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Immigration
By Rebecca Major
Posted on October 23, 2025
Updated 24 hours ago
So, we’re doing a little refresher on how CEC work experience is calculated, when you’re considered eligible, and how long that eligibility lasts.
Let’s break it down.
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To qualify under the CEC, you must have:
Your qualifying period is the timeframe IRCC looks at to decide whether your Canadian work experience counts toward the one year (1,560 hours) needed for the CEC.
It’s not tied to the calendar year or your work permit dates. Instead, it’s a rolling three-year window that shifts forward one day at a time.
For example, if today’s date is October 23, 2025, your qualifying period would be October 24, 2022 to October 23, 2025.
Any eligible work you’ve done within those dates can be counted. But as time moves forward, older experience drops off. Meaning your window of qualifying experience is always changing. Keep an eye on these dates to make sure you stay eligible before submitting your application.
It’s also important to remember that this three-year qualifying period is measured at two separate points in time. First, when you receive your Invitation to Apply (ITA) from the Express Entry system, and again when you submit your electronic Application for Permanent Residence (eAPR). You must meet the CEC eligibility requirements at both stages.
Now that we’ve defined the qualifying period, let’s explore a few real-world examples. These scenarios will help you understand how different work timelines fit (or don’t fit) within your 3-year window, and how that affects your CEC eligibility.
Let’s start with a simple case. You worked full-time from December 1, 2022 to December 1, 2023 in a TEER 1 occupation.
This gives you a complete year (1,560 hours) of qualifying Canadian experience. You would remain eligible for the CEC until November 30, 2025.
On December 1, 2025, your earliest work experience begins to fall outside the three-year window and can no longer be counted toward your CEC eligibility.
To avoid losing eligibility, you’ll need to receive an Invitation to Apply (ITA) and submit your permanent residence application (eAPR) before that earliest qualifying experience (December 1, 2025, in this example) “drops off” your rolling window.
In this example, you worked from March 15, 2022 to December 15, 2022, and again from March 20, 2025 to October 20, 2025, both in a skilled occupation. You plan to submit your application on October 23, 2025
At first glance, that’s around 17 months of Canadian work experience. However, only the work completed within the qualifying period, from October 24, 2022 to October 23, 2025, can be counted toward CEC eligibility.
This means your earlier experience from March to October 2022 falls outside the three-year window and cannot be included.
As a result, you only have about 10 months of valid experience within the current qualifying period, not enough to meet the minimum one-year requirement for the Canadian Experience Class.
In this scenario, you worked in skilled positions from January 2023 to June 2023, took a break, and then worked again from October 2023 to April 2024. Again, you plan to submit your application on October 23, 2025
Even though your skilled work experience wasn’t continuous, it can still qualify, as long as the combined total adds up to at least one full year (and at least 1,560 hours) of skilled work within your three-year qualifying period.
Breaks between jobs don’t affect your eligibility; both periods fall entirely within your qualifying period.
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The Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) takes a slightly different approach when it comes to awarding points for Canadian work experience.
For CRS purposes, your qualifying period is the 10-year period preceding the day on which points are assigned.
If we use today’s date, October 23, 2025, your qualifying period would be October 24, 2015 to October 23, 2025.
So, while CEC eligibility focuses only on your most recent 3 years, CRS points can consider up to 10 years of Canadian work experience. This means that even if some of your older experience no longer counts toward CEC eligibility, it may still help increase your CRS score.
You worked full-time in Canada from 2017 to 2018, and again from 2023 to 2024.
Your 2017–2018 experience is too old to count toward CEC eligibility. However, it still counts for CRS points, because it falls within the last 10 years.
Understanding your CEC qualifying period is crucial for planning your Express Entry strategy. Because that three-year window is always moving, timing matters. Waiting too long to apply can mean losing eligibility if your earliest qualifying work falls outside the window.
Remember, you must meet CEC eligibility both when you receive your ITA and when you submit your eAPR. Keep careful track of your work history, and plan ahead so your experience still counts when it’s time to apply.
And even if some of your older experience no longer counts for CEC eligibility, it may still strengthen your CRS score, giving you a better shot at receiving an invitation in a future draw.
Canada Abroad is a transparent Canadian immigration consultancy with advice you can trust. Led by Deanne Acres-Lans (RCIC #508363), the team delivers professional, regulated, and efficient service.
Led by Anthony Doherty (RCIC #510956) and Cassandra Fultz (#514356), the Doherty Fultz team uses their 40+ years of experience to empower you towards settling in Canada.
Led by Jenny Perez (RCIC #423103), Perez McKenzie Immigration is a Canadian immigration consultancy based in British Columbia, with offices in Vancouver and Whistler.
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