🍁 Updated June 2026 · Australian Immigration Guide

Table of Contents

Moving to Canada from Australia: The Complete 2026 Guide to Visas, PR Pathways & What It Actually Costs

Most articles start with scenery. This one starts with something more useful: Australians are among the best-positioned nationalities in the world for Canadian permanent residency — and most of them have no idea. Here is everything you need to know, with current 2026 data.

380,000 2026 PR target
24 months IEC Working Holiday permit
2–3 yrs IEC → PR realistic timeline
CAD $7 eTA cost to visit Canada

English as a first language. University degrees assessed as Canadian equivalents by WES. Work experience in occupations that map cleanly to TEER 0–3 NOC codes. These three factors — language, education, and skilled work history — are exactly what the Comprehensive Ranking System rewards. A 28-year-old Australian professional with four years of skilled work experience and an IELTS score of 7.5 or above can walk into the Express Entry pool with a CRS score in the 440–490 range before any bonus factors. That puts them within striking distance of category-based draws and in a realistic position for a PNP nomination.

The other thing worth knowing upfront: Canada’s immigration system changed substantially in 2024–2026. PR targets were cut, student arrivals dropped by nearly half, and the draw rhythm slowed. Anyone using 2023 guides to plan a 2026 move is working with outdated information. This guide reflects the current system — what the 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan actually says, what cut-offs are actually running, and what a realistic timeline from Australia to Canadian PR looks like right now.

2026 Context

What Australians Need to Know About the Current Canadian Immigration System (2026)

Canada admitted a record 484,000 permanent residents in 2024. In response to housing pressure, strained public services, and public opinion that immigration volumes were too high, the government dramatically pulled back. The 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan set PR targets at 380,000 per year — a 21% reduction. New temporary resident arrivals dropped from 673,650 in 2025 to 385,000 in 2026. International student approvals fell by nearly 49%.

This matters for Australians because it reshapes the math. Express Entry CEC draws that cut at 470–490 in 2023 are now cutting at 507–518. Draw sizes have shrunk from 6,000–8,000 ITAs per round to 2,000–4,000. The system is more competitive than it was two years ago, but it is absolutely not closed. Category-based draws — targeting French-language speakers, healthcare workers, tradespeople, and others — run at cut-offs significantly lower than the general pool. A healthcare worker with a CRS of 467 gets invited in a healthcare draw while a general skilled worker at 510 waits.

The right frame for 2026: harder than 2023, but still one of the most accessible skilled immigration systems in the world for English-speaking professionals with a degree and work experience.

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For full detail on what the 2026–2028 plan means for Express Entry targets, PNP allocations, and Francophone immigration: read the Canada 2027–2029 Immigration Levels Plan guide. The November 2026 plan announcement will reset all these numbers — worth understanding before you commit to a timeline.

The eTA — Your First Step Before Anything Else

Before visas, pathways, and CRS scores — the eTA. Australians do not need a full visa to visit Canada for a short visit. What they do need is an Electronic Travel Authorization, which costs CAD $7, takes minutes to apply for online, and is linked electronically to your Australian passport. Without it, you cannot board a flight to Canada.

If you are scouting the country before committing — checking out neighbourhoods, meeting potential employers, attending university open days — apply for an eTA before you book the flight. It is valid for five years or until your passport expires. This is not a visa and it does not give you the right to work or study in Canada.

Know your CRS score before you plan your move

Find out exactly where you stand in the Express Entry pool as an Australian applicant — takes 3 minutes.

Calculate CRS Score →
Visa Pathways

The 4 Main Visa Pathways for Australians Moving to Canada

There is no single path from Australia to Canada. Which route makes sense depends on your age, occupation, education, and whether you want temporary work first or are aiming straight for permanent residency.

1. Working Holiday Visa (IEC) — The Fastest Way In for Australians Under 35

If you are between 18 and 35 years old, the International Experience Canada Working Holiday program is the single fastest and least bureaucratic way to get to Canada legally and start working. No job offer required. No IELTS score required. No points system to navigate. You apply, get selected from the pool, pay CAD $161 in fees, and receive an open work permit valid for 24 months.

