earnest blog feature

How IRCC Counts Work Experience for Express Entry

Working more hours does not always mean IRCC will count more hours toward your permanent residence eligibility. For Express Entry, the rules on what counts — and what doesn’t — are stricter than most applicants assume. A single miscalculation can trigger delays, additional document requests, or credibility concerns at the e-APR stage.

This guide breaks down exactly how Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) measures work experience across the three Express Entry programs, the 30-hour weekly cap, and a recent rule change that affects category-based draws in 2026.

The 30-Hour Rule: Why Overtime Doesn’t Help

For Express Entry program eligibility, IRCC measures work experience in hours — not calendar days or job titles. One year of full-time work is defined as 1,560 hours, calculated as 30 hours per week over 52 weeks.

The critical point: IRCC caps countable work at 30 hours per week. If you work 50 or 60 hours in a week, only 30 of those hours count toward your eligible experience. Extra hours do not accumulate faster and cannot compensate for a shorter overall employment period.

In practice, this means a candidate working 50-hour weeks for 12 months has the same eligible experience as one working 30-hour weeks for 12 months — one year. The cap applies to both Canadian and foreign work experience.

How the 1,560 Hours Can Be Met

  • Full-time, one job: up to 30 hours/week for 12 months = 1 year (1,560 hours)
  • Full-time, multiple jobs: 30 hours/week across more than one employer for 12 months = 1 year
  • Part-time equivalent: e.g., 15 hours/week for 24 months = 1 year full-time equivalent

CEC vs. FSWP vs. FSTP: Know Your Program

The three programs managed under Express Entry have different work experience definitions and look-back windows. Confusing them is one of the most common eligibility errors.

ProgramWork Experience RequiredLook-Back Window
CEC1 year (1,560 hrs) of skilled work in Canada, TEER 0/1/2/3, while authorized to workLast 3 years before applying
FSWP1 year (1,560 hrs) continuous skilled work, in Canada or abroad; min. 67 FSWP pointsLast 10 years before applying
FSTP2 years (3,120 hrs) of skilled trades work, in Canada or abroadLast 5 years before applying

CEC = Canadian Experience Class   |   FSWP = Federal Skilled Worker Program   |   FSTP = Federal Skilled Trades Program   |   IRCC = Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada

Important for CEC: the work must have been performed while you were physically in Canada and working for a Canadian employer. Remote work for a Canadian company while living abroad, and self-employment, do not count toward CEC. Work experience gained while you were a full-time student also does not count toward the CEC minimum.

2026 Update: Category-Based Draws Now Require 12 Months

Effective February 18, 2026, IRCC changed the work experience requirement for category-based selection draws (e.g., Healthcare, STEM, Education, Trades, French-language). Two changes matter:

1.    The minimum requirement doubled from 6 months to 12 months of full-time (or part-time equivalent) work experience in a single eligible occupation.

2.    The continuity requirement was removed — the 12 months can now be accumulated across multiple jobs or contracts in the same NOC, with gaps permitted, as long as all hours fall within the relevant look-back window.

The 30-hour weekly cap still applies. Hours worked in excess of 30 per week do not count as additional experience for category eligibility.

Before You Submit: A Pre-Profile Checklist

  • Confirm which program your experience qualifies under (CEC, FSWP, or FSTP)
  • Calculate hours correctly — cap each week at 30, sum the capped weekly hours
  • Verify your experience falls within the program’s look-back window
  • Match your real duties to the correct NOC — IRCC checks the lead statement and main duties, not your job title
  • Ensure employment reference letters (on company letterhead) confirm title, NOC, hours, salary, and dates
  • Keep pay stubs and tax records that support every hour you claim

Get Your Work Experience Assessed by an RCIC

A small miscalculation in your work hours can cost you an ITA. At Earnest Immigration, our RCIC-licensed (Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant) team reviews your job duties, NOC classification, and hours before you create your Express Entry profile — so your application stands up to IRCC scrutiny.

Explore our Express Entry services, review your PNP eligibility options, or contact our consultants today for a personalized eligibility assessment.

Have Any Question?

Any question about Canadian immigration? We’re here to help.

TR to PR Pathways in Canada

Get Comprehensive Information

Close the CTA