You earned your degree through years of study and significant financial investment. In your home country, it opened professional doors and established your credibility.
In Canadian immigration, that same degree needs to go through a formal assessment process before it counts — and depending on how it is assessed, it can either strengthen your application significantly or contribute less than you expected.
Understanding how education credentials work in the immigration system is how you make sure your qualification does everything it can for your application.
The Comprehensive Ranking System awards points for education — and the level of your credential directly determines how many points you receive.
General point hierarchy from highest to lowest:
The difference in CRS points between a one-year diploma and a master's degree is significant. If you have multiple credentials, the combination can also earn additional points beyond either credential alone.
If your education was completed outside Canada, your foreign credential needs to be formally assessed before it can be claimed in your Express Entry profile.
An Educational Credential Assessment, or ECA, is conducted by a designated organization — World Education Services is the most widely used — and compares your foreign degree to its Canadian equivalent.
What the ECA determines:
What it does not do:
Without a valid ECA, you cannot claim your foreign education in Express Entry. Without claiming your education, you leave significant CRS points on the table.
ECA processing times vary by organization and credential type — but they are rarely fast.
World Education Services typically takes several weeks to several months depending on the credential and the complexity of the assessment. Some credentials from certain countries require additional documentation and take longer.
The practical implication:
Start your ECA application as early as possible — ideally six months or more before you plan to submit your immigration application. Do not wait until your language score is back or your profile is nearly ready. The ECA process runs in parallel with everything else, not after it.
If you studied in Canada, your educational credential assessment is not required. A Canadian degree is accepted directly in your Express Entry profile at face value.
Beyond eliminating the ECA requirement, Canadian education earns higher CRS points than an equivalent foreign credential assessed at the same level.
A Canadian master's degree produces more points than a foreign master's degree assessed as equivalent. A Canadian bachelor's degree similarly outscores its foreign equivalent in the CRS.
This is one of the most significant immigration advantages that international students accumulate — often without fully realizing it.
If you hold more than one post-secondary credential, both can be claimed in your Express Entry profile — and the combination may earn additional points.
This matters most when:
Have all credentials assessed where required. Do not assume that only your highest credential matters — the combination factor can add meaningful points to your profile.
If your credential is in a regulated profession — medicine, nursing, engineering, law, teaching, or accounting — your ECA is the beginning of a longer process, not the end of it.
Canadian provinces regulate these professions independently. Your foreign credential and your ECA result do not authorize you to practice. You need to go through the provincial regulatory body for your profession — which involves its own assessment, bridging programs, and in many cases additional exams or supervised practice requirements.
Run both processes simultaneously. Start your ECA for immigration purposes and contact your provincial regulatory body for credential recognition purposes at the same time. The two processes serve different purposes and do not replace each other.
Sometimes an ECA result comes back lower than anticipated — a foreign master's degree assessed as a bachelor's equivalent, for example, or a professional degree assessed at a lower level due to program length or curriculum differences.
An ECA result you disagree with is frustrating. But working with the actual result — and understanding its impact on your CRS score — is always better than building a profile around a credential level that has not been formally recognized.
For applicants who are still in the planning stage of their immigration journey, the education decision is also an immigration decision.
A Canadian credential — even a two-year diploma from a Canadian college — eliminates the ECA requirement, earns higher CRS points, provides access to the Post-Graduation Work Permit, opens provincial graduate nominee streams, and builds employer familiarity and network connections.
For applicants with the flexibility and resources to study in Canada before applying for permanent residence, the immigration return on that educational investment is substantial.
A Canadian degree does not just open career doors. In the immigration system, it is one of the most valuable documents you can hold.
1. Which ECA organization should I use for Express Entry?
IRCC designates several organizations — World Education Services, Comparative Education Service, International Credential Assessment Service, and others. Check the current IRCC list of designated organizations before choosing — not all organizations are accepted for all programs.
2. My ECA came back lower than my actual credential level. Can I appeal?
Most ECA organizations have a review or appeal process. You can submit additional documentation to support a higher assessment. Check the specific organization's review policy and timeline before deciding whether to pursue this.
3. Does my professional certification — CPA, PMP, CFA — count as an educational credential in Express Entry?
Professional certifications are generally not counted as educational credentials in Express Entry. They may strengthen your overall profile and employer interest but do not add education points the way academic degrees and diplomas do.
4. How long is an ECA valid for?
ECA results do not expire for Express Entry purposes — unlike language scores. However, if you are applying to specific provincial nominee programs, check whether those programs have their own ECA recency requirements.
5. I have a PhD from a foreign university. Does it automatically earn the highest education points?
A foreign doctoral degree assessed as equivalent to a Canadian PhD through an approved ECA earns the highest education points available in Express Entry. The ECA is still required — the degree level alone without a formal assessment does not count in your profile.
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