
On February 4, 2026, the British Columbia Provincial Nominee Program (BC PNP) conducted its first Skills Immigration draw of the year, issuing a total of 429 Invitations to Apply (ITAs) to candidates the province identified as having “high economic impact.” Invitations were distributed through two selection pathways: a high-wage job offer stream and a score-based selection stream, issuing 206 and 223 invitations respectively.
Draw Breakdown: Two Pathways, Two Sets of Criteria
Invitations were issued to candidates who met one of the following criteria:
| Selection category | Criteria | Invitations issued |
|---|---|---|
| High-wage job offer stream | Job offer in NOC TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 with an offered wage of at least $70/hour (≈ $145,000/year) | 206 |
| Score-based selection | Minimum registration score of 138 points | 223 |
| Total | 429 |
BC also noted that future “high economic impact” draws may be based on different factors, and the province may adjust what it prioritizes in upcoming selections.
What “High Economic Impact” May Include: Potential Factors in Future Draws
The province indicated that future high economic impact draws could be based on one or more of the following attributes:
- Education: level and field of education, and where it was completed;
- Professional designation in BC;
- Language proficiency;
- Occupation;
- Duration and skill level of work experience;
- Wage and/or skill level of the job offer;
- Intent to live, work, and settle in a specific region; and/or
- Strategic priorities (e.g., factors addressing specific labour market needs in BC, or supporting government pilot projects and initiatives).
Skills Immigration Registration Pool: 11,210 Registrations and Score Distribution
BC PNP publishes a score-range breakdown of candidates in its Skills Immigration registration pool to help applicants understand where they stand. As of January 6, 2026, the pool had 11,210 total registrations:
| Score range | Number of registrations |
|---|---|
| 150+ | 9 |
| 140–149 | 67 |
| 130–139 | 791 |
| 120–129 | 1,170 |
| 110–119 | 1,635 |
| 100–109 | 2,161 |
| 90–99 | 2,048 |
| 80–89 | 1,530 |
| 70–79 | 996 |
| 60–69 | 480 |
| 0–59 | 323 |
| Total | 11,210 |
The province noted that the top three score tiers in this table had not been updated after the February 4 draw.
Nomination Spaces vs. Pool Size: Competition Expected to Remain High in 2026
British Columbia has been allocated 5,254 nomination spaces in 2026. The province expects that some of these spaces will be used for waitlisted nomination applicants carried over from the 2025 intake, as well as the province’s entrepreneur immigration streams.
Given the substantial gap between the current size of the Skills Immigration registration pool (11,210) and the available nomination spaces (5,254), it is likely that many candidates will not receive invitations to apply in 2026. Candidates may need to strengthen their profiles in areas aligned with BC’s stated priorities—such as wages, language ability, professional credentials, and regional settlement intent—to remain competitive.









