Last updated on: March 16, 2026

Federal Skilled Trades Program (FSTP) Guide for Skilled Tradespeople

The Federal Skilled Trades Program is Canada’s main Express Entry path for tradespeople who want permanent residence. It was built for hands on workers like welders, electricians, plumbers, cooks, and mechanics. You do not need a degree to qualify, but you do need trade experience, language results, and either a job offer or a certificate.

This program works whether you are outside Canada or already here on a work permit. The language scores needed are also lower than most other Canadian immigration programs. That makes it a strong option for many skilled workers.

Trade experience, a job offer or certificate, and a language test — that is your path to permanent residence.


Where FSTP fits inside Express Entry

Express Entry is a system, not one program. It has three streams in one pool: FSWP, CEC, and the Federal Skilled Trades Program. All candidates are ranked with the CRS score, and higher scores get invited first.

This matters because IRCC can run category based draws that target trade workers. Those draws can pull tradespeople from the pool with lower cut offs than general draws. A trade draw can turn a mid range CRS score into a faster invitation.


Federal Skilled Trades Program vs FSWP vs CEC (What’s Different?)

FSTP stands out from the other two Express Entry streams in clear ways. The table below highlights the key differences at a glance. Keep these differences in mind as you decide which stream fits your situation best.

Requirement FSTP FSWP CEC
Education required? No Yes (minimum high school) No
Minimum language (CLB) CLB 5 (speaking/listening)
CLB 4 (reading/writing)
CLB 7 (all abilities) CLB 7 (TEER 0/1) or CLB 5 (TEER 2/3)
Work experience needed 2 years in an eligible trade 1 year in skilled work 1 year of Canadian experience
Job offer or certificate required? Yes — one or the other No No
Must have Canadian experience? No No Yes

Am I eligible? Federal Skilled Trades Program requirements

This section walks you through each FSTP eligibility requirement in order. Think of it as a series of gates. You must pass through every single gate to qualify. If you fail any step, FSTP is not the right program for you — but other Canadian immigration options may still be open.

Step 1: Is your job in an eligible skilled trade group?

Your trade must fall into one of the NOC groups listed below. If your trade is not on this list, you cannot use FSTP. This is the first gate — and it stops many applicants before they go any further.

Eligible NOC groups (Skilled trades NOC codes):

  • Major Group 72 (industrial, electrical, and construction trades) — excluding Sub-Major Group 726
  • Major Group 73 (maintenance and equipment operation trades)
  • Major Group 82 (supervisors and technical jobs in natural resources, agriculture, and related production)
  • Major Group 83 (occupations in natural resources and related production)
  • Major Group 92 (processing, manufacturing, and utilities supervisors and central control operators)
  • Major Group 93 (central control and process operators and aircraft assembly assemblers and inspectors) — excluding Sub-Major Group 932
  • Minor Group 6320 (cooks)
  • Unit Group 62200 (chefs)

Step 2: Do you meet the 2 year rule and the timing window?

  • Add up paid hours from your trade work.
  • You need 3,120 hours minimum.
  • Only 30 hours per week counts as full time.
  • Your 2 years must be within the last 5 years.

Step 3: Do you have a job offer OR a certificate of qualification?

  • If you have a valid job offer, you can meet the requirement that way.
  • If you have a certificate of qualification, you can meet it that way.

Step 4: Do you meet the minimum CLB scores?

  • CLB 5 speaking and listening.
  • CLB 4 reading and writing.

Step 5: Do you need proof of funds?

  • Most applicants need proof of funds.
  • You may be exempt if you have a valid job offer and can work in Canada. As of 2026, a single applicant needs roughly CAD $15,263.

Step 6: Do you pass basic admissibility checks?

You must pass medical and police checks after you get an ITA.


Job offer vs certificate of qualification Canada: which route is realistic?

Both routes can work, but the best choice depends on where you live and how fast you can act.

Factor Job Offer Route Certificate Route
Best for Applicants outside Canada Applicants already in Canada
Typical timeline 5–10 months (finding offer + LMIA) 7–15 months (assessment + exam)
Feasibility from outside Canada Difficult but possible Very difficult (often requires travel or employer sponsorship)
Dependency on employer High (tied to one employer) None (once certified, you can work for any employer)
Proof of funds required? No (if you have a valid job offer and are authorized to work in Canada) Yes
Main advantage No need to obtain provincial certification before applying Full control — not dependent on one employer
Main risk Employer can rescind offer before you get PR Long timeline; may require physical presence in Canada
Cost $0 to you (employer pays LMIA fees) $500–$2,000+ (assessment, exam, translations, travel)
Scam risk High (many fake job offers targeting FSTP applicants) Low (provincial authorities are legitimate)
Best if your trade is not regulated in your province Your only option Not available (certificate does not exist for unregulated trades)

Certificate of Qualification roadmap

Regulated vs non-regulated trades (why the province matters)

Canada does not regulate trades at the federal level. Each province and territory decides which trades require certification and which do not. This means your trade might be regulated in one province but not in another.

