Indian Professionals in the US: Why the 50-Year Green Card Wait Has Made Canada's French Route the Rational Choice
PrepMyFrench Education Team
11 min read
Indian Professionals in the US: Why the 50-Year Green Card Wait Has Made Canada's French Route the Rational Choice
Summary: For Indian nationals currently working in the United States on H-1B, L-1, or OPT visas, the employment-based green card is effectively unattainable within a working lifetime. USCIS's own data confirms that EB-2 India priority dates have moved fewer than 4 years in the last 15 years. Against this backdrop, an alternative has emerged that is both faster and more achievable: learning French to NCLC 7, taking the TEF Canada or TCF Canada exam, and qualifying for Canada's francophone category Express Entry draws — which have issued Invitations to Apply to candidates with CRS scores as low as 336. This guide maps the complete pathway from Indian professional in the US to Canadian permanent resident.
The Impossible Math of EB-2 India
Let's start with the numbers, because they tell a story that immigration lawyers in the US are increasingly calling a "generational injustice."
The US allocates employment-based green cards through a per-country annual limit system that was designed in 1990. Under this system, no single country can receive more than 7% of the total annual employment-based green card quota — regardless of how large that country's skilled worker population is.
PrepMyFrench Ebooks
Structured 60-day study guides · A1 through B1
Live French Classes
LIVE
Small-group Zoom sessions · 3x per week · Instructor Guillaume
Save up to $100 with combo packages (A1+A2, A2+B1, or all three)
Indian Professionals in the US: Why the 50-Year Green Card Wait Has Made Canada's French Route the Rational Choice
India accounts for an enormous proportion of H-1B visa holders in the US — estimates suggest 70–75% of all H-1B cap-subject petitions are filed on behalf of Indian nationals. The result:
EB-2 India priority date (as of mid-2026): Approximately 2012–2014 for most categories. Applicants who filed in 2025 will not see movement for 30–50 years under current conditions.
EB-3 India: Similarly backlogged, with some analyses suggesting 80+ year waits for applicants at the end of the current queue.
EB-1 India (extraordinary ability / multinational managers): Significantly backlogged as well, though less extreme than EB-2/3.
The National Foundation for American Policy (NFAP) has published research showing that at current rates, Indian EB-2 applicants who filed in 2020 may not receive their green card until 2100 or later. This is not hyperbole — it is derived directly from USCIS data.
What the US Government Has Not Fixed (And Why)
Multiple attempts to reform the per-country cap system have failed in Congress:
The EAGLE Act (previously the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act) — which would have eliminated per-country caps for employment-based green cards — passed the House of Representatives in 2021 with overwhelming bipartisan support and then stalled in the Senate
The H-1B Cap Reduction proposals of 2025–2026 — which went in the opposite direction, proposing to restrict H-1B numbers further — added additional uncertainty
The structural problem is that eliminating per-country caps would dramatically accelerate Indian and Chinese applicants through the backlog, which raises political concerns about displacement of other-country applicants who currently benefit from shorter wait times. The reform has been politically blocked for more than a decade.
Limited Offer
Aiming for CLB 7+?
Join 15,000+ candidates efficiently preparing with our AI-powered simulator.
Canadian immigration operates on an entirely different principle: the points-based Express Entry system allocates permanent residence based on individual Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) scores, with no per-country limits. An Indian national with a strong profile competes equally with all other nationalities.
The francophone pathway makes this even more accessible:
Canada has been holding dedicated francophone category-based Express Entry draws since August 2023. These draws target French-speaking candidates with NCLC 7+ scores and have issued ITAs at CRS thresholds dramatically below the standard Express Entry pool.
A typical Indian professional — software engineer, master's degree, 6+ years of experience — would have a CRS of approximately 430–480 without French. With NCLC 7 French added:
CRS with second-language French bonus (NCLC 7+): +50 points → CRS of 480–530
Francophone category eligibility: CRS floor as low as 336 in recent draws
Both routes lead to an ITA.
Timeline Comparison: The Starkest Numbers
Scenario
Estimated PR/Green Card Timeline
EB-2 India (filed 2025)
30–80 years
EB-3 India (filed 2025)
50–100+ years
EB-1 India (qualified)
5–10 years
Canadian Express Entry — all programs (CRS 460+)
1–3 years
Canadian francophone category — NCLC 7+
2–4 years (including French study)
The difference is not marginal. For most Indian professionals in the EB-2/3 backlog, the Canadian francophone pathway is literally hundreds of times faster than the US green card process.
Limited Offer
Aiming for CLB 7+?
Join 15,000+ candidates efficiently preparing with our AI-powered simulator.
A significant advantage for many Indian professionals pursuing the French pathway: multilingual backgrounds often accelerate language acquisition. Professionals who already speak Hindi, Punjabi, Gujarati, Tamil, or other Indian languages have already demonstrated the cognitive flexibility to navigate multiple language systems. French, while structurally different from Indian languages, benefits from this foundation.
Additionally, many Indian professionals who attended English-medium schools have encountered French as a second foreign language option. Even rusty A1/A2 exposure from school years reduces the effective study time.
Realistic timelines for Indian professionals:
Starting Level
Estimated Time to NCLC 7
No French background
14–20 months
School-level French (forgotten but restorable)
8–12 months
Working conversational French
4–6 months
The critical preparation components are the same as for any candidate: grammar automation through structured instruction, daily speaking practice, timed writing with expert feedback, and full mock exams before the real test.
Maintaining US H-1B Status During the Canadian Application
Many Indian professionals in this situation worry about the legal implications of pursuing Canadian PR while on H-1B status. The legal position is clear:
H-1B is a "dual intent" visa. USCIS explicitly acknowledges that H-1B holders may simultaneously harbor immigrant intent for another country or for the US itself. Filing a Canadian immigration application does not constitute fraud or misrepresentation on H-1B renewal applications.
The process can run entirely in parallel:
French study: continue while fully employed on H-1B
TEF/TCF Canada exam: taken at US test centres during a weekend
Express Entry profile: submitted online in approximately 2 hours
Canadian PR application (after ITA): submitted online over 60 days
Status activation: you choose when to activate residency (you don't have to move to Canada until you are ready)
Consult with both a US immigration attorney and a Canadian Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) before proceeding, to ensure