You can work for any employer in any occupation. You can change jobs freely. You can travel in and out of Canada during the permit period. The two-year window is generous enough to build genuine roots — find your career niche, save money, get a sense of which province fits your life, and accumulate the 12 months of eligible work experience that qualifies you for the Canadian Experience Class.

IEC pools open at different points throughout the year and fill quickly. The specific opening dates and available spots vary annually — check the IRCC website directly rather than relying on third-party calendars that are often out of date. Once you receive an Invitation to Apply from the IEC pool, you have a set window to accept and submit your work permit application. Do not delay.

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IEC Working Holiday spots for Australians are capped by annual agreement between Australia and Canada. In recent years, the Australian quota has been generous — several thousand spots — but competition has increased as more Australians have discovered the program. If you are age-eligible, applying through IEC before pursuing any other route is almost always the right first move.

2. Express Entry — The Main PR Pathway for Skilled Australians

Express Entry is Canada’s flagship immigration management system. It covers three federal programs: the Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSW), the Federal Skilled Trades Program (FST), and the Canadian Experience Class (CEC). Most Australians pursuing permanent residency will end up in Express Entry at some point — either through FSW if they are applying directly from Australia, or through CEC after gaining Canadian work experience first.

The system works by ranking candidates in a pool based on Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) scores. IRCC holds draws periodically — roughly every two to four weeks — and invites candidates above a certain score to apply for permanent residency. Since 2023, IRCC has also run category-based draws that target specific occupational groups, which can invite candidates at cut-offs 50 to 100 points below the general pool.

For Australians, the three programs work like this:

Federal Skilled Worker Program is for people with at least one year of skilled foreign work experience in the past ten years, meeting a minimum of 67 points on the FSW selection grid, and a language score of CLB 7 or above. This is the pathway for Australians who want to apply directly without Canadian work experience first. You do not need to be in Canada to apply.

Federal Skilled Trades Program is for tradespeople — electricians, plumbers, welders, heavy machinery operators, and others in skilled trade occupations. You need at least two years of full-time trade experience in the past five years, a valid job offer or Certificate of Qualification in Canada, and CLB 5 in speaking and listening and CLB 4 in reading and writing.

Canadian Experience Class requires one year (1,560 hours) of skilled work experience in Canada within the past 36 months. This is the program most Australians access after arriving on an IEC permit and spending a year or more working in a TEER 0–3 occupation.

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Use our CRS Score Calculator to calculate your exact score before making any decisions. The number matters enormously — a difference of 20 points can be the gap between receiving an ITA in a current draw cycle or waiting six months. Also check whether you meet the FSW 67-point minimum with the FSW Points Calculator.

3. Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) — Which Provinces Make Sense for Australians

Every province and territory (except Quebec and Nunavut) runs its own Provincial Nominee Program, which allows them to nominate immigrants for permanent residency based on local labour market needs. A provincial nomination adds 600 CRS points to your Express Entry profile — effectively guaranteeing an ITA in the next draw regardless of your base score.

The practical question for Australians is which province’s program is realistically accessible. Here is the honest breakdown:

Ontario has the largest economy and the most competitive PNP. The OINP was completely restructured in May 2026. Most streams require either a Canadian job offer or existing Canadian connection. Without one, Ontario is difficult for an Australian who has not yet worked in Canada. Check the OINP Points Calculator under the new framework.

British Columbia runs an active tech and healthcare stream (BC PNP Tech) and Skills Immigration streams. A job offer is required for most streams. Very popular with Australians because Vancouver’s lifestyle is closest to Sydney or Melbourne, which also means more competition. Check your eligibility with the BC PNP Calculator.

Alberta has strong streams for healthcare, engineering, and business occupations. The Accelerated Tech Pathway is active. Costs are lower than BC and Ontario, and the economy has been strong. Use the Alberta PNP Calculator to check your eligibility.

Saskatchewan runs sector-specific windows that open and fill within hours. The SINP rewards candidates with relevant work experience and sometimes does not require a job offer. You need to be ready before the windows open. Check your eligibility with the Saskatchewan SINP Calculator.

