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TEMPORARY TO PERMANENT

TR to PR Pathway

Transitioning from a temporary resident status (student, worker, visitor) to permanent residence. Most common pathway is study permit → PGWP → CEC.

"TR to PR" (Temporary Resident to Permanent Resident) is the most common pathway to Canadian permanent residence in 2026. Over 60% of new PRs first held temporary status — as students, workers, or family members of Canadian residents.

What is TR to PR?

TR to PR isn't a single program — it's a strategy. You enter Canada on a temporary permit (study, work, or visitor), build qualifying experience, education, or family ties, then transition to permanent residence through whichever federal or provincial program fits your profile.

The 4 most common TR-to-PR pathways

PathwayTypical timelineWho it fits
Study Permit → PGWP → CEC3–5 years totalInternational students at DLIs
Work Permit → CEC or PNP2–4 years totalForeign workers (LMIA or LMIA-exempt)
Spousal Open Work Permit → Spousal Sponsorship1.5–3 years totalSpouses of Canadian PRs/citizens
Visitor Visa → in-Canada PR (rare)VariesSpouses of Canadians (inland sponsorship), refugee claimants

Pathway 1: International Student → PGWP → PR (most popular)

  1. Apply for a study permit at a Designated Learning Institution (DLI). Programs must be 2+ years to qualify for a 3-year PGWP.
  2. Study in Canada — full-time, in good academic standing. Off-campus work allowed 20 hrs/week during term, full-time on breaks.
  3. Graduate. Receive your transcript and completion letter.
  4. Apply for a Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP). Valid for 1–3 years depending on program length. Open work permit — no employer needed.
  5. Work in Canada for 12+ months in a TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 occupation. Track hours carefully.
  6. Apply for PR through Canadian Experience Class (Express Entry). No proof of funds needed; CEC draws have the lowest CRS cutoffs (typically 509–533).

Pathway 2: Foreign Worker → CEC or PNP

If you're working in Canada on a closed (employer-specific) or open work permit:

  • 12+ months on Canadian payroll in a skilled occupation → eligible for CEC
  • Job in a province's in-demand occupation → eligible for that province's PNP (often faster than CEC if PNP-linked)
  • Working in Atlantic Canada with a designated employer → eligible for AIP
  • Working in a rural community → eligible for the Rural Community Immigration Pilot (RCIP)

Pathway 3: Spousal Open Work Permit (SOWP)

If your spouse is a Canadian work or study permit holder, you may qualify for a SOWP:

  • Spouse holds TEER 0 or TEER 1 work permit → SOWP available
  • Spouse is a student in master's, doctoral, or select professional programs → SOWP available (changed Jan 2025)
  • Hold SOWP, work 12+ months → eligible for CEC

See our dedicated Spousal Work Permit page for the post-2025 eligibility rules.

CRS boosting while you're here

The biggest mistake TR-to-PR candidates make is not optimizing their CRS during their temporary stay. Things that boost CRS while you're in Canada:

  • Improve language test scores — go from CLB 7 → CLB 9 adds 22+ points per skill
  • Add French as a second language at CLB 7 → 25 bonus points
  • Complete a 1-year Canadian credential while working → 30 points
  • Stay in skilled work past 12 months — at 24+ months, +17 points
  • Get a provincial nomination — 600 CRS bonus = effective ITA guarantee

Common mistakes (and how to avoid them)

  • Letting status lapse — once your study/work permit expires, you have 90 days to "restore status" or face removal. Don't miss this window.
  • Working outside permit conditions — exceeds-hours work or unauthorized employment = misrepresentation risk on future PR application
  • Wrong NOC on employer letter — make sure your employer letter accurately describes duties matching the claimed NOC at 51%+
  • Quitting too soon — leave a CEC-qualifying job before 12 months and your work doesn't count
  • Failing to plan for spouse — your spouse's language, education, and Canadian experience can add 10–20 CRS points

Useful official resources

Working with us: The most expensive mistakes in TR-to-PR are usually made early — wrong study permit choice, lapsed status, wrong NOC. Our RCICs build a multi-year strategy from day 1. Book a free TR-to-PR strategy session.

At a glance
• Most common: Study → PGWP → CEC\n• Other paths: LMIA → PNP, spousal, AIP\n• Timeline: typically 3-5 years total\n• Strong fit for ambitious international students\n• Build CRS through Canadian experience
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