Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - Is there a difference between immigrants in Canada?

Is there a difference between immigrants in Canada?

Canadian immigrants vary from province to province.

Immigration requirements by province:

Quebec (Montreal): College degree or above for two years, no work experience, medium level of French required.

Nova Scotia: After graduating from junior college or above for 2 years, you will get an employer's letter corresponding to your major, and the financial guarantee will be 20,000 Canadian dollars per person.

Manitoba province: 1 year college degree or above, 6 months working experience.

Saskatchewan: One-year junior college course or above, you can apply after working for 6 months. Masters and doctors can directly apply for the nomination of immigrants in the province.

Newfoundland: graduated from junior college or above for two years, and has a letter of introduction from an employer with a professional counterpart, with a guarantee of about 20 thousand Canadian dollars. Masters and doctors can directly apply for the nomination of immigrants in the province.

Alberta (Calgary): Graduated from two-year junior college or above, working in line with the list of O, A, B and B occupations, and having received special training in line with this occupation, the computer major is relatively easy to immigrate.

BC Province (Vancouver): It requires two years' college study and one year's work experience. Ielts 7.0. Natural science, medical care and physics are easy to immigrate, but business is not easy to immigrate. Doctor Master (IELTS 7.0) can directly apply for provincial nomination.

Ontario (Toronto): two years' college courses and one year's work experience, and the requirements for obtaining O, A, B A and B work experience are strict. Doctor Master (IELTS 7.0) can directly apply for provincial nomination.