Manitoba is one of the most accessible provinces for Australians who have not yet been to Canada. The MPNP has specific streams for in-demand occupations where a job offer is not always required. Winnipeg has a lower cost of living than Toronto or Vancouver and a strong economy in healthcare, trades, and agriculture. Check the Manitoba PNP Calculator.

Atlantic Canada — Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador — runs the Atlantic Immigration Program, which brings employer-supported workers into Atlantic provinces. Processing is faster than major urban PNPs and competition is lower. If you are flexible about location, Atlantic Canada is worth serious consideration.

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A note on Quebec: Quebec runs its own separate immigration system outside of Express Entry. The Quebec Skilled Worker Program (QSWP) uses ARRIMA, its own points system, and requires a functional level of French. If you do not speak French, Quebec is not a realistic option for skilled worker immigration. If you do speak French, check the ARRIMA Points Calculator.

4. Study Permit — The Student Route into Canadian PR

Some Australians move to Canada to study, which then opens a pathway to work and PR through the Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP). The PGWP is an open work permit issued after graduating from an eligible Canadian institution, valid for up to three years for programs of two years or more.

Important changes since 2024: if you are graduating from a college diploma or non-degree program, your program must fall within a PGWP-eligible field of study tied to long-term labour shortages. Degree graduates (bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral) are exempt from this field-of-study requirement.

The study-to-PR pipeline: complete a PGWP-eligible program at a Designated Learning Institution → receive a PGWP → work in a TEER 0–3 occupation for 12 months → become CEC-eligible → submit Express Entry profile → receive ITA. The 2025–2026 cuts to international student approvals make the study route more competitive to enter, but the pipeline itself remains one of the cleaner paths to PR for Australians who want to combine further education with immigration.

Family Sponsorship — If You Have a Canadian Spouse or Parent

If you are in a genuine relationship with a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, spousal or partner sponsorship is the most direct path to PR regardless of your skills or language scores. The sponsor must be over 18, living in Canada, and financially able to support you for three years. Processing times have varied significantly — from eight months to over two years — depending on IRCC workloads.

The Parents and Grandparents Program allows Canadian citizens and PRs to sponsor parents. This program is capped and uses an interest to sponsor process that fills extremely fast when intake opens each year.

Step-by-Step Timeline

The IEC-to-PR Pipeline — How Most Australians Actually Get Permanent Residency

The most common route for Australians ends up looking like this, and nobody maps it clearly:

1
Apply for IEC Working Holiday — Month 0
Submit your IEC profile on the IRCC portal. Wait for your pool to open and receive an Invitation to Apply. Accept the ITA, pay fees (CAD $161 for the working holiday permit, CAD $85 for biometrics if not already collected), and submit your work permit application. Approval typically takes two to eight weeks.
2
Arrive in Canada, Secure a TEER 0–3 Job — Month 1–3
Land in Canada. Your IEC permit gives you the right to work for any employer. The clock on your CEC eligibility starts the moment you begin working in a qualifying occupation — TEER 0, 1, 2, or 3 in the National Occupational Classification. Most Australian professionals — accountants, engineers, nurses, software developers, project managers, electricians, plumbers — slot into TEER 0–3 without difficulty.
3
Hit 1,560 Hours of CEC-Eligible Work — Month 12–15
IRCC defines one year of work experience as 1,560 hours. At 30 hours per week full-time, you hit this in exactly 12 months. Part-time work counts — two jobs at 15 hours each, combined to 30 hours per week, still qualifies. The work must be authorized (your IEC permit covers this), paid, and physically performed in Canada. For the full eligibility rules, see the Canadian Experience Class guide.
4
Take Your Language Test and Submit Your Express Entry Profile — Month 13–16
Book IELTS General Training (not Academic) or CELPIP General. Most Australians score CLB 9 or above without significant preparation — English is your first language. CLB 9 in all four skills adds significantly more CRS points than CLB 7 or 8. Do not undertest yourself. Submit your Express Entry profile as soon as you have your results — the tie-breaking rule for equal CRS scores is profile submission timestamp. Earlier is better. Use the CLB Calculator to convert your IELTS scores to CLB levels.
5
Receive an ITA and Submit Your eAPR — Month 14–30
When a draw cuts at or below your CRS score, you receive an Invitation to Apply. You then have 60 days to submit a complete Electronic Application for Permanent Residence. This deadline does not move. Gather reference letters from every employer (job title, dates, hours, salary, duties — all of it must match your NOC code), confirm your IELTS results are still within the two-year validity window, and book an upfront medical exam immediately to avoid processing bottlenecks.
6
Permanent Residence Approved — Month 20–36
IRCC’s target is six months from receiving a complete eAPR. Many applications are processed faster. Completeness of your application matters more than the speed of submission — a returned application adds months. Realistic total timeline from IEC application to PR landing: 2 to 3 years. For Australians who arrive knowing what they are doing, 2.5 years is achievable.