What "regulated" means: A regulated trade requires a certificate of qualification to work legally in that province. You cannot practice that trade without passing a certification exam and meeting all provincial requirements.

What "non-regulated" means: A non-regulated trade does not require any official certification. You can work in that trade based on your skills and experience alone. No exam or certificate is needed.

Why this matters for FSTP: If your trade is not regulated in your target province, you cannot get a certificate there — because the province does not issue certificates for that trade. Your only FSTP option is the job offer route.

Example:

  • Welders are regulated in Alberta. You need a certificate to work as a welder in Alberta.
  • Welders are not regulated in Ontario. You do not need a certificate to work as a welder in Ontario.
  • If you plan to live in Ontario and your trade is welding, you cannot use the certificate route. The certificate does not exist for welders in Ontario. You must secure a job offer instead.

"Red Seal" explained (when it helps and when it doesn't)

The Red Seal Program is a national standard for skilled trades in Canada. It allows tradespeople certified in one province to work in other provinces without retaking exams. But it only applies to certain trades — not all.

What Red Seal is: Red Seal is a certification mark that appears on your certificate of qualification if you pass the Red Seal exam. The exam tests your knowledge against national standards. If you pass, your certificate is recognized across Canada.

Which trades are Red Seal trades: About 60 trades are part of the Red Seal program. Common examples include:

  • Electricians
  • Plumbers
  • Welders
  • Carpenters
  • Heavy equipment operators
  • Automotive service technicians
  • Industrial mechanics (millwrights)
  • Refrigeration and air conditioning mechanics

Check the Red Seal website for the full list of designated trades.

When Red Seal helps:

  • You can work in any province or territory without retaking exams (as long as your trade is regulated there).
  • It proves you meet national standards, which makes you more attractive to employers.
  • It simplifies the certification process if you move between provinces.

When Red Seal doesn't help:

  • If your trade is not a Red Seal trade, the program does not apply to you.
  • If your trade is not regulated in your target province, having a Red Seal certificate from another province does not change anything. You still do not need a certificate to work there.

For FSTP purposes: A Red Seal certificate meets the certificate of qualification requirement for FSTP. If you obtain a Red Seal certificate in one province, you can use it to qualify for FSTP — even if you plan to settle in a different province.

Typical steps in a trade assessment

Most certificate paths follow the same pattern:

  1. Apply for an equivalency or trade qualifier assessment.
  2. Upload documents and certified translations if needed.
  3. Wait for an assessment decision.
  4. Book the exam after approval.
  5. Write the exam, and sometimes a practical test.
  6. Receive the certificate after you pass.

Can you start while outside Canada?

Often you can start the file from outside Canada:

  • Submit the assessment application.
  • Upload documents and pay fees.
  • Receive the decision.

What usually needs travel:

  • Most exams are in person.
  • Practical tests are in person.

Province by province checklist: what to verify

Use this as a fast research checklist before you commit:

  • Confirm your trade is regulated in that province.
  • Confirm which steps need in person presence.
  • Confirm exam format and wait times.
  • Confirm what proof of experience they accept.
  • Confirm what happens if your trade is not listed.

Category-based trade draws vs FSTP eligibility

Category draws can invite candidates from the Express Entry pool if they meet the category rules. Category-based trade draws are not the same as FSTP eligibility.

  • FSTP eligibility needs 2 years experience and offer or certificate.
  • To qualify for a trade draw, you need 6 months of continuous work experience in that specific trade within the last 3 years.

IRCC targets specific trades (like carpentry and plumbing) based on labour market needs. Always check the latest draw categories on the IRCC website.


Step by step: Express Entry skilled trades PR Process

FSTP runs through Express Entry. The steps are simple, but timing can vary. Start early, because tests and papers take time.

