Canada’s latest occupation-based Express Entry draw issued 500 Invitations to Apply to senior managers with a minimum Comprehensive Ranking System score of 392. The July 10, 2026 round targeted eligible candidates in NOC codes 00012, 00013, 00014 and 00015.
This was the second Senior managers draw of 2026, the largest draw in this category during the last 12 months and the category’s lowest CRS threshold during that period. Compared with the previous round on March 5, invitations doubled while the cutoff fell by 37 CRS points.
Senior Managers Draw Doubles in Size and Reaches CRS 392
The July 10 draw represents a significant expansion from the first Senior managers round of the year. On March 5, 2026, only 250 invitations were issued at a CRS cutoff of 429. After a 127-day gap, the new round invited 500 candidates, an increase of 100 percent.
At the same time, the required CRS score declined from 429 to 392. The new threshold is 19 points below the rounded 12-month category average of 411.
These results show that IRCC was prepared to reach substantially deeper into the Senior managers candidate pool. The size increase was large enough to overcome both new candidate entries and the pool accumulated during the four-month interval.
The July draw is both the largest Senior managers draw and the lowest Senior managers CRS cutoff recorded in the available 12-month history. Only two category-specific rounds appear in that period, which means this remains a narrowly used and relatively unpredictable Express Entry stream.
What the 117-Day Tie-Break Date Means
The tie-breaking cutoff was March 15, 2026 at 01:46:05 UTC, exactly 117 days before the July 10 draw. This refers to the age of the Express Entry profile at the cutoff, not the age of the candidate. Candidates with a CRS score above 392 were ranked ahead automatically. Among candidates sitting exactly at 392, only those who submitted their profiles before the stated time were invited.
A 117-day tie-break window indicates that the draw did not invite every eligible Senior managers candidate at CRS 392. Some profiles at the same score that were submitted after March 15 likely remained in the pool.
That remaining inventory is important for the next category-specific round. A repeat draw of similar size would not automatically produce another large CRS decrease because IRCC may first need to clear later profiles already sitting at 392, together with new candidates entering above that score.
The broader Express Entry pool reportedly has an average profile age of approximately 11 months. The 117-day category cutoff is considerably more recent, although the two figures measure different aspects of the pool and should not be treated as directly equivalent.
Senior Managers Remain a Small Part of Express Entry Selection
Express Entry issued 97,101 invitations across 38 draws in 2026 through July 10. Senior managers received 750 invitations through two draws, representing only 0.77 percent of all invitations and 5.26 percent of draw rounds.
Canadian Experience Class selection accounted for 43,250 invitations, or 44.54 percent of the year’s total. French-language draws issued 35,500 invitations, representing another 36.56 percent. Together, these two streams accounted for more than four out of every five invitations issued.
Provincial Nominee Program draws were the most frequent, with 13 rounds, but produced a smaller share of invitations because nomination-based draws usually involve fewer candidates than broad program or category rounds.
The small Senior managers allocation confirms that this category should be treated as a targeted opportunity rather than a dependable invitation pathway. Qualified senior executives should remain eligible for every other applicable Express Entry or provincial route instead of relying exclusively on another occupation-based draw.
A separate occupation reference includes roles commonly associated with CEC, trade and provincial selection. Those occupations should not be treated as part of the Senior managers category unless they independently satisfy the applicable category instructions and NOC requirements.
What Is Likely to Happen Next
The 97,101 invitations issued so far equal 78.8 percent of the stated annual planning figure of 123,230, leaving a difference of 26,129 with 174 days remaining in the year.
Measured only as a pacing exercise, that difference equals approximately 150 invitations per remaining day, or about 1,051 invitations per week. Express Entry invitations are issued through irregular draw rounds rather than daily allocations, so the actual pace will continue to fluctuate.
There is also an important legal and policy distinction between invitations and admissions. Federal immigration planning levels generally measure the number of permanent residents expected to be admitted, while an Invitation to Apply begins an application process and does not guarantee admission during the same calendar year. The 78.8 percent figure is therefore a useful draw-volume indicator, not a binding legal quota.
Senior Managers Draws Will Probably Remain Intermittent
Only two Senior managers rounds occurred during the available 12-month period, separated by 127 days. That history does not support an expectation of frequent or regularly scheduled draws.
The broader 2026 pattern continues to favour Canadian Experience Class, French-language and Provincial Nominee Program candidates. Senior managers may receive additional rounds, but this category is likely to remain smaller and less frequent than the leading streams.
CRS May Stabilize Before Falling Further
The movement from 429 to 392 is substantial, but it resulted from a combination of a doubled draw size and a long interval between rounds. The tie-break date confirms that demand still existed at the final cutoff score.
A future Senior managers draw of approximately 500 invitations could keep the score around the current range or produce a modest reduction if the interval is long enough and the eligible pool does not refill quickly. A smaller draw, or a draw held after significant new profile accumulation, could cause the cutoff to remain at 392 or rise.
Another 30-point decline should not be assumed. The current evidence supports a stable to moderately lower outlook, subject to draw size, timing, candidate inflow and any changes to category eligibility.