Track the latest Express Entry draws while you are building your Canadian work experience. Knowing which categories are active and what cut-offs are running helps you time your profile submission for maximum effect. See the latest Express Entry draw results and the next draw prediction.

Not sure which pathway fits your Australian profile?

Get a personalised review of your CRS score, program eligibility, and fastest route to Canadian PR — free, within 24 hours.

Get Free Assessment →
Know Your Score

What Is Your CRS Score If You Are Australian? A Realistic Estimate

Rather than explaining CRS abstractly, here are three realistic Australian profiles with actual score estimates. Use the CRS Score Calculator to get your precise score based on your actual profile.

Profile A
28-Year-Old Australian Professional — Bachelor’s Degree, 4 Years Experience, IELTS 8.0
~479
Estimated CRS Score (no Canadian experience)
Age (28)110 pts
Education (3-yr bachelor’s)120 pts
Language CLB 9 (IELTS 8.0)124 pts
Foreign work exp (3–5 yrs)50 pts
Skill transferability75 pts
This candidate does not qualify for current CEC draws (507–518) but is within range of a healthcare or trades category draw if the occupation qualifies. After 12 months of Canadian work experience, the score rises to approximately 505–520 — in range for CEC draws. PNP nomination is the fastest route to an ITA at this score.
Profile B
32-Year-Old Australian in Healthcare — Master’s, 6 Years Experience, IELTS 8.5
~521
Estimated CRS Score (no Canadian experience)
Age (32)100 pts
Education (master’s equivalent)135 pts
Language CLB 10 (IELTS 8.5)136 pts
Foreign work exp (6+ yrs)50 pts
Skill transferability100 pts
This candidate would receive an ITA in most 2026 CEC draws (cut-offs 507–524). They also likely qualify for healthcare category draws at 462–476, which means an ITA before even reaching the general pool threshold. Strong position — file should be submitted promptly to secure an early tie-breaking timestamp.
Profile C
26-Year-Old Australian Tradesperson — Cert III Electrical, 3 Years Experience, IELTS 7.0
~332
Estimated CRS Score (no Canadian experience)
Age (26)110 pts
Education (no post-secondary)64 pts
Language CLB 8 (IELTS 7.0)108 pts
Foreign work exp (1–3 yrs)25 pts
Skill transferability25 pts
Best path: IEC Working Holiday, gain 12 months of Canadian work experience as an electrician, then enter Express Entry via CEC with Canadian experience added. Canadian work experience raises the score substantially. The trades category draw (cut-off 477 in April 2026) becomes relevant. Check FST eligibility with the FSW Points Calculator.
Where to Live

Which Province Should Australians Move To?

The honest answer depends on two separate questions: where do you want to live, and where can you get permanent residency most easily? Those are not always the same city.