  1. Confirm your NOC and TEER: Match your trade duties to the right NOC.
  2. Check FSTP basics: Make sure you have 2 years paid trade work (3,120 hours).
  3. Choose your route: Get a valid job offer or a provincial certificate of qualification.
  4. Take a language test: Book CELPIP, IELTS, PTE, TEF, or TCF and meet CLB minimums.
  5. Check proof of funds: Confirm if you need funds or if you are exempt.
  6. Create an Express Entry profile: Enter your details and submit your profile.
  7. Improve your CRS score: Retake language, add spouse scores, or get an ECA.
  8. Gather key documents: Start early for police checks and work letters.
  9. Wait for an ITA: IRCC invites profiles through draws, including trade draws.
  10. Submit your PR application: Upload documents and pay the fees within the deadline.
  11. Complete biometrics and medical: Follow IRCC steps and timelines.
  12. Wait for a decision: IRCC may ask for more papers or updates.
  13. Get COPR: If approved, you receive confirmation of permanent residence

Processing Timeline: What to Expect

Most FSTP applicants wait 12 to 24 months from start to finish. Here's the breakdown:

Before Express Entry

Stage Timeline
Language test 2–6 weeks (book early, add time for retakes)
Job offer + LMIA 5–10 months (finding employer takes longest)
Certificate route 7–15 months (faster if already in Canada)

In the Pool

Waiting for ITA: 1 to 6 months (depends on your CRS score and trade draw frequency)

  • CRS below 400: likely need trade draw or provincial nomination
  • CRS 400–450: good chance in trade draws within 3–6 months
  • CRS 450+: may get invited in next draw

Your profile expires after 12 months. You can resubmit if not invited.

After ITA

60 days to submit your application (hard deadline)

Start medical exam and police certificates immediately. They take the longest.

After Submission

IRCC processing target: 6 months or less

Typical stages:

  • Week 1–2: Completeness check
  • Week 2–8: Eligibility review (NOC, work experience, job offer/certificate)
  • Week 4–16: Background and security checks
  • Week 4–12: Medical review
  • Week 16–24: Final decision

Most applicants get a decision in 4 to 8 months.

After Approval

  • COPR arrives: 2–4 weeks
  • Land in Canada before COPR expires (usually 12 months)
  • PR card arrives by mail: 4–8 weeks after landing

What slows things down: missing documents, incomplete reference letters, complex travel history, medical issues.

Total realistic timeline: 10 months (fastest) to 2 years (typical).


Common mistakes that cause refusal or ineligibility (and how to avoid them)

Picking the wrong NOC (and how officers assess "match")

Choosing the wrong NOC is the single most common reason FSTP applications get refused. Your job title does not determine your NOC. Your actual duties do.

How IRCC officers assess your NOC match:

Officers follow a strict process when reviewing your application:

  1. Read your reference letters and identify the duties you performed
  2. Open the NOC description for the code you selected
  3. Compare your duties to the lead statement (the opening paragraph that describes the occupation)
  4. Compare your duties to the main duties list (you must have performed most of these duties — typically 70% to 80%)
  5. Make a decision: Do your duties match this NOC, or not?

If the match is weak, your application is refused.

Common NOC selection mistakes:

Mistake 1: Choosing based on job title alone

  • Your title was "maintenance supervisor" so you selected NOC 72024 (construction millwrights and industrial mechanics).
  • But your actual duties were supervising other workers and managing schedules — not performing hands-on millwright work.
  • The officer refuses your application because your duties do not match the NOC.

Mistake 2: Mixing up similar trades

  • You selected NOC 72200 (electricians) but you actually worked as an industrial electrician in a factory.
  • The correct NOC is 72201 (industrial electricians).
  • Even though both are electrician roles, they are separate NOCs with different duty descriptions.

Mistake 3: Using a supervisor NOC when you did hands-on work

  • You were called a "head cook" so you selected NOC 62020 (food service supervisors).
  • But you spent 80% of your time cooking food — not supervising staff.
  • The correct NOC is 63200 (cooks).
  • Also: NOC 62020 is not an eligible FSTP trade. Your application would be refused even if your duties matched.

How to avoid this mistake:

  • Read the NOC lead statement carefully. Does it describe what you actually did every day?
  • Read the main duties list. Did you perform at least 7 out of 10 duties listed?
  • Write your reference letters using language from the NOC description. This makes it easy for the officer to see the match.
  • If you are unsure which NOC to choose, consult an immigration lawyer or use the IRCC NOC lookup tool and read multiple NOC descriptions before deciding.
  • Do not rely on your job title. Focus only on your duties.