Draw Clustering May Continue
The July 10 round followed other Express Entry draws held on July 7 and July 9. Three rounds within four days show that IRCC may continue issuing invitations in clusters across different streams rather than following a single predictable schedule.
This approach allows the department to balance program targets, category priorities and provincial nominations. It also makes it risky for candidates to wait for one specific category when other pathways may already be available.
How to Get CRS 392 in a Senior Manager Draw: 3 Sample Profiles with Canadian Experience in NOC 00012, 00013 and 00015
To get exactly CRS 392 in this Senior Manager Draw scenario, an applicant can combine eligible Canadian senior-management experience with education, language results, skill-transferability factors, Canadian study, or spouse points. Under the supplied eligibility criteria, the applicant needs at least one year of qualifying Canadian work experience during the last three years in NOC 00012, NOC 00013, NOC 00014, or NOC 00015. When several candidates have the same CRS score, the date and time their Express Entry profiles were submitted may determine priority under the applicable tie-breaking rule.
Profile 1: Inland Applicant Youssef El Mansouri, Senior Transportation Operations Manager with 3 Years of Canadian Experience, CRS 392
Youssef El Mansouri is a 34-year-old applicant from Morocco who is living and working in Ontario. Before coming to Canada, Youssef gained practical exposure to logistics through his family’s small transportation business, but that informal experience is not being used in his Express Entry calculation because it cannot be documented to the required standard. After arriving in Canada, he completed a one-year Ontario College Certificate in Supply Chain and Operations Management at Seneca Polytechnic. This is his highest assessed post-secondary credential and gives him 90 core education points, together with 15 additional points for Canadian education.
After graduating, Youssef obtained a post-graduation work permit and joined a regional freight and warehousing company. He started in an operational coordination position, moved into terminal management, and was eventually promoted to Senior Manager of Transportation Operations under NOC 00015. His authorized employment now gives him three years of Canadian work experience, including more than one year in an eligible senior-management occupation during the last three years. Those three years provide 64 core CRS points for Canadian experience. His education combined with Canadian experience contributes another 25 transferability points. Youssef also has an older sister who is a Canadian permanent resident living in Mississauga, giving him a further 15 sibling points.
Youssef completed IELTS General Training and received Speaking 6.5 for 23 points, Listening 8.5 for 34 points, Reading 8.0 for 34 points, and Writing 5.5 for 9 points. His language results therefore contribute 100 points. Altogether, Youssef’s CRS 392 comes from age, education, language proficiency, Canadian work experience, transferability, Canadian education, and his sibling in Canada.
Profile 2: Outland Applicant Oliver Bennett, Senior Corporate Communications Director with 3 Years of Previous Canadian Experience, CRS 392
Oliver Bennett is a 39-year-old applicant from the United Kingdom who is currently living outside Canada. He completed a two-year Higher National Diploma in Business and Marketing before building a career in corporate communications and digital media. His credential gives him 98 education points. Oliver has accumulated two years of qualifying foreign work experience, including his current role directing corporate communications for a medium-sized British business-services company.
Oliver previously lived in Canada under two forms of temporary work authorization. He initially entered through a working holiday program and later remained with his Canadian employer under a positive Labour Market Impact Assessment-supported work permit. During that period, he completed three years of authorized Canadian skilled work, progressing from communications manager to Senior Director of Corporate Communications under NOC 00012. His final year in the senior-director position falls within the three-year period used for the supplied draw criteria, even though he has since returned to the United Kingdom. His Canadian experience contributes 64 core points. His education and language combination provides 13 transferability points, education combined with Canadian experience provides 25 points, foreign experience combined with language provides 13 points, and foreign experience combined with Canadian experience provides another 25 points. His total transferability score is therefore 76 points.
Oliver completed PTE Core and obtained Speaking 72 for 17 points, Listening 85 for 31 points, Reading 89 for 34 points, and Writing 74 for 17 points. These results contribute 99 language points. Together with 55 age points, Oliver reaches CRS 392 without Canadian education points, a sibling bonus, or a provincial nomination.
Profile 3: Couple Applicant Maria Santos, Executive Director of Community Services with Canadian Education and Spouse Points, CRS 392
Maria Santos is a 35-year-old applicant from the Philippines who is applying with her husband, Paolo. Before coming to Canada, Maria accumulated two years of qualifying foreign experience in community-program administration. She later completed a two-year Social Service Worker diploma at George Brown College in Toronto, giving her 91 core education points and 15 additional points for Canadian education.
Following graduation, Maria received a post-graduation work permit and joined a community organization supporting newcomers, seniors, and low-income families. Based on her previous program-management experience and Canadian training, she was appointed Executive Director of Community Services under NOC 00013. She has now completed one full year of authorized Canadian work experience, which gives her 35 core points and satisfies the supplied senior-manager draw requirement. Her education combined with language proficiency contributes 13 transferability points, education combined with Canadian experience contributes 13 points, foreign experience combined with language contributes 13 points, and foreign experience combined with Canadian experience contributes 13 points. Her total transferability score is 52 points.
