Dovidnyk z imigratsii do Kanady
Lokalizovanyi pidsumok dlia ukrainskykh chytachiv: NOC and TEER connect your job duties to Canadian occupational classifications. Picking the wrong code can affect eligibility and evidence.
This page is part of CanPath tier-1 multilingual coverage and is designed for high-priority global search demand.
What NOC and TEER means
Canadian immigration programs often care about what you actually did at work, not only your job title. NOC/TEER should reflect duties, responsibilities, and program rules.
The safest first step is to separate official eligibility rules from general internet advice. Canadian immigration programs can change, pause, reopen, or require evidence that is easy to miss when you only read summaries.
How CanPath fits into the process
CanPath keeps the full assessment behind account creation so you can save answers, upload documents, and return later. Public pages explain the pathway, while the account-gated workflow helps organize your personal facts.
The current CanPath stream index tracks 97 federal, provincial, territorial, and Quebec pathways and was last updated May 1, 2026.
- Compare duties against official NOC descriptions.
- Record employer letters, dates, hours, and wage details.
- Use the same care for job offers and past work history.
Before you rely on any result
Use CanPath as an informational planning tool, then confirm current intake status, fees, forms, document rules, and deadlines on official sources. If your situation involves refusals, inadmissibility, complex family history, or tight timelines, consider professional legal advice.