Express Entry and the Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program are often discussed together, but they are not the same thing. Express Entry is the federal online system used for several skilled worker programs. OINP is Ontario’s provincial nominee program, and some OINP streams connect to Express Entry while others use Ontario’s own expression of interest system.
Why pathway planning matters
A candidate may look strong in one pathway and weak in another. Age, education, language scores, Canadian work experience, foreign work experience, occupation, employer support and settlement plans can all change the strategy. A good plan starts by mapping the facts before choosing where to spend time and money.
Express Entry questions to review
- Which Express Entry program could apply: Canadian Experience Class, Federal Skilled Worker Program or Federal Skilled Trades Program?
- Are language tests, education assessments and work history documents ready?
- Is the CRS score competitive enough, or should the candidate improve the profile first?
- Would a provincial nomination strategy make sense?
OINP and PNP questions to review
Ontario has multiple OINP streams, and each stream has its own requirements and intake rules. Some candidates need to watch notifications of interest. Others need to register an expression of interest. Employer-supported streams require careful coordination with the employer, while Express Entry-linked streams depend on a valid federal profile.
How Sela Immigration helps
Sela Immigration reviews eligibility, CRS factors, documents and Ontario pathway options before a client commits to a strategy. The goal is not to chase every program at once; it is to identify the pathway that is realistic, documentable and aligned with the client’s timeline.
Official starting points: IRCC Express Entry and Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program.