Maria completed IELTS General Training with Speaking 8.0 for 32 points, Listening 9.0 for 32 points, Reading 8.5 for 32 points, and Writing 6.5 for 22 points. Her language results contribute 118 points. Paolo completed secondary school and has one year of Canadian work experience, providing 2 spouse education points and 5 spouse Canadian-experience points. His IELTS General Training results are Speaking 5.5, Listening 5.5, Reading 5.0, and Writing 5.5, contributing one spouse point for each ability and four language points in total. Maria therefore receives 11 spouse-related points.
CRS Breakdown of Maria: Age (70) | Education (91) | Language (118) | Canadian Experience (35) | Transferability (52) | Spouse (11) | Additional Points (15) | Total CRS (392)
How These Senior Manager Candidates Could Improve Their CRS Scores
Improving Education and Canadian Education Points
Education provides substantial room for improvement in all three cases. Youssef currently has 90 education points, compared with the supplied maximum of 150, leaving theoretical room for 60 additional core points. Completing another qualifying credential could move him into the two-or-more-credentials category, while a bachelor’s or advanced degree could produce a larger increase. Because his existing Canadian program is only one year, completing an eligible Canadian program of at least three years could also potentially increase his Canadian education bonus from 15 to 30 points, an improvement of 15 additional points.
Oliver has 98 education points and a supplied maximum of 150, leaving potential room for 52 additional points. Obtaining a bachelor’s degree or advanced credential and securing an educational credential assessment where required could strengthen both his core education score and his education-based transferability combinations.
Maria has 91 education points, compared with a maximum of 140 for a candidate applying with a spouse, leaving potential room for 49 additional core points. A bachelor’s, professional, or graduate-level credential could improve her core education score. An eligible Canadian credential of three years or longer could also potentially increase her Canadian education bonus by 15 points, from 15 to 30.
Improving Language Results
Youssef’s listening and reading are already at the supplied maximum, but his speaking can rise from 23 to 34 points, a potential improvement of 11 points. His writing can rise from 9 to 34 points, creating another potential increase of 25 points. His stated language-score headroom is therefore 36 core points, with writing representing his most important immediate opportunity.
Oliver can increase speaking from 17 to 34 points, adding as much as 17 points. Listening can rise from 31 to 34 points, adding 3 points, while writing can rise from 17 to 34 points, adding another 17 points. His combined stated language-score headroom is 37 points.
Maria’s speaking, listening, and reading are already at their supplied maximums. Her writing can rise from 22 to 32 points, leaving room for 10 additional core points. A stronger writing result could also support higher transferability points if the improved result moves her into a more favourable education or foreign-experience combination.
Increasing Canadian Work Experience
Youssef and Oliver each have 64 Canadian-experience points, compared with a supplied maximum of 80. Each therefore has theoretical room for 16 additional core points through more qualifying Canadian employment.
Maria currently receives 35 Canadian-experience points, compared with a maximum of 70 for a candidate applying with a spouse. Additional authorized Canadian work could therefore create as much as 35 points of core improvement. It could also increase her education-with-Canadian-experience and foreign-experience-with-Canadian-experience combinations.
For this senior-manager selection scenario, candidates should also protect their category eligibility by maintaining clear evidence that at least one year of their recent Canadian employment was performed in an eligible senior-management occupation. Employment letters should accurately describe duties, dates, hours, compensation, and the organizational level of the position.
Maximizing Skill Transferability
Skill-transferability points are awarded through combinations of education, language proficiency, foreign experience, Canadian experience, and certain trade qualifications, but the combined transferability score cannot exceed 100 points.
Youssef currently has 25 transferability points, leaving room for as much as 75 additional points. His strongest route would likely involve improving his education and writing result, followed by acquiring documented qualifying foreign experience where applicable.
Oliver already has 76 transferability points, so his remaining headroom is 24 points. Stronger speaking and writing results could improve the education-with-language and foreign-experience-with-language combinations. Additional qualifying foreign experience may also help if it moves him into a higher experience category.
Maria has 52 transferability points, leaving room for 48 additional points. Her score could rise through a higher educational credential, stronger writing performance, and additional Canadian or foreign skilled experience. Because several improvements affect both core factors and transferability combinations, applicants should recalculate the full CRS rather than simply adding every theoretical increase together.
Provincial Nomination and Other Additional Points
A qualifying provincial nomination provides 600 additional CRS points in the supplied maximums and would create the largest possible increase for each candidate. Youssef, Oliver, or Maria could therefore move from CRS 392 to CRS 992 before considering any other changes, provided the nomination is linked to Express Entry and accepted in the candidate’s profile.
Youssef already receives 15 points for Canadian education and 15 points for his sibling, while Maria receives 15 points for Canadian education. Oliver does not receive additional points in the present scenario, making a provincial nomination especially significant for his profile. Provincial eligibility depends on the candidate’s occupation, work location, employer, language results, settlement intentions, and the criteria in effect when the province issues an invitation.
Citation
"Express Entry Senior Managers Draw Invites 500 Candidates as CRS Falls to 392." RED Immigration Consulting. Published July 10, 2026. https://redim.ca/express-entry-senior-managers-draw-invites-500-candidates-as-crs-falls-to-392/
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