Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP): Assessing the application against selection criteria

This section contains policy, procedures and guidance used by IRCC staff. It is posted on the department’s website as a courtesy to stakeholders.

IRCC started accepting permanent residence applications under the Atlantic Immigration Program (AIP) on March 6, 2022.

Applicants should be assessed against the pass and fail selection criteria below, based on the information and documents provided in the application. Applicants must meet all of the following criteria to be approved.

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Confirmation of provincial endorsement

An endorsement certificate is issued by an Atlantic province to a candidate they support for permanent residence under the AIP based on

Note: Applicants should submit a copy of the endorsement certificate with their permanent residence application.

Part of the completeness check includes verifying that the applicant applying for permanent residence under the AIP is listed on the encrypted monthly endorsement spreadsheet that the Centralized Intake Office (CIO) in Sydney receives electronically from the provinces.

The provincial endorsement certificate is considered valid as long as the applicant submits a complete application for permanent residence on or before the expiry date of the endorsement, and the province doesn’t revoke the endorsement certificate during the processing of the AIP permanent residence application. All endorsements are valid for 12 months after the date of issuance. While the AIP permanent residence application is in processing, the endorsement certificate can expire. Endorsement extensions are not permitted under the AIP.

When a final decision is made on the application, the endorsement certificate can be expired, but it cannot have been revoked by the province. If the province revokes the endorsement certificate, the processing officer must refuse the application, as the application no longer meets the AIP criteria.

Note: IRCC is responsible for assessing the selection criteria and determining if the applicant meets all the requirements of the program. It also has final selection authority. Officers should not presume that an applicant meets all the requirements of the program based on the endorsement certificate.

Note: The AIP lock-in date refers to the date the province receives a complete application for an endorsement certificate.

Education

Assessing education – applications with a lock-in date on or before November 15, 2022

The applicant must have either

The ECA must be less than 5 years old on the date we receive the application.

Assessing education – applications with a lock-in date on or after November 16, 2022

The applicant must have either

The ECA must be less than 5 years old on the date we receive the application.

Note:

  • If the applicant did not complete their studies in Canada, they will need an ECA to show that their studies are equal to a Canadian secondary or post-secondary certificate, diploma or degree.
  • The assessment outcome stated in the ECA is conclusive evidence that an applicant’s completed foreign educational credentials are equivalent to at least a completed Canadian secondary school educational credential.
  • Equivalency assessments will include an assessment by the designated organization of the authenticity of the applicant’s completed foreign educational credentials. This assessment provided by the designated organization is not conclusive evidence of the authenticity of the foreign educational credentials. If an officer has concerns about the authenticity of an applicant’s foreign educational credentials, they must communicate these concerns to the applicant, afford them an opportunity to respond to those concerns and provide additional information or documentation.

Eligible educational credentials for international graduates

Only certain educational credentials are eligible for international graduates. An educational credential is not eligible if it was obtained in a study or training program where

Note: The educational credential must have been obtained within 24 months of the date on the application for permanent residence.

Official language proficiency

Assessing language proficiency – applications with a lock-in date on or before November 15, 2022

For a job offer at the NOC skill type 0 or skill level A or B, the applicant must provide results from a language test approved by IRCC that shows the applicant meets the minimum criteria for level 5 of the Canadian Language Benchmarks system in English or the Niveaux de compétence linguistique canadiens in French for each of the 4 language skill areas.

For a job offer at the National Occupational Classification (NOC) C skill level, the applicant must provide a language test approved by IRCC that shows the applicant meets the minimum criteria for level 4 of the Canadian Language Benchmarks system in English or the Niveaux de compétence linguistique canadiens in French for each of the 4 language skill areas.

Note: The test results must be less than 2 years old on the date of application. Electronic copies of the test results are acceptable.

Assessing language proficiency – applications with a lock-in date on or after November 16, 2022

For a job offer under Training, Education, Experience and Responsibilities (TEER) 0, TEER 1, TEER 2, or TEER 3 of the NOC, the applicant must provide results from a language test approved by IRCC that shows the applicant meets the minimum criteria for level 5 of the Canadian Language Benchmarks system in English or the Niveaux de compétence linguistique canadiens in French for each of the 4 language skill areas.

