+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445

Thirty30

Star Member
Sep 11, 2020
58
3
Hello,
I've spent months studying Canada's immigration system In all provinces. I came to the conclusion that The Skills Immigration (SI) – International Post-Graduate category of the BC Provincial Nominee Program (BC PNP) suits me the best.

Here's my plan:
1/ Get an admission at Uvic MPH program
2/ Pay tuition fees for the 2 years which is around $30k CAD.
3/spend another $30k on living expenses for the whole two years + work as possible while studying.
4/ Once I graduate, I sign a one-year lease (to prove settling in BC) then apply for a PR.
5/ Start looking for work with 0 stress about legal stay.

What do you guys think in terms of the whole plan and the budget I set for these 2 years? I'd love any recommendations.
 
Others can comment/correct as appropriate maybe adjust 4/5

4/ Once I graduate, I sign a one-year lease (to prove settling in BC) , apply for a 3 year PGWP
5/ Start looking for full time work (noc 0,A or B) with 0 stress about legal stay due to the PGWP as you will need a work permit to work regardless any PNP PR application .
6/Apply for PR and wait in pool for X months for an invitation/nomination

Possibly still a 3 year or so end to end plan given processing times and budget wise maybe not assume for planning purposes that you would walk straight into a job post graduation.
 
Last edited:
Others can comment/correct as appropriate maybe adjust 4/5

4/ Once I graduate, I sign a one-year lease (to prove settling in BC) , apply for a 3 year PGWP
5/ Start looking for full time work (noc 0,A or B) with 0 stress about legal stay due to the PGWP as you will need a work permit to work regardless any PNP PR application .
6/Apply for PR and wait in pool for X months for an invitation/nomination

Possibly still a 3 year or so end to end plan given processing times and budget wise maybe not assume for planning purposes that you would walk straight into a job post graduation.
Thanks,
 
How much would you say is enough for reasonable living in Victoria?

Really depends on what you're able to find for housing. Prices may have gone down a bit due to covid but Victoria has a low vacancy rate and housing is expensive.