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Toronto (Ontario)
Hard PNP
Largest job market, most international workers, closest to a major-city Australian experience. The trade-off is cost of living that rivals Sydney, a very competitive PNP (completely restructured May 2026), and traffic that will feel familiar in all the wrong ways. If your employer is based there or your industry is concentrated there (finance, tech, media), Toronto makes sense. If not, look elsewhere first.
OINP Calculator →
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Vancouver (British Columbia)
Hard PNP
Most popular destination for Australians because the outdoor lifestyle — mountains, ocean, mild winters by Canadian standards — mirrors what many Australians value. It is also one of the most expensive cities in North America. Rent in Vancouver is comparable to Sydney. The BC PNP is active in tech and healthcare but requires a job offer for most streams. Understand the costs before choosing Vancouver on lifestyle alone.
BC PNP Calculator →
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Calgary (Alberta)
Moderate PNP
Significantly underrated among Australians. Strong job market in energy, engineering, construction, and technology. Housing costs are lower than Vancouver and Toronto by a wide margin. The Alberta PNP has active streams for skilled workers. And Calgary’s access to the Rockies — Banff, Kananaskis — is exceptional. For Australians with trades or engineering backgrounds, Alberta deserves a serious look.
Alberta PNP Calculator →
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Saskatchewan
Moderate PNP
Sector-specific windows that open and fill within hours. The SINP rewards candidates with relevant work experience and sometimes does not require a job offer. You need to be ready before the windows open. Strong in agriculture, trades, and healthcare. Smaller cities like Saskatoon and Regina have a good quality of life at a fraction of Toronto or Vancouver costs.
SINP Calculator →
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Manitoba
Accessible PNP
One of the most accessible provinces for Australians who have not yet been to Canada. The MPNP has streams where a job offer is not always required. Winnipeg has a lower cost of living than Toronto or Vancouver and a strong economy in healthcare, trades, and agriculture. If you are willing to commit to Manitoba for two years, the route to PR is meaningfully faster than through Ontario or BC.
Manitoba PNP Calculator →
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Atlantic Canada
Easiest PNP Access
Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, PEI, and Newfoundland run the Atlantic Immigration Program. Processing is faster than major urban PNPs and competition is lower. Cities are smaller — more like regional Australian cities than Sydney or Melbourne — but that suits many people well. If you are flexible about location, Atlantic Canada offers the fastest route to PR for Australians without existing Canadian connections.
Financial Reality

Cost of Living — Australia vs. Canada in Real Numbers (2026)

Most comparison articles say “costs are similar.” That is not very useful. Here is a more precise picture.

Housing Costs Compared

In Sydney, the median weekly rent for a two-bedroom apartment sits around AUD $800–$1,100 depending on suburb. In Toronto, a comparable two-bedroom runs roughly CAD $2,700–$3,400 per month. At the current AUD/CAD exchange rate of approximately 0.90 (one Australian dollar buys roughly 0.90 Canadian dollars), that is AUD $2,430–$3,060 per month in Toronto — significantly higher than Sydney outside the most expensive inner suburbs.

Vancouver is comparable to Toronto for rent, and in some inner areas more expensive. Calgary rents sit around CAD $1,800–$2,400 per month for a two-bedroom — meaningfully cheaper than either coastal city, and similar to Brisbane or Adelaide rather than Sydney. Halifax is cheaper again — CAD $1,500–$2,000 per month for a two-bedroom in a good area.

🇦🇺 Australia — Monthly Rent (2BR)
Sydney (inner)AUD $3,200–$4,400
Melbourne (inner)AUD $2,800–$3,600
BrisbaneAUD $2,400–$3,200
AdelaideAUD $1,800–$2,400
🍁 Canada — Monthly Rent (2BR)
Toronto (inner)CAD $2,700–$3,400
Vancouver (inner)CAD $2,800–$3,600
CalgaryCAD $1,800–$2,400
HalifaxCAD $1,500–$2,000

Groceries, Transport, Utilities

Grocery prices in Canada are broadly comparable to Australia, with some categories notably more expensive. Dairy, fresh produce, and imported goods tend to cost more in Canada, particularly outside major urban centres. A weekly grocery bill for two people runs CAD $200–$300 in Canadian cities, versus AUD $180–$280 in Australian cities — similar in purchasing power terms.

