Last updated: 2 juillet 2026
The Return of the H-1B RFE: Why You Need a Canadian Backup Plan Before Your Next Renewal

The Return of the H-1B RFE: Why You Need a Canadian Backup Plan Before Your Next Renewal
Summary: The H-1B visa is the backbone of the US tech and engineering sectors, but it is fundamentally a temporary, unstable status. With changing political administrations and evolving United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) guidelines, the dreaded Request for Evidence (RFE) and outright visa denials are a constant threat during every renewal cycle. Instead of facing this cyclical anxiety, thousands of highly skilled workers are investing 6 to 12 months into learning French. Achieving an NCLC 7 in French unlocks guaranteed Canadian Permanent Residence through Express Entry, providing the ultimate safety net before the next USCIS policy shift.
The Cyclical Anxiety of the H-1B Visa
If you hold an H-1B visa, your life in the United States is governed by 3-year increments. Every time your visa is up for renewal, or every time you change employers (H-1B transfer), you are at the mercy of USCIS.
While you may have held your H-1B for a decade without issue, past approvals do not guarantee future success.
The biggest fear for any H-1B worker is the Request for Evidence (RFE). When an adjudicating officer issues an RFE, they are challenging the core premise of your visa. They may question whether your degree truly matches your job duties, whether your role is genuinely a "specialty occupation," or whether your employer has a legitimate right to control your work.
During periods of strict immigration enforcement or changing political administrations, RFE rates can skyrocket. A sudden spike in RFEs inevitably leads to a spike in outright denials.
The Cost of a Denial
If your H-1B renewal or transfer is denied, the consequences are immediate and catastrophic:
- You must stop working immediately.
- Your spouse's H-4 EAD becomes invalid.
- You have 60 days (or less, depending on your I-94 status) to pack up your life, pull your children out of school, sell your home, and leave the country.
Living with this cyclical anxiety—knowing that a single subjective decision by a government bureaucrat could erase your entire American life—is a brutal psychological burden.
The Canadian Solution: Unconditional Permanence
Smart professionals do not leave their future entirely to chance. They build redundancies.
While you cannot control USCIS processing trends, you can control your backup plan. Canada’s immigration system offers exactly what the US system lacks: deterministic, unconditional permanence.
Through the Express Entry system, highly skilled professionals can secure Canadian Permanent Residence (PR). Once you land as a PR in Canada, your status is secure. There are no renewals every 3 years. There are no RFEs questioning your specialty occupation. If you are laid off, or if you want to switch careers entirely, your residency is never threatened.
The Problem: The 500+ CRS Cutoff
The challenge is that standard all-program Express Entry draws currently demand Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) scores well above 500. Without prior Canadian work experience or a provincial nomination, an H-1B worker in the US will struggle to clear 470 points.
To bypass this general pool and secure your Canadian PR, you need a strategic advantage. You need French.
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How French Unlocks the Ultimate Safety Net
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) holds category-based draws specifically designed to attract French-speaking professionals to settle outside of Quebec.
To qualify, you must demonstrate an NCLC 7 (roughly a B2 Upper Intermediate level) on the TEF Canada or TCF Canada exam.
Because the pool of bilingual, highly educated applicants is relatively small, the CRS cutoffs for francophone draws are drastically lower—historically falling between 336 and 400.
If you are an H-1B professional with a degree and a few years of experience, you already possess the baseline points to clear 400. By achieving NCLC 7 in French, you essentially guarantee yourself an Invitation to Apply (ITA) for Canadian Permanent Residence.
Executing the Strategy: A Race Against Your Next Renewal
The smartest time to build your Canadian backup plan is immediately after your H-1B is approved. You have a 3-year runway before you have to face USCIS again.
Here is how you weaponize that time:
Months 1–12: Learn French to a B2 Level Commit 1 to 2 hours a day to structured study. Because you are an educated professional, you have the discipline to master the grammar and vocabulary quickly.
Months 13–18: Pass the Exam and Apply Take the TEF or TCF Canada exam at a US Alliance Française location. Once you have your NCLC 7 results, submit your Express Entry profile. Because your CRS score is well above the francophone cutoff, you will receive an ITA in the next draw. Processing takes 6 to 12 months.
Month 24+: The "Soft Landing" and Total Security By the end of your second year, your Canadian PR is approved. You perform a "soft landing" by taking a weekend trip across the border to activate your PR status, and then return to the US.
As you approach your third year—and your next dreaded H-1B renewal—your mindset is completely transformed. If USCIS approves your renewal, great; you continue your life in the US. If USCIS issues an RFE or denies your visa, you do not panic. You simply execute your backup plan, moving your career and your family to a thriving Canadian tech or finance hub like Toronto or Vancouver.
Aiming for CLB 7+?
Join 15,000+ candidates efficiently preparing with our AI-powered simulator.
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How PrepMyFrench Builds Your Backup Plan
Achieving an NCLC 7 is a serious undertaking, but it is entirely manageable if you use the right system. You do not have time to waste on generic language apps that teach you how to order coffee. You need rigorous, exam-focused preparation.
At PrepMyFrench, we specialize in guiding busy professionals to their target scores:
- Live Zoom Classes: We provide the structure. Join our A1, A2, and B1 cohorts for live instruction with Guillaume 3 times a week (Thursday, Friday, Saturday). We force the accountability you need to stay on track.
- AI Speaking Simulations: The TEF/TCF speaking exams require specific debate reflexes. Practice 24/7 with our AI simulator from your living room, receiving instant grading and feedback without needing to schedule a tutor.
- Writing Evaluations: Submit your practice essays to our platform and get them graded strictly against the official NCLC rubric.
Our complete A1+A2+B1 class bundle is $500 CAD (~$365 USD), covering the entire curriculum in 33 weeks. It is the cheapest, most effective insurance policy you can buy against USCIS uncertainty.
The Verdict
The H-1B visa is a powerful tool, but it is not a permanent foundation upon which to build a life. The constant threat of RFEs, changing political winds, and layoffs creates a baseline of anxiety that drains your energy and limits your freedom.
By investing 6 to 12 months into learning French, you reclaim control. You bypass the impossible Express Entry cutoffs and secure an unconditional, permanent home in Canada. Your skills and your peace of mind are too valuable to leave at the mercy of the H-1B system.