
Two tracks, 437 invitations and a notably lower wage bar
The May 14 draw is the third-largest SI round of 2026, trailing only the April 22 (484 invitations) and February 11 (460) rounds. The 437 invitations were split almost evenly between two selection tracks, with the wage-and-job-offer track edging ahead at 51.5% of the total.
| Selection criteria | Details | Invitations |
|---|---|---|
| Wage/salary + job offer | TEER 0–3 job offer with an offered wage of at least C$59/hour (≈ C$120,000/year) | 225 |
| Registration score | Minimum 135 points | 212 |
The C$59/hour benchmark used in this round is meaningfully lower than the C$70/hour (≈ C$145,000/year) threshold used on February 4 and the C$62/hour (≈ C$125,000/year) used on April 22. Against the backdrop of a tighter federal allocation and a slower post-overhaul nomination pace, the steady downward drift of the wage floor effectively re-opens the door to TEER 0–3 professionals whose offered pay had previously fallen short of the high-wage line.
A pillar without a fixed occupation list
Innovate is one of three pillars introduced under the April 23 reform of the SI category. The province describes it as an initiative aimed at "encouraging experts and innovators from all sectors to help make B.C. a top destination for international talent," with invitations directed at highly skilled, high-economic-impact candidates across a wide range of in-demand sectors.
Unlike the Care and Build pillars — both built around fixed occupation lists — Innovate does not pre-define a list of eligible occupations. Instead, the province retains the discretion to adjust selection factors round by round, in line with shifting labour-market priorities. The BCPNP has signalled that future high-economic-impact invitations under Innovate may be based on one or more of the following factors:
- education — level, field, and location of study;
- professional designations held in B.C.;
- duration and skill level of work experience;
- language ability;
- occupation;
- offered wage and/or skill level of the job offer;
- intended region of residence and work within B.C.; and
- strategic priorities aligned with provincial labour demand or specific projects.
In line with commitments made at the April 23 launch, B.C. has also pledged to allocate at least 35% of its nominations to candidates working outside Metro Vancouver, with the aim of distributing population and economic growth more evenly across the province.
A slower year, a deeper pool
The May 14 round brings 2026's running SI total to 2,143 invitations. Across the five SI draws held so far this year, the wage-plus-TEER 0–3 standard has clearly emerged as the most-used criterion, deployed on February 4 (429 invitations), February 11 (460), April 22 (484) and May 14 (437). The only occupation-targeted round was the May 6 draw, which sent 333 invitations to candidates working in healthcare, veterinary services, education and the construction trades — sectors that closely mirror the occupation lists now anchoring the Care and Build pillars.
As of May 6 — the most recent data publicly available — the BCPNP SI registration pool contained 9,967 active profiles, with the largest share (21.1%) clustered in the 100–109 score band:
| Score range | Number of registrations |
|---|---|
| 0–59 | 215 |
| 60–69 | 401 |
| 70–79 | 853 |
| 80–89 | 1,353 |
| 90–99 | 1,781 |
| 100–109 | 2,107 |
| 110–119 | 1,550 |
| 120–129 | 1,148 |
| 130–139 | 522 |
| 140–149 | 32 |
| 150+ | 5 |
Because the score track in this round used a minimum cut-off of 135 points, only the upper end of the roughly 559 registrations sitting in the 130–139 band and above sat within reach of an invitation — meaning the majority of candidates clustered in the mainstream 100–119 range will still need to lift language results, deepen work experience or secure a higher-paying job offer to be competitive in the next round.
The province has also conducted eight Entrepreneur Immigration (EI) draws across five selection rounds this year, issuing no fewer than 49 invitations — five rounds through the EI Base Stream and three through the EI Regional Stream.
A federal squeeze meets a provincial reset
The policy backdrop to this round deserves close attention. Although Ottawa's 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan lifts the national PNP admissions target sharply, from 55,000 in 2025 to 91,500 in 2026 (roughly +66%), nomination allocations sent to individual provinces have not expanded in lock-step. B.C.'s 2026 allocation came in at just 5,254 — more than 40% below the 9,000 the province had requested, and lower than the 6,214 it ultimately used in 2025 after late-year top-ups. The province has signalled that talks with Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) about additional nominations for 2026 and beyond remain ongoing.
It was against that backdrop that B.C. announced, on April 23, its most far-reaching BCPNP overhaul in years: the SI category was reorganized around the Care, Build and Innovate pillars, while the Entry Level and Semi-Skilled (ELSS) stream, the former Tech pathway, and the International Graduate streams were formally retired. The result is that workers in tourism, hospitality and food processing, along with large numbers of recent international graduates, can no longer pursue provincial nomination through their previous routes. In parallel, the BCPNP application processing fee has risen from C$1,475 to C$1,750.
Industry observers have broadly read the shift as a move from broad-based intake through multiple pathways toward a sharper, "fewer but higher-value" selection model. The decision to drop the Innovate wage floor to C$59/hour on May 14 has in turn been interpreted by several immigration practitioners as a deliberate effort to broaden the eligible pool and preserve momentum in the Innovate stream while staying within a tighter overall allocation.
Process: register first, then seek nomination and PR
Foreign nationals seeking to immigrate to B.C. through the SI category must first submit a registration under the relevant sub-stream. Once submitted, each registration is scored against a 200-point framework that weighs human-capital and economic factors, and is placed into the corresponding pool. The province then periodically selects candidates from the pool — by stream and by current priorities — and invites them to apply for provincial nomination.
Registrations remain valid for up to 12 months; candidates who are not invited within that window must submit a fresh registration to remain in contention. Those who secure a provincial nomination can then apply to IRCC for permanent residence, which moves the file into the federal stage of the process.
With the April 23 reset now in force and federal allocations tightening, BCPNP selection is set to lean further toward high-wage, high-skill and labour-shortage occupations — the "high economic impact" axis the province has placed at the centre of its new framework — rather than the more diversified set of pathways that characterized previous years. For prospective applicants, tracking the province's evolving occupation lists, draw thresholds and allocation negotiations is likely to matter more in the months ahead than it has in any recent cycle.









