Home/Pathways/Provincial Nominee Program
PNP · Province-Specific Streams

Get nominated
by a province -
fast-track your PR

A provincial nomination adds 600 CRS points to your Express Entry profile - virtually guaranteeing an Invitation to Apply. Choose the province that matches your skills, and our consultants handle the rest.

$299 CAD flat fee
All provinces
+600 CRS points
Licensed consultants
1,200+ approvals
Provincial Nominee Program
PNP + Express Entry
$299 CAD
Flat fee · All PNP streams · IRCC fees separate
1
Free consultation - identify your best province + stream
2
Apply to the province - AI fills all provincial forms
3
Receive nomination certificate (+600 CRS points)
4
Get your federal ITA PR application submitted
No obligation · 30 minutes · Province matching included
How it works

Two ways the PNP delivers PR

Provinces run their own immigration streams - but the path to federal PR varies depending on which route you take.

+600
CRS points - the nomination advantage
A provincial nomination certificate (PNC) added to your Express Entry profile awards 600 additional CRS points - the equivalent of a near-perfect score on every other factor combined. In almost every case, a nomination guarantees the next available ITA.
Check my score
Enhanced Nomination (Express Entry-linked)
Province nominates you through Express Entry · Federal processes in ~6 months
Fastest

You must have an active Express Entry profile. The province reviews your profile and, if you qualify for their stream, issues an enhanced nomination. You add the nomination to your Express Entry profile, receive +600 CRS points, and get your ITA in the next draw.

1
Create Express Entry profile and enter the federal pool
2
Apply to provincial stream (or receive provincial interest notification)
3
Receive provincial nomination certificate – +600 CRS points applied
4
Receive federal ITASubmit complete PR applicationCOPR in ~6 months
~12–18 months total Check eligibility
Base Nomination (Non-Express Entry)
Province nominates you directly · Separate federal PR stream
Broader access

You do not need an Express Entry profile. The province nominates you through their own stream, outside the Express Entry system. You then apply directly to the federal government for PR through a separate paper-based or online process - no CRS points involved.

1
Apply directly to the provincial stream (no Express Entry profile needed)
2
Receive provincial nomination certificate
3
Apply to the federal government for PR under the Provincial Nominees Class
4
Federal processingCOPR issued(takes longer than Express Entry route)
18–30 months total Check eligibility
All provinces and territories

PNP Streams by Province

Every province has its own streams targeting workers in different occupations, education levels, and situations. Your consultant will identify which streams you qualify for across all provinces.

British Columbia BCPNP
Tech-forward
Skilled Worker - job offer in BC, NOC TEER 0–3
International Graduate - graduated from BC institution, job offer in BC
Healthcare Professional - nurses, physicians, allied health
Entry Level & Semi-Skilled - NOC TEER 4, hospitality, food service
Express Entry BC - EE-linked versions of above streams with faster processing
Entrepreneur Immigration - business owners with minimum net worth
Points-based BC scoring gridEE-linked + Base
Alberta AINP
High demand
Alberta Opportunity Stream - working in Alberta with job offer, multiple NOC codes
Alberta Express Entry Stream - EE-linked, draws target specific occupations
Farm Stream - farm managers and operators with job offer
Self-Employed Farmer - purchasing and operating a farm in Alberta
Alberta prioritizes tech, healthcare, and engineering
Software developers, nurses, civil engineers, and accountants regularly receive nominations through Alberta Express Entry draws.
Job offer usually requiredEE-linked + Base
Saskatchewan SINP
No job offer some streams
Express Entry - Occupation In-Demand - EE profile + qualifying NOC
Express Entry - Saskatchewan Job Offer - job offer from SK employer
Occupation In-Demand - Base PNP, specific NOC codes in demand
Existing Work Permit - working in SK for 6+ months with eligible employer
International Student - graduated from SK institution, eligible NOC
Entrepreneur and Farm - business owners and farming operators
Points-based Expression of InterestEE-linked + Base
Manitoba MPNP
Broad NOC coverage
Skilled Worker in Manitoba - working in MB with job offer or employer support
Skilled Worker Overseas - close connection to Manitoba (family, previous stay)
International Education Stream - MB graduates, career employment offer
Business Investor Stream - business owners with net worth + investment intent
Strong ties to MB required for OverseasEE-linked + Base
Nova Scotia NSNP
Labour Market focus
Nova Scotia Demand: Express Entry - occupations in critical shortage
Nova Scotia Demand: Occupation - Base PNP, in-demand NOC codes
Labour Market Priorities - employer-specific partnerships, targeted draws
Physician Stream - licensed or license-eligible physicians
International Graduates - NSCC or Dalhousie grads with NS job offer
Invitation-only for some streamsEE-linked + Base
New Brunswick NBPNP
Atlantic region
Express Entry Labour Market Stream - EE profile + job offer from NB employer
Skilled Workers with Employer Support - Base PNP, job offer required
Post-Graduate Entrepreneurial Stream - NB graduates launching businesses
Entrepreneur Stream - business owners with active business proposal
Settlement plan requiredEE-linked + Base
Prince Edward Island PEI PNP
Smaller intake
Labour Impact - Critical Worker - full-time job offer from PEI employer
Labour Impact - Skilled Worker - NOC TEER 0–3, job offer required
Labour Impact - International Graduate - UPEI or Holland College graduates
Express Entry - PEI Labour Market - EE-linked with PEI job offer
Business Impact - entrepreneurs with minimum net worth and business plan
Job offer required for most streamsEE-linked + Base
Newfoundland & Labrador NLPNP
Healthcare priority
Priority Skills NL - in-demand occupations, no job offer for some
Express Entry Skilled Worker - EE-linked, job offer from NL employer
Skilled Worker Category - Base PNP, job offer from NL employer
International Graduate - Memorial University graduates
International Entrepreneur - business plan, investment threshold
Healthcare workers often prioritizedEE-linked + Base
Yukon YNP
Territory
Skilled Worker - job offer from Yukon employer, NOC TEER 0–3
Critical Impact Worker - NOC TEER 4–5, employer support
Express Entry - EE-linked, Yukon employer job offer
Business Nominee - entrepreneurs planning to operate business in Yukon
Strong employer relationship neededEE-linked + Base
Northwest Territories NTNP
Territory
Employer Driven - employer in NWT, job offer, NOC TEER 0–3
Express Entry - EE-linked stream, employer-supported
Business - business ownership and operations in NWT
Note on territories
Manitoba and Quebec are not listed above - Quebec runs a separate immigration system (not part of PNP). Nunavut does not have a nominee program.
Limited annual intakeEE-linked + Base
Québec Not PNP
Separate system
Quebec controls its own immigration and does not participate in the federal PNP system
Québec Skilled Worker Program (QSWP) - points-based, French prioritized
Arrima Expression of Interest Pool - Quebec's own EOI system
Certificat de Sélection du Québec (CSQ) - required before federal PR application
French strongly preferredQuebec only
Am I eligible?