Claiming certificate points incorrectly (and how to verify before claiming)

If you have a certificate of qualification Canada, you can earn 50 CRS points — but only if you meet specific conditions. Many applicants claim these points incorrectly and face issues later.

Common certificate points mistakes:

Mistake 1: Claiming certificate points without meeting the CLB 7 threshold

  • You have a valid certificate of qualification.
  • Your language scores are CLB 5 for speaking/listening and CLB 4 for reading/writing (the FSTP minimum).
  • You claim 50 certificate points in your Express Entry profile.
  • After you receive an ITA, IRCC reviews your application and removes the 50 points because you do not meet CLB 7 in all four abilities.
  • Your CRS score drops below the cut-off. Your application is refused.

How to avoid:

  • You need CLB 7 in all four language abilities to claim the 50 certificate points.
  • If your scores are below CLB 7, do not claim the points — even if you hold a certificate.
  • Retake your language test and aim for CLB 7+ before claiming the points.

Mistake 2: Certificate is not valid or has expired

  • You obtained a certificate of qualification 10 years ago.
  • You never renewed it. The certificate expired.
  • You claim 50 certificate points in your profile.
  • IRCC refuses your application because the certificate is no longer valid.

How to avoid:

  • Check the expiry date on your certificate (if applicable).
  • If the certificate has expired, renew it before you apply.
  • If your province does not issue expiring certificates, confirm this with the provincial trade authority.

Mistake 3: Certificate is from a province but not recognized as valid for FSTP

  • You completed a short training course and received a "certificate" from a private trade school.
  • You assume this counts as a certificate of qualification.
  • IRCC refuses your application because the certificate was not issued by a provincial, territorial, or federal trade authority.

How to avoid:

  • Only certificates issued by an official trade authority count for FSTP.
  • Check the list of provincial trade authorities on the IRCC website.
  • Training certificates from private schools do not qualify.

Mistake 4: Claiming points for a certificate in a trade that is not regulated in your province

  • Your trade is not regulated in your target province.
  • You obtained a certificate from a different province where the trade is regulated.
  • You claim 50 certificate points.
  • IRCC accepts the certificate for FSTP eligibility — but you cannot actually use the certificate in your target province because the trade is not regulated there.
  • This is not technically a refusal issue — but it creates confusion. The certificate meets FSTP requirements, but it may not help you once you arrive in Canada.

How to avoid:

  • Verify that your trade is regulated in the province where you plan to live.
  • If it is not regulated there, the certificate route may not be practical (even if it qualifies for FSTP).

Proof-of-funds errors and missing explanations

Proof-of-funds issues are less common than NOC or job offer mistakes — but they still cause refusals. The most frequent problems involve missing explanations or unclear documentation.


FAQ: Federal Skilled Trades Program

1) Do I need a job offer to apply under the Federal Skilled Trades Program?
No — but you need either a valid job offer OR a certificate of qualification from a Canadian province or territory. You cannot apply for FSTP without one of these two options. A valid job offer must be full-time (30+ hours per week) for at least one year and backed by an LMIA.

2) What is a certificate of qualification, and how do I get one?
A certificate of qualification is a document issued by a Canadian provincial or territorial authority that proves you are legally qualified to work in your skilled trade in that province. To get one, you must apply for a trade equivalency assessment, pass a certification exam, and meet all provincial requirements. The process typically takes 7 to 15 months if you are already in Canada.

3) What is the minimum IELTS/CLB score required for FSTP?
The minimum is CLB 5 for speaking and listening, and CLB 4 for reading and writing. For IELTS General Training, this equals 5.0 in speaking and listening, 4.0 in writing, and 3.5 in reading. These minimums are lower than the Federal Skilled Worker Program, which requires CLB 7 in all abilities.

4) Do I need proof of funds if I have a valid job offer and I'm authorized to work in Canada?
No — you are exempt from the proof-of-funds requirement in this case. If you have a job offer but are not currently authorized to work in Canada, you must provide proof of funds.

5) Can I apply for FSTP if I am outside Canada?
Yes — there is no requirement to be physically in Canada to create an Express Entry profile or apply for FSTP. However, obtaining a certificate of qualification from outside Canada is difficult in most provinces. The job offer route is usually more practical for applicants living abroad.

6) Can I apply for FSTP if I am inside Canada?
Yes — applicants already in Canada on a valid work permit can apply for FSTP. Being in Canada may give you an advantage because you can more easily obtain a provincial certificate of qualification and any Canadian work experience you gain adds CRS points to your profile.