Tax Rates: What Australians Pay in Canada vs. Australia

Canadian federal income tax rates are comparable to Australian rates at equivalent income levels — both countries use progressive systems. The key difference is that Canadian provinces add their own income tax on top of the federal rate, while Australian states do not. Total combined tax (federal plus provincial) in Ontario at CAD $80,000 income is approximately 31–33%. The equivalent in Australia at AUD $80,000 is approximately 26–28%. Canada runs slightly higher when you include provincial levies.

AUD to CAD — The Exchange Rate Reality

The Australian dollar and Canadian dollar trade at a rate that has historically been close to parity, fluctuating between 0.85 and 1.05 depending on commodity cycles. In mid-2026, one AUD buys approximately 0.90 CAD. This means your Australian savings travel reasonably well to Canada — though if the commodity cycle turns and the AUD weakens further, that gap widens.

Critical Financial Topic

What Happens to Your Australian Superannuation?

This is the question nobody covers and it matters more than most people realise.

When you permanently leave Australia to live overseas, your superannuation does not automatically become accessible. Superannuation is locked until you reach preservation age (currently 60 for most Australians) regardless of where you live. However, there is a specific provision for people who are not Australian citizens or permanent residents.

If you are not an Australian citizen or permanent resident and you leave Australia permanently, you can apply for the Departing Australia Superannuation Payment (DASP). This allows you to withdraw your super after leaving the country. If you contributed under a Working Holiday Maker visa at some point, a higher withholding tax rate applies (65%). For other visa holders, the withholding tax varies by component — generally 35% on the taxed element.

But if you are an Australian citizen — which most people moving from Australia to Canada are — you cannot access DASP. Your super stays locked until preservation age regardless of your country of residence.

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Do not factor your superannuation balance into your moving budget if you are an Australian citizen. It will be there when you reach 60, but it is not liquid capital to fund your relocation. Before you leave: confirm your super fund knows you are going overseas (some funds charge higher fees or change insurance arrangements for overseas members), check whether income protection and life cover through your super lapses when you stop contributing (it often does), and understand that employer super contributions stop the moment you stop working in Australia.

If you are planning to retire in Canada eventually, the Australia-Canada tax treaty affects how your super distributions are taxed when you eventually draw them. This is a situation where talking to a cross-border tax specialist before you move is genuinely worth the cost.

Healthcare Transition

Healthcare in Canada — What Australians Need to Know

Coming from Medicare, Australians expect universal coverage. Canada has provincial health plans but there is no equivalent of Medicare for dental, vision, or prescription medication. Most of these are covered by employer benefits plans in professional roles — but if your employer does not provide benefits, you pay out of pocket.

More critically for new arrivals: most provinces have a waiting period before your provincial health insurance activates. British Columbia eliminated its waiting period in 2020. Ontario eliminated it in 2020 as well. But other provinces still have waiting periods of up to three months. During that gap, you need private health insurance — budget approximately CAD $100–$200 per month for basic coverage.

Provincial Health Insurance Waiting Period by Province

OntarioNo wait ✅
British ColumbiaNo wait ✅
AlbertaNo wait ✅
NewfoundlandNo wait ✅
Manitoba3 months ⚠️
Saskatchewan3 months ⚠️
New Brunswick3 months ⚠️
Nova Scotia3 months ⚠️
PEI3 months ⚠️
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If you are moving to a province with a three-month wait, arrange private health insurance before you land. Do not arrive uncovered. Arrange it before departure, not on arrival — you need the policy to be active from day one in Canada.

Logistics

Shipping Your Belongings from Australia to Canada

Shipping Costs and Container Options

Sea freight is the practical option for a full household move from Australia to Canada. Air freight exists but the cost for anything beyond essential personal items is prohibitive. For a Full Container Load (FCL), expect to pay AUD $8,000–$15,000 for a 20-foot container from major Australian ports (Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane) to Vancouver or Halifax. A 40-foot container runs AUD $12,000–$22,000. Transit time is typically 30–45 days depending on routing.

Less-than-Container Load (LCL) shipping — sharing container space with other households — costs less but takes longer. Expect AUD $3,000–$8,000 depending on volume, and plan for 45–60 days transit plus additional time for customs processing.