PNP Eligibility - What Matters Most

PNP eligibility varies by province and stream. These are the factors that appear across most streams. Your consultant will match you to the streams where you score highest.

General Requirements
Express Entry-Linked
Base PNP
Job Offer Streams
What most PNP streams require
Skilled work experience - typically NOC TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 (some streams accept TEER 4 for semi-skilled positions)
Language ability - minimum CLB 4–7 depending on province and stream (CLB 7 is most common minimum; higher scores earn more points)
Education - most streams require at least a secondary school diploma; higher education earns more provincial points
Settlement funds - proof you can support yourself and any dependants until established in Canada
Admissibility to Canada - no serious criminal history, no previous immigration bans
Genuine intent to settle and work in the nominating province
Factors that make you competitive
Canadian work experience - especially in the nominating province. Working in BC and applying to BCPNP is far stronger than applying from overseas
Canadian education - graduating from a DLI in the target province is often the strongest single factor for international graduate streams
High language scores - CLB 9+ in all four bands (IELTS 7.0+) significantly boosts provincial scoring in most EOI systems
Family ties - siblings, parents, or children in a province can add points to certain streams (especially Manitoba Skilled Worker Overseas)
In-demand occupation - each province publishes lists of prioritized NOC codes; matching these dramatically increases your chances of a nomination draw
Express Entry-linked PNP requirements
You must have an active Express Entry profile in the federal pool - either FSW, CEC, or FST eligible
Most EE-linked provincial draws have a minimum CRS score threshold (often 300–400) - lower than the all-program federal draw cutoff
Meet the provincial stream's requirements in addition to Express Entry minimums (language, education, work experience, job offer if required)
Once nominated, you must update your Express Entry profile with the provincial nomination code - IRCC will then send your ITA in the next available draw (usually within days)
You have 60 days from ITA to submit a complete PR application - GetNorthPath's AI fills all forms within days
EE-linked strategy tips
Register an Express Entry profile even if your CRS is low - provinces can find you and send Notifications of Interest (NOIs) inviting you to apply
Provinces like Ontario, BC, and Saskatchewan regularly conduct targeted draws from the EE pool for specific occupations - watch their draw histories
A provincial nomination is worth +600 CRS - with any reasonable base score (400+), you will receive an ITA in the next draw after nomination
French language ability qualifies you for Francophone PNP streams in multiple provinces - some with very low CRS cutoffs
Base PNP (non-Express Entry) requirements
No Express Entry profile required - you apply directly to the province through their own stream
Most Base PNP streams require a job offer from a provincial employer - and often require you to already be working in the province
Language requirements tend to be lower (CLB 4–5) for semi-skilled and entry-level streams compared to EE-linked streams
Education requirements are generally more flexible - some streams accept trade certificates or vocational training instead of post-secondary degrees
After receiving a provincial nomination, you apply to IRCC directly under the Provincial Nominees Class using a paper or online application - not through Express Entry
Base PNP trade-offs
Federal processing under the Provincial Nominees Class (non-EE) takes 18–30 months - significantly longer than the 6-month Express Entry target
The upside: Base PNP is the only PR pathway for workers in NOC TEER 4–5 occupations who don't qualify for Express Entry
Employer support is often mandatory - your employer may need to demonstrate they couldn't fill the role locally
Some Base PNP applicants also become eligible for Express Entry during the process - your consultant will identify if this applies to you
Employer-driven stream requirements
A genuine, permanent, full-time job offer from an employer in the nominating province - not temporary or contract work
Most job offer streams require an LMIA or LMIA-exempt designation - your employer must prove the role couldn't be filled by a Canadian citizen or PR
The offered wage must meet or exceed the provincial median wage for the NOC - ESDC's job bank wage data is the reference
Work experience in the same or closely related NOC code - typically 1–2 years in the past 3–5 years
Language ability meeting the provincial minimum for the specific stream (typically CLB 5–7)
Common mistakes with job offer streams
Using a job offer from a franchise, unregistered business, or employer with IRCC compliance issues - always verify employer eligibility
Job offer is conditional, temporary, or in a different NOC code than the stream requires
Wage offered is below the provincial median for the occupation - this is a common ground for refusal in OINP and BCPNP
Employer submits the Offer of Employment through IRCC Employer Portal before the candidate completes the provincial application
Your consultant will verify all employer eligibility criteria before you submit - preventing expensive mistakes at the provincial stage
What to gather

