Process

How It Works

A clear, step-by-step path from registration to being presented to a Canadian employer. All positions we recruit for are based on LMIA (Labour Market Impact Assessment) — an official Canadian government authorization allowing an employer to hire a foreign worker.

  1. 1

    Register your free account

    Sign up in about 20 seconds with your name, email, phone (WhatsApp) and password. No payment required. You can browse and save jobs right away.

  2. 2

    Complete your candidate profile

    Fill in personal details, passport, education, work experience, languages and preferences for Canada. A complete profile is what allows employers to actually consider you.

  3. 3

    Pay the service fee

    A one-time service fee of CAD 120.86 covers professional review of your profile, preparation of a Canadian-format CV, entry into our recruitment database and ongoing candidate management. It is not a visa fee, government fee or job guarantee.

  4. 4

    We prepare your CV and documents

    Our team rewrites your CV in the format Canadian employers expect and prepares the supporting documents needed for LMIA-based recruitment.

  5. 5

    We present you to the employer

    We send your profile to Canadian employers with open LMIA positions. If there is a match, the employer contacts you directly and the work permit and visa process begins with the appropriate authorities.

What is LMIA?

LMIA (Labour Market Impact Assessment) is a document a Canadian employer must obtain from Employment and Social Development Canada before hiring a foreign worker. A positive LMIA confirms there is a real need for a foreign worker and that no Canadian is available for the job. Every job offer on our platform comes from an employer with an approved (or in-process) LMIA — so the position and the legal path to work in Canada are real.

Important

Registration and the service fee do not guarantee employment, a work permit, a visa or immigration approval. Final hiring decisions are made by the employer, and immigration decisions are made only by Canadian authorities.