Express Entry competition rises despite slower pool growth, i.e., Canada’s Express Entry pool is continuing to become more competitive, even though overall growth in the pool has slowed sharply in recent weeks.

Between April 12 and April 26, the pool added only 897 new profiles. This is much lower than the previous reporting period, which saw growth of 2,193 profiles.

At the same time, competition among high-scoring candidates continues to increase.

The number of candidates in the 501 – 600 Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score range increased by another 250 profiles during this period. This marks the second straight reporting period where this score range has grown after months of decline.

This growing competition at the top of the pool was reflected in the most recent Canadian Experience Class (CEC) draw held on April 28.

That draw invited only 2,000 candidates and had a CRS cut-off score of 514. The tie-breaking rule reached back to September 24, 2025, meaning candidates had been waiting in the pool for more than seven months.

This suggests that there is still a large number of high-scoring candidates competing for invitations.

Changes Seen In The Express Entry Pool

From April 12 to April 26, the total number of profiles in the Express Entry pool increased from 233,555 to 234,452.

This means the pool grew by only 897 profiles overall.

One of the biggest changes during this period was seen in the mid-range CRS score bands.

Every score range between 421 and 460 lost candidates. Altogether, these ranges dropped by 1,317 profiles.

This likely happened because of recent Express Entry draws, especially the French-language proficiency draw held on April 15 and the Trades draw held earlier in the month.

The French-language draw had a CRS cut-off of 419, while the Trades draw had a cut-off of 477.

At the higher end of the pool, growth continued.

The 601 – 1,200 score range increased by 147 profiles. This was mainly caused by new Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) candidates entering the pool with an extra 600 CRS points.

It is also important to note that the pool data published on April 26 does not include the three Express Entry draws held between April 27 and April 29.

Those three draws issued a total of 6,473 invitations.

Score Range Changes In The Pool

The following table shows how the pool changed between April 12 and April 26:

CRS Score Range  April 26  April 12  Difference (April 12 – April 26) 
0–300  8,339  8,253  +86 
301–350  18,733  18,543  +190 
351–400  52,874  52,309  +565 
401–410  12,185  11,845  +340 
411–420  12,956  12,753  +203 
421–430  12,613  12,973  -360 
431–440  14,456  14,775  -319 
441–450  14,305  14,606  -301 
451–460  15,175  15,512  -337 
461–470  15,973  15,968  +5 
471–480  16,487  16,246  +241 
481–490  12,815  12,663  +152 
491–500  13,209  13,174  +35 
501–600  13,860  13,610  +250 
601–1200  472  325  +147 
Total  234,452  233,555  +897 

Canada’s Express Entry pool has seen only small overall changes in recent weeks, but competition remains strong among top-scoring candidates.

Draws Not Included In The April 26 Data

The April 26 pool figures do not include three draws that took place later in the month.

Those draws are listed below:

Date  Round Type  Invitations Issued  CRS Score Of Lowest-Ranked Candidate Invited 
April 29  French-Language proficiency  4,000  400 
April 28  Canadian Experience Class  2,000  514 
April 27  Provincial Nominee Program  473  795 

These draws likely removed many candidates from the pool.

At minimum, they may have reduced the pool by:

  • 4,000 profiles in the 401 – 410 score range and above
  • 2,000 profiles in the 501 – 600 score range and above
  • 473 profiles in the 601 – 1200 score range

Recent CEC draws have also become smaller.

After dropping to 507 in March, CEC cut-off scores have stayed above 510 in every draw since then.

Since April 14, the cut-offs have remained above 514.

Draws That Shaped The April 26 Pool Data

The latest pool composition was influenced mainly by three draws held between April 13 and April 15.

Together, these draws issued 6,324 invitations.

Date  Round Type  Invitations Issued  CRS Score Of Lowest-Ranked Candidate Invited 
April 15  French-Language proficiency  4,000  419 
April 14  Canadian Experience Class  2,000  515 
April 13  Provincial Nominee Program  324  786 

Even after issuing more than 6,300 invitations, the pool still added 897 profiles.

This suggests that around 7,197 new candidates entered the pool during this period.

Current Competitiveness Of The Pool

The table below shows how competitive the Express Entry pool has become as of April 26.

CRS Score Range  Number Of Candidates  Cumulative  Percentile Range  Percentage 
0–300  8,339  8,339  0.00%–3.56%  3.56% 
301–350  18,733  27,072  3.56%–11.55%  7.99% 
351–400  52,874  79,946  11.55%–34.10%  22.55% 
401–410  12,185  92,131  34.10%–39.30%  5.20% 
411–420  12,956  105,087  39.30%–44.82%  5.53% 
421–430  12,613  117,700  44.82%–50.20%  5.38% 
431–440  14,456  132,156  50.20%–56.37%  6.17% 
441–450  14,305  146,461  56.37%–62.47%  6.10% 
451–460  15,175  161,636  62.47%–68.94%  6.47% 
461–470  15,973  177,609  68.94%–75.75%  6.81% 
471–480  16,487  194,096  75.75%–82.79%  7.03% 
481–490  12,815  206,911  82.79%–88.25%  5.47% 
491–500  13,209  220,120  88.25%–93.89%  5.63% 
501–600  13,860  233,980  93.89%–99.80%  5.91% 
601–1200  472  234,452  99.80%–100.00%  0.20% 

The percentile ranges show where candidates fall compared to others in the pool.

Overall, the latest data shows that even though pool growth has slowed, competition for top Express Entry scores remains very strong.

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