Required Documents - PNP Application

Documents required at the provincial stage, then again at the federal stage. AI reads and validates each on upload - tagged fields are auto-filled into your forms.

Identity
Required Valid passport (all pages) AI
Required Birth certificate AI
If applicable Marriage or common-law certificate AI
If applicable Passports for dependants AI
If applicable Current Canadian work or study permit AI
Language Tests
Required IELTS General Training, CELPIP-General, or PTE Core (English) AI
If applicable TEF Canada or TCF Canada (French) AI
Note Province may require more recent test results than federal stage
Note Some streams accept CLB 4 - others require CLB 7 or higher
Education
Required Degree, diploma, or certificate AI
Foreign degrees ECA report from designated body (WES, ICAS, etc.) AI
If applicable Canadian transcripts and credential (DLI graduates) AI
If trades Red Seal or provincial trade certificate
Work Experience
Required Reference letters (role, dates, hours/week, salary, responsibilities) AI
Canadian exp. Pay stubs or T4 slips AI
If applicable Employment contracts
If self-empl. Business registration + tax records
Note Provinces may conduct employer verification calls
Job Offer (if applicable)
If required Written job offer letter (employer name, position, NOC, wage, full-time, permanent) AI
If applicable LMIA copy from ESDC AI
If exempt Offer of Employment number from IRCC Employer Portal
Note Wage must meet or exceed provincial median for the NOC
Financial & Background
Required Bank statements (last 3–6 months) AI
Federal stage Police certificates from all countries where you lived 6+ months since age 18
Federal stage Medical examination by IRCC-designated physician
Note Biometrics collected at VAC - $85 CAD if not previously given
What to expect

PNP Timeline - Province to PR Card

1
Free Consultation + Province Matching
Consultant identifies every provincial stream you qualify for, estimates your provincial scoring, and recommends the fastest or most certain route.
Day 0
2
Documents Prepared + Express Entry Profile Created
Upload all documents. AI validates each. Consultant creates your Express Entry profile (if EE-linked stream) and submits your provincial EOI or application.
Week 1–3
3
Waiting for Provincial Nomination
Provinces conduct draws from their EOI pools or review applications directly. Draw frequency and wait times vary widely by province and stream.
2 weeks – 12 months (depends on province)
4
Provincial Nomination Certificate Received
+600 CRS points applied to Express Entry profile (EE-linked). ITA received in next draw - usually within days of nomination.
Certificate issued ITA within 1–2 weeks
5
60-Day ITA Window - AI Fills All PR Forms
AI fills IMM 0008, Schedule A, IMM 5406, IMM 5562, and all supplementary forms within 3–5 days. Medical exam and police certificates coordinated.
Day 1–55 of 60-day window
COPR Issued - Permanent Resident
Confirmation of Permanent Residence issued. You land in Canada, activate PR status. PR card received in 6–8 weeks.
~6 months after federal submission (EE-linked)
Total Timeline Estimates
EE-linked (strong CRS 400+)12–18 months total
EE-linked (lower CRS, targeted draws)18–24 months total
Ontario OINP (Employer Job Offer)18–24 months total
BC PNP - Skills Immigration18–24 months total
Base PNP (non-Express Entry)24–36 months total
Federal processing after nomination~6 months (EE)
GetNorthPath processes PNP applications in parallel
While you wait for a provincial nomination, we prepare your federal documents, book your medical exam, and gather police certificates - so the moment your nomination arrives, your federal application is ready to submit within days.
Provincial processing times change frequently
Draw frequencies and NOI volumes shift with provincial labour market conditions. Your consultant will give you current timelines at consultation - the estimates above are general guides.
Transparent pricing