For a job offer under TEER 4 of the NOC, the applicant must provide results from a language test approved by IRCC that shows the applicant meets the minimum criteria for level 4 of the Canadian Language Benchmarks system in English or the Niveaux de compétence linguistique canadiens in French for each of the 4 language skill areas.

Note: The test results must be less than 2 years old on the date of application. Electronic copies of the test results are acceptable.

Qualifying work experience

Assessing work experience – applications with a lock-in date on or before November 15, 2022

Candidates who want to apply under the AIP must have accumulated at least 1 year of full-time (or part-time equivalent, meaning at least 1,560 hours) work experience within the last 5 years at one of the following skill levels:

Assessing work experience – applications with a lock-in date on or after November 16, 2022

Candidates who want to apply under the AIP must have accumulated at least 1 year of full-time (or part-time equivalent, meaning at least 1,560 hours) work experience within the last 5 years at one of the following skill levels:

For more information, see National Occupational Classification.

Candidates must have obtained qualifying work experience by

Note: Applicants do not have to be employed at the time they apply.

To calculate the hours, the processing officer should

Note: Full-time work experience means working at least 30 paid hours per week. Candidates can count part-time work toward the work experience requirement as long as they have gained the equivalent amount of experience as someone who worked full-time for at least 1 year (1,560 hours).

Work experience does not need to be continuous to qualify and can be accumulated within the last 5 years. The period of 12 months of required employment cannot include any extended breaks in employment, periods of unemployment, prolonged sick leave or parental leave. However, a reasonable period of vacation time will be counted toward meeting the work experience requirement (for example, a 2-week period of paid vacation leave within a given 52-week period in which the applicant was engaged in qualifying work).

Qualifying international graduates are exempt from work experience requirements

An applicant does not need to meet the work experience requirements if they are an international graduate who

Job offer

Assessing job offers – applications with a lock-in date on or before November 15, 2022

The job offer must meet all of these requirements:

NOC level job offer and qualifying work experience requirement

NOC level job offer Work experience requirement

NOC 0

NOC 0, A, B, C

NOC A

NOC A, B, C

NOC B

NOC B, C

NOC C

NOC C

Assessing job offers – applications with a lock-in date on or after November 16, 2022

The job offer must meet all of these requirements:

Processing officers must assess the following:

TEER category of the job offer and qualifying work experience requirement

TEER category of the job offer Work experience requirement

TEER 0

TEER 0, 1, 2, 3, 4

TEER 1

TEER 1, 2, 3, 4

TEER 2,3

TEER 2, 3, 4

TEER 4

TEER 4

The applicant’s employer must complete an Offer of Employment to a Foreign National [IMM 0157] (PDF, 317 KB) and send the applicant a copy. The applicant must read and sign the declaration at the bottom of the copy and submit it with their application.

Note: If the job offer is permanent, the applicant’s employer must enter “permanent” as the expected duration of employment in box 22 on the Offer of Employment to a Foreign National form [IMM 0157].

When assessing the job offer, the officer can consider that

Employment requirements

Applicants must demonstrate that they meet the relevant employment requirements of the job they are being offered. Relevant employment requirements may include education, training or other qualifications listed in the NOC description, with the exception of Canadian licensing requirements in the case of regulated occupations.

Settlement funds

If you are already working in Canada and authorized to work, you don’t need to show proof of funds.

If an applicant is not already working in Canada with a valid work permit, they must demonstrate that they have sufficient funds available for settlement in Canada at the time of application and when the application is finalized. The funds must be all of the following:

Sufficient funds are determined according to the applicant’s family size (including both accompanying and non-accompanying dependants), using 12.5% of the current low income cut-off (LICO) for urban areas with populations of 500,000 or more.

If the applicant is unable to demonstrate that they have sufficient funds to meet the requirements, officers should refuse the application.

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