If you’re still thinking “French is optional for Canada PR”, you’re already behind. The reality in 2026 is very different.

Express Entry is no longer just about IELTS + degree + work experience. The system is evolving, competition is rising, and French has quietly become one of the strongest strategic advantages you can have.

And with that shift, TEF and TCF Canada are not just important anymore… they are becoming more competitive, more technical, and more decisive.

Let’s break this down properly so you actually understand what’s going on.

 

  1. First things first: TEF & TCF Canada are NOT optional anymore

For Canadian immigration, there are only two accepted French exams:

  • TEF Canada
  • TCF Canada

These are officially recognised by IRCC and your scores are converted into NCLC (Canadian Language Benchmarks) for Express Entry.

Also important:

  • Your result is valid for 2 years only
  • You must submit it inside your Express Entry profile

So yes, this is not a side exam.
This is a core immigration requirement.

 

  1. Why French is suddenly a “game changer” in Express Entry

Let’s talk numbers (because this is where things get serious):

  • You can get up to 50 CRS points just for French.
  • That’s MORE than many degrees or work experience combinations.

And here’s the real shock:

  • A profile stuck at 460 CRS can jump to 510+ just with French.

Now understand this clearly:

This is the difference between
→ waiting for years
→ getting PR quickly

 

  1. Express Entry 2026: The competition is brutal now

The pool is getting bigger and stronger every year.

Recent data shows:

  • General / CEC draws: around 507–515 CRS
  • French-specific draws: as low as 393–419 CRS

Let that sink in.

There’s literally a 100+ point difference.

This is exactly why people are shifting to French.

 

  1. Canada is actively prioritising French-speaking candidates

This is not a trend.
This is a government strategy.

  • Canada exceeded its Francophone immigration targets in 2025
  • Now increasing targets further for 2026–2028
  • Creating 5,000 additional spaces specifically for French-speaking immigrants.

Also:

  • Regular French-language Express Entry draws are happening
  • Thousands of invitations are being issued ONLY to French speakers.

So if you’re not learning French, you’re literally ignoring a priority pathway.

 

  1. Why TEF & TCF Canada are becoming more difficult

Now let’s address the uncomfortable truth:

It’s not just important. It’s getting harder. Here’s why:

1. More serious candidates

Earlier: people gave TEF Canada casually
Now: people are preparing for B2 (CLB 7) minimum

And yes, you need CLB 7 to qualify for most French draws.

 

2. Evaluation is stricter (especially writing & speaking)

Because:

  • Candidates are aiming for maximum CRS points
  • Even small mistakes = lower NCLC conversion

So scoring high is not just about knowing French. It’s about exam strategy + precision

 

3. Strategic preparation has become necessary

Earlier:

  • Basic vocabulary + practice = enough

Now:

  • Structured arguments
  • Complex grammar
  • Opinion-based speaking
  • Formal writing

Basically: B2/C1-level thinking is becoming the norm

6. French is now a “shortcut”, but only if done right

Canada has created something very interesting:

  • A system where French speakers get lower CRS cut-offs
  • Faster invitations
  • More targeted draws

But here’s the catch:

→ Everyone now knows this

Which means:

  • More competition inside French category
  • Higher expectations
  • Stronger candidates

So yes, it’s a shortcut…
But only if you’re actually good.

7. Future uncertainty: why you should NOT delay

There are also discussions about possible changes in CRS:

  • French points structure may be revised
  • Express Entry system may evolve further

Which means:

The current advantage might not stay the same forever.

So if you’re planning Canada PR:

This is the best time to act, not wait

8. So what should students do now?

If your goal is Canada PR:

  • Don’t treat French as optional
  • Don’t aim for A2/B1
  • Don’t prepare randomly

Instead:

  • Target B2 (CLB 7 minimum)
  • Focus on exam-specific preparation
  • Work on speaking + writing structure
  • Understand CRS strategy, not just language

Because this is no longer “learning French”
This is building an immigration advantage

The shift is already happening!!

Let me say it very clearly:

  • Express Entry is getting tougher
  • CRS scores are rising
  • French is becoming a priority filter

And because of that:

TEF & TCF Canada are no longer just language exams. They are decision-makers for your future.

So if you’re serious about Canada PR and still confused about:

  • TEF Canada vs TCF Canada
  • How to reach B2 in French from scratch
  • How to actually score CLB 7+ in TEF/TCF Canada

Then don’t waste time experimenting randomly.

At LingoRelic Language Academy, we train students specifically for results:

  • Structured preparation (not YouTube confusion)
  • Real exam strategies
  • Focus on speaking + writing (the real game changers)

Because honestly, French is not difficult. But doing it the right way is everything.