$299 CAD - covers every province, every stream.

One flat fee from province matching to federal COPR. No billing surprises, no hourly rates.

Provincial Nominee Program - All Provinces
EE-linked + Base PNP · IMM 0008 federal application · All nationalities
$299 CAD
IRCC government fees are separate
What's included
Free 30-minute consultation - province matching, stream shortlisting, score estimate
Provincial EOI submission or direct application to nominated stream
AI Document Validator - 10-second checks on every upload
Express Entry profile creation and monitoring (EE-linked streams)
AI auto-fill of all federal PR forms after ITA is received
My Details intake - travel history, background declarations
Parallel document preparation - medical, police certs, biometrics coordinated
Full consultant review of provincial + federal application
One-click IRCC submission + real-time status portal from nomination to COPR
Additional IRCC costs (not included)
IRCC PR processing fee (principal)$850 CAD
IRCC PR processing fee (per dependant)$230 CAD
Right of Permanent Residence Fee$515 CAD
Biometrics (if not previously collected)$85 CAD
Medical examinationVaries by country
ECA report (foreign credentials)~$250 CAD
LMIA-exempt employer compliance fee$230 CAD
Your consultant confirms which fees apply to your province and stream at the free consultation.
Stripe · No subscription · Receipt emailed immediately
Start for $299 CAD
Common questions

Frequently asked questions

Which province should I apply to?
+
The right province depends on your occupation, education, language scores, current location, and whether you have a job offer or Canadian connections. Generally: if you're in Canada already and working, apply to the province you're already in. If you're overseas, target provinces where your occupation is in high demand. Your consultant will map your profile against all provincial EOI scoring grids to identify where you rank highest - often across multiple provinces simultaneously.
Can I apply to multiple provinces at the same time?
+
Yes - in most cases you can maintain an EOI in multiple provincial systems simultaneously. However, once you receive and accept a nomination from one province, you are expected to intend to settle there. You should withdraw or decline nominations from other provinces once you've accepted one. Your consultant will advise on which provinces to prioritize and whether applying to multiple is appropriate for your situation.
Do I need a job offer to get a provincial nomination?
+
Not always. Some streams - particularly Express Entry-linked "human capital" streams in Ontario, BC, and Saskatchewan - nominate candidates based on their profile (language, education, work experience, NOC code) without requiring a job offer. However, job-offer streams tend to be faster and more predictable because they bypass the competitive draw system. Your consultant will assess both options for your profile.
What if I receive a nomination but my CRS is below the cut-off for the next draw?
+
This doesn't happen with PNP. A provincial nomination adds exactly 600 CRS points to your profile - which brings virtually every candidate above any historical all-program draw cutoff. Once you have a nomination, you will receive an ITA in the next regular Express Entry draw, typically within 1–2 draws (2–4 weeks) of the nomination being applied to your profile.
Am I obligated to stay in the nominating province after getting PR?
+
Legally, as a permanent resident, you have the right to live and work anywhere in Canada - the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees this. However, when you apply for a provincial nomination, you must genuinely intend to settle in that province. If IRCC finds evidence that you had no genuine intent to live there (e.g., you moved immediately after receiving PR), it can affect your application or future PR renewal. In practice, many PNP recipients relocate to other provinces within a few years - and this is generally fine once you are established as a PR.
How is PNP different from Express Entry without a nomination?
+
Without a PNP nomination, your Express Entry rank depends entirely on your CRS score - which must be competitive enough to beat hundreds of thousands of other candidates in each draw. A PNP nomination bypasses this competition entirely by adding 600 CRS points, guaranteeing you an ITA regardless of your base score. The trade-off is the additional step of the provincial nomination process, which adds time - but the federal processing is the same 6 months once you submit your PR application after receiving your ITA.

Find the province
that wants your skills

Book a free 30-minute consultation. We'll identify every provincial stream you qualify for, rank them by speed and certainty, and get your application moving the same week.

Check PNP Eligibility All PR pathways
Provincial Nominee Program · All Provinces
+600 CRS points · $299 CAD flat fee
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