Australian Customs — What You Cannot Take

Australia’s biosecurity rules apply on exit as well as entry. Items made from certain protected species (some hardwoods, turtle shell, coral) require permits or cannot be exported. Foods, plant materials, and untreated wooden items may also face restrictions. If in doubt, check with the Department of Agriculture before packing.

Canadian Customs Clearance

Personal and household effects imported by someone moving to Canada as a new resident are generally exempt from duty provided you have owned and used them for at least six months before arrival. You will need to complete a B4 form listing all items being imported. If your belongings are owner-packed, expect more stringent inspection at the Canadian border. A carton-by-carton inventory significantly speeds clearance. Professionally packed shipments from registered removalists typically clear faster.

Full Container Load clearance typically takes 5–7 business days. Shared containers take up to 10 business days. Budget for storage costs if your rental or accommodation is not ready when your shipment arrives.

Moving Your Pet from Australia to Canada

Good news: Canada does not require quarantine for cats and dogs imported from Australia if documentation is correct. The requirements for importing a dog or cat from Australia to Canada:

  • Microchip (ISO 15-digit standard)
  • Rabies vaccination certificate showing vaccination after the microchip was implanted (dogs require this; cats do not, but it is recommended)
  • A completed CFIA import form if applicable (check current rules for your specific situation at the time of your move)

Airline requirements vary separately from CFIA rules — check with your specific airline about approved carriers, temperature restrictions on cargo hold travel, and breed restrictions (many airlines restrict brachycephalic breeds in cargo). Australia’s biosecurity rules on exit and the airline coordination across multiple agencies make this complex enough that using a registered pet transport agent for an international move of this distance is strongly recommended.

Pre-Departure Planning

Practical Checklist — Before You Leave Australia

Three Months Before Departure

  • Cancel or redirect Australian private health insurance, noting that you will need Canadian cover on arrival in provinces with waiting periods
  • Notify your superannuation fund of your overseas move and check what happens to any insurance bundled with your super
  • Begin gathering documents: birth certificate, academic transcripts, professional certifications, employment reference letters. Canadian immigration requires originals or certified copies. Replace anything missing now, not two weeks before your visa deadline.
  • Research banking options — some Canadian banks (RBC, TD, Scotiabank) allow Australians to open an account from overseas before arrival. Having a Canadian account when you land lets you activate employer payroll and set up rent payments immediately.

Six Weeks Before Departure

  • Apply for your International Driving Permit through AAA (NRMA, RACQ, etc.) — valid in Canada for up to one year depending on province
  • Notify the Australian Tax Office of your change of residency status. Your Australian tax obligations may continue for part of the year you leave. Consider speaking with an accountant who handles international moves.
  • Arrange private health insurance for Canada to cover the waiting period in provinces that require it

Two Weeks Before Departure

  • Confirm pet documentation is complete and airline-compliant if you are bringing animals
  • Download a copy of your Australian Medicare records — useful context for Canadian healthcare providers even though Medicare itself does not apply in Canada
  • Confirm your Canadian bank account is active and transfer an emergency cash buffer before you land

On Arrival in Canada

  • Apply for your provincial health card immediately — in provinces with a three-month waiting period, applying on day one means coverage starts as early as legally possible
  • Apply for your Social Insurance Number (SIN) — required before you can start work. Applications can be done at a Service Canada location with your work permit
  • Set up a Canadian mobile number — this is required for most financial and government online services
Frequently Asked Questions

