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Immigration
By Freya Devlin
Posted on November 28, 2025
Get results as they happen – plus expert insights on what it means for your chances, straight to your inbox.
The November 28 French-language draw invited 6,000 candidates with a CRS cut-off of 408, making it one of the largest category-based draws we’ve seen this year. Today’s draw comes in at the same size as the October 29 round, keeping French-language draws among the biggest category-based selections this year.
When you look at the pattern, the trend becomes pretty obvious. The most recent French draws this year invited:
Today’s cut-off of 408 is the lowest French score since March, when a huge round invited 7,500 candidates at CRS 379. While we’re not quite back to March’s dramatic low, 408 is still a meaningful drop, lower than the last two French rounds (416 and 432) and well below September’s 446, creating real movement at the lower end of the competitive French-speaking pool and delivering the kind of shift many candidates have been waiting for.
The timing of today’s draw is interesting. Just yesterday, IRCC announced a $3.6 million investment in Francophone communities through the Francophone Immigration Support Program (FISP). The message was clear that Canada wants to grow its French-speaking population outside Quebec, support minority communities, and respond to labour shortages in sectors like healthcare, early childhood, and education.
IRCC also reaffirmed its future targets for French-speaking permanent residents outside Quebec:
If you were wondering whether category-based French draws were going to slow down, today is your answer. The policy direction and draw patterns are clearly aligned.
French-language draws continue to be one of the largest category-based rounds in Express Entry, often ranging from 4,500 to 7,500 invitations (with one draw at 2,500 ITAs issued). By comparison:
In terms of size and impact, French-language draws continue to shape the mid-range CRS distribution in a big way, especially in the 380–450 band.
A cut-off of 408 offers meaningful hope to French-speaking candidates sitting anywhere from the high 300s to low 400s. With Canada’s renewed emphasis on French-language immigration and the multi-year funding commitments announced yesterday, we’re likely to see:
French-speaking candidates with strong work experience, Canadian ties, or a competitive education profile may want to update their Express Entry profiles.
For more information:
Use our online Express Entry CRS calculator to learn more about your current score and how to improve it.
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