, regardless of where they live. After you move to Canada and become a Canadian tax resident, you are still legally required to file a US federal tax return each year. If your Canadian bank accounts exceed USD $10,000 at any point during the year, you also have Foreign Bank Account Report (FBAR) filing obligations. The US–Canada tax treaty helps prevent double taxation, but it does not eliminate your US filing requirements. Budget for a cross-border tax specialist — this is not DIY territory.

Driver’s Licence

Most provinces allow US state licence holders to exchange their licence for a provincial one without retesting. Ontario, British Columbia, and Alberta all have exchange agreements in place. The specific process and documents required vary by province, so confirm the rules for the province you are moving to before you arrive.

Banking

Canada’s major banks — RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, and CIBC — allow many non-residents to open a Canadian account before arriving. Doing this in advance makes your first weeks significantly smoother. You will need a Canadian account to receive your first paycheque, set up automatic payments, and build your credit history in Canada.

Social Insurance Number

Your Social Insurance Number (SIN) is the Canadian equivalent of a Social Security Number. It is required to work legally, file Canadian taxes, and access most government benefits. Apply at a Service Canada office as one of your first priorities after landing — you typically cannot start working until you have it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can a US citizen move to Canada without a job offer?

Yes, in some cases. The Federal Skilled Worker Program through Express Entry does not require a job offer — you are evaluated on your education, language scores, work experience, and age. A valid job offer does add points to your CRS score, but it is not a requirement to enter the pool. The IEC Working Holiday program (for those under 35) also requires no job offer before arrival. Work permits, however, generally do require a job offer or a specific open permit program.

Q: How hard is it for an American to get Canadian permanent residence?

It is competitive. General Express Entry draws have had cut-off scores ranging from 490 to 540 in recent years, and most Americans applying from outside Canada — without Canadian work experience — score in the 440–470 range. The most practical strategy for many Americans is to enter Canada on a work permit first, build Canadian experience, and then apply for PR through the Canadian Experience Class with a stronger profile.

Q: Do I need to give up my US citizenship to become a Canadian citizen?

No. Canada permits dual citizenship, and the United States allows citizens to hold citizenship in another country. You can become a Canadian citizen while keeping your US passport. To apply for citizenship, you must have been a permanent resident for at least three years — 1,095 days — out of the five years before your application date.

Q: Can Americans work in Canada without a work permit?

In most cases, no. A work permit is required for Americans to work legally in Canada. Narrow exceptions exist for certain business visitors under CUSMA exemptions, but if you will be employed by a Canadian company and receiving a Canadian paycheque, you need a work permit.

Q: What is the easiest way for an American to move to Canada?

For most Americans, the two most accessible first steps are the IEC Working Holiday (if you are 35 or under) and the CUSMA work permit (if your profession is on the designated list and you have a Canadian job offer). Both get you into Canada on a valid permit relatively quickly, without waiting in a competitive PR pool. Both also allow you to build Canadian work experience that significantly strengthens a future permanent residence application.

How to Start Your Canadian Immigration Journey

Immigration to Canada from the United States is absolutely achievable — but the path looks different for every person depending on their occupation, their family situation, their timeline, and how competitive their profile is right now. The worst thing you can do is assume one pathway applies to you without first understanding the full picture.

At Canada By Choice, we have been helping people navigate this process since 2007. Our licensed RCICs — including Executive Director Hussein Zarif — assess your full situation and identify the pathway that actually makes sense for you, not the one that sounds simplest on paper.

The best place to start is a free immigration assessment. It takes a few minutes, costs nothing, and gives you a clearer picture of where you stand before you spend time or money on an application. If your situation is complex, you can book a paid consultation directly with a licensed RCIC — the consultation fee is credited back if you proceed with an application.

Start your free assessment today and find out exactly where you stand.

The information in this blog is not to be interpreted or construed as legal advice. Everyone’s immigration goals, objectives and situations are different. Please contact us to speak to a consultant for advice.

Canada by Choice Windsor, On Team

About Us

Canada By Choice is a Canadian Immigration Firm based in Windsor, Ontario. Founded in 2007, Canada By Choice Immigration is widely considered as one of the most respected immigration firms in our region. We have earned our reputation as a world class firm by providing dedication and personalized service to each and every unique case before us.

Verify our Membership number here. Membership number: R530015

Sign Up for Newsletter

Receive offers, product allerts, styling inspiration and more.

You can unsubscribe at any time.

Related Posts

5

Mar

Federal Immigration Minister Marc Miller plans to override Quebec’s immigration cap to expedite family reunification. Despite requests to Quebec to increase its family reunification limit, currently set at about 10,000 applicants yearly, the federal government will now issue permanent residence permits beyond this cap. This decision, driven by a humanitarian perspective, aims to address the …

5

Mar

Manitoba, with its diverse geographic ranging from northern tundra to fertile southern farmlands, plays an important role in Canada’s geography and economy. Manitoba is a hub for industries such as agriculture, manufacturing, and mining, contributing significantly to Canada’s economic stability. For those considering making Manitoba their new home, the province offers inviting immigration programs aimed …

5

Mar

Quebec, Canada’s largest province by area, is known for its vibrant culture, diverse geography ranging from forests to rivers, and a robust economy anchored in technology, aerospace, and natural resources. Its distinct society, with a majority French-speaking population, contributes to a unique demographic profile. Quebec possesses a unique degree of autonomy in its immigration policies, …

4

Mar

The new provincial attestation letter system in British Columbia, launched today on March 4, 2024, and it marks a significant shift in the process for international students applying to study in the province. This change comes in response to the federal government’s decision to cap international student numbers, aiming to manage growth and ensure the …