Moving to Canada from Australia — Common Questions Answered

Do Australians need a visa to move to Canada?
Australians do not need a full visa to visit Canada for up to six months — but they do need an Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA) costing CAD $7 to board a flight. To work, study, or stay beyond six months, Australians need the appropriate permit: a Working Holiday permit through IEC, a work permit, a study permit, or a permanent residence document.
How long does it take to get PR in Canada from Australia?
Via the IEC-to-CEC route: approximately 2 to 3 years from arriving on your Working Holiday permit to receiving permanent residence. Via the FSW Express Entry route applied from Australia: 12–18 months if your CRS score is above the current cut-off. Via a PNP nomination: 12–24 months depending on province. The full timeline depends on your CRS score, which category draws are active, and how quickly your application is processed once you receive an ITA.
Can I move to Canada from Australia without a job offer?
Yes. The IEC Working Holiday visa requires no job offer and no points. The FSW program through Express Entry does not require a job offer, though one adds 50 CRS points. Most PNP streams require a job offer, but not all — Saskatchewan and Manitoba have streams where a job offer is not mandatory for candidates with in-demand occupations.
What is the easiest way for an Australian to immigrate to Canada?
For those under 35: the IEC Working Holiday permit, followed by CEC after 12 months of eligible work. This requires no job offer, no IELTS, and no points system to qualify initially — just age eligibility and pool selection. For those 35 and over: FSW through Express Entry, or a PNP nomination. For those in healthcare occupations: the healthcare category draw has cut at 462–476 in 2026 — substantially below the general CEC cut-off. Calculate your CRS score to see which route fits your profile.
Can I bring my Australian superannuation to Canada?
Not directly. Australian citizens cannot access superannuation until preservation age (currently 60) regardless of where they live. The Departing Australia Superannuation Payment (DASP) only applies to non-citizens and non-permanent residents leaving Australia permanently. If you are an Australian citizen, your super will remain in your Australian fund until you reach preservation age. Before leaving, check your super fund’s policy on overseas members and the impact on any bundled insurance.
How much does it cost to move to Canada from Australia?
The main costs: sea freight for a household move (AUD $8,000–$22,000 depending on volume), immigration fees (eTA CAD $7, IEC permit CAD $161, biometrics CAD $85, PR application CAD $1,325 plus right of permanent residence fee CAD $515), flights, and an emergency fund for the first three months in Canada (CAD $10,000–$20,000 recommended to cover first and last month’s rent, setup costs, and the health insurance gap if your province has a waiting period).
Is Australia or Canada better to live in?
That depends on what you are optimising for. Canada has a more accessible immigration pathway to permanent residency and eventual citizenship. Australia has higher average wages and Medicare. Canada gives proximity to the US economy and domestic flights across North America. Australia has better beaches. Canada has better mountains and skiing. Most Australians who move to Canada do not move back — but most of them took the decision seriously rather than treating it as an indefinite working holiday.
Can Australians get permanent residency in Canada?
Yes. Express Entry (FSW, FST, CEC), PNP nominations, and family sponsorship all lead to permanent residency. Australians are well-positioned in Express Entry due to English language, education, and skilled work backgrounds. Use the CRS Score Calculator to understand exactly where you stand, and the free immigration assessment for a personalised pathway recommendation.
What jobs are in demand in Canada for Australians?
Healthcare (nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, pharmacists), technology (software developers, data analysts, cybersecurity), engineering (civil, mechanical, electrical), skilled trades (electricians, plumbers, carpenters), and finance (accountants, financial analysts) are consistently in demand across multiple provinces. Many of these occupations qualify for category-based Express Entry draws at cut-offs 50–100 points below the general pool.
What is the Working Holiday Visa age limit for Australians going to Canada?
18 to 35 inclusive. You must be within this age range at the time of applying for the IEC Working Holiday permit, not at the time of arrival. If you are 35 years and 11 months when you apply, you qualify. If you have already turned 36, you do not. The permit itself is valid for 24 months from issuance regardless of your age at the time you use it.

Your Next Step — Start With Your CRS Score

The path from Australia to Canada is more straightforward than most people think and more competitive than it was two years ago. Both things are true simultaneously. Start with your CRS score — it is the number that determines whether you walk straight into an Express Entry draw or need to work on your profile first.

Disclaimer: This guide reflects Canadian immigration policy, program eligibility criteria, and cost data as of June 2026. Rules, fees, and program requirements change frequently. Information on superannuation, tax, and healthcare is general in nature and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Consult a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) or immigration lawyer before making decisions about your application. Consult a qualified financial adviser or accountant regarding superannuation and cross-border tax matters.