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Updated

IRCC draw data verified through June 27, 2026. Latest tracked round: Healthcare and Social Services Occupations #422 on Jun 25, 2026.

Methodology

How the site handles draws, updates, and public guidance

The site starts with official information, then adds visual summaries and plain-language explanations to make it easier to use.

Primary source

IRCC and Canada.ca pages

Use case

Tracking and public guidance

Not a substitute

Legal or regulated advice

Draw and news data

Latest rounds, notices, and news references are taken from official government sources where possible. The site then turns that information into shorter cards, stream pages, and summary sections so key changes are easier to understand quickly.

CRS guide and explanations

The CRS tool is designed to stay aligned with the official IRCC structure, but it is still a general information tool. Users should verify final results against official calculators and program instructions before relying on them for submissions.

Search and AI previews

Search tries to open an existing site page first. If no page is close enough, AI writes a short starting point that should be checked against the official source before any high-stakes decision is made.

Country pages and review dates

Each country page brings the main visa options, practical checks, and official links into one view. The “Last reviewed” date shows when the page was last checked by the site, not when every rule was formally republished by the government on that exact day.

Email alerts and notifications

Email alerts are meant to tell you quickly when a new official Express Entry round is published. They are still an information service, so every alert should be checked against the official source before you act on it.

Update and review frequency

The most sensitive pages, such as draw pages, alerts, and some country hubs, are reviewed more often than slower-moving reference pages. The exact cadence depends on the content type: draw pages can move quickly, while background pages usually change more slowly.

How errors are corrected

When a credible error is flagged, the right sequence is to return to the official source, reread the underlying text, correct the affected page, and then reflect that review in the page context. The goal is not to hide corrections. It is to reduce how long a wrong detail stays visible.

What happens when official pages change structure

If IRCC or another authority significantly changes the structure of a page, PDF, or visa table, the site may temporarily fall back to broader links or a less detailed interpretation until the source is reviewed again. In those moments, the priority is honesty about certainty levels rather than pretending the site still has precision it no longer has.

What “Last reviewed” means

The review date marks when that page was last checked by the site. It does not mean every threshold, tuition figure, or visa rule was manually republished on that same day.

What the site does not cover

The site does not replace case-specific file review, legal advice, a lawyer, or a regulated consultant. Refusals, criminality, medical issues, employment disputes, and complex dependent options should always be checked directly with a qualified professional or the official authority.

How to use the site well

Start on the homepage or draw pages for the newest activity, then use score pages and country guides for more detail. If you are making a time-sensitive or high-stakes decision, go back to the underlying official page linked from the relevant section.

Helpful next pages: draw pages, CRS page, and Canada page.

For a high-stakes decision, always cross-check three things: the official source page, the last reviewed date, and the exact conditions of your visa option such as score, salary, language, study path, employer, or province. The more sensitive the decision, the closer you should stay to the official source.