Realistic strategies without myths
If you’ve checked your CRS score and your first thought was, “That’s… not enough,” you’re not alone.
What I don’t want you to do is spiral into internet advice that sounds like a shortcut. Because most “quick fixes” fall into one of two categories:
- not accurate, or
- technically possible, but not realistic for your timeline, budget, or situation.
So let’s ground this in a real strategy.
First: A “Good CRS” isn’t a fixed number
Express Entry invitations move based on IRCC’s rounds of invitations and what kinds of rounds are happening (general, program-specific, category-based).
That’s why one person’s “low” score can be workable in a different context and why planning matters more than comparing yourself to screenshots online.
Second: The myth of a Job Offer for points
As of March 25, 2025, IRCC removed CRS points for job offers for current and future candidates in the Express Entry pool.
So if someone is still selling you the idea that a job offer is the magic CRS booster, they’re working off outdated information.
Don’t get me wrong, a job offer can still matter for other reasons like:
-eligibility in certain programs,
-the proof of funds requirement if invited under FSW,
-or provincial pathways
but it’s not the CRS “boost button” it used to be.
If you have a job offer, you might have some other work permit pathways available for you to wait for your ITA while still in Canada, but this will depend on the specific job offer you have and your profile.
A realistic plan when your CRS isn’t where you want it
Step 1: Make sure your CRS score is correct
This sounds obvious, but I regularly see profiles that are “low” because something was entered wrong.
Double-check:
- your language scores (and test dates)
- your education (and whether an ECA is needed/entered correctly)
- your work history (dates, full-time equivalency, and accurate NOC/TEER)
- spouse factors (if applicable)
Even small errors can cost real points because CRS is very structured.
Step 2: Focus on the biggest point movers first
If you want the highest return on effort, these are usually the levers that matter most:
Language results (English and/or French).Language affects multiple parts of CRS, not just one line item, which is why improving results can be one of the most powerful strategies.
Spouse factors (if you have an accompanying spouse/partner).Sometimes the “best” move is shifting whose education or language results are emphasized, depending on your family profile. CRS explicitly includes spouse/common-law partner factors.
Education and skill transferability.Depending on your combination of education + language + work experience, points can stack differently. (This is exactly why copy-pasting someone else’s strategy often fails.)
Step 3: Don’t ignore category-based selection
Category-based selection exists to invite candidates who meet specific categories set by the Minister.
This matters because some category-based rounds can have (usually) lower CRS cutoffs than, for example, draws for Canadian Experience Class.
The practical takeaway: if your work experience or language ability aligns with an active category, your strategy might be less about “chasing 520” and more about positioning correctly and staying eligible.
Step 4: Consider a provincial nomination as a separate lane
A provincial nomination can dramatically change your ranking in Express Entry because it adds significant additional CRS points.
That doesn’t mean it’s easy (it isn’t), but it does mean that for many people, the most realistic plan is not “raise CRS forever,” it’s to build a PNP strategy that matches their province, job, and timeline.
The part nobody likes hearing (but it helps)
Sometimes the strategy isn’t “increase CRS this month.” Sometimes, you need to find a way to ride this wave while you wait for your opportunity to show itself.
This may mean focusing on:
- protecting your temporary status
- keep building Canadian experience
- improving language results
- keeping your profile accurate and active
- aligning your work experience with a category or a PNP stream
Express Entry is not a single finish line. It’s a system with multiple doors, and your job is to walk toward the door you can realistically open.
Closing thought
If your CRS score isn’t where you want it, that doesn’t automatically mean you’re stuck. It means you need a plan that’s built on actual CRS rules, not internet myths.
If you want a realistic strategy (and an honest answer about what’s worth your time), book a consultation and we’ll map out the strongest options together based on your profile, your timeline, and the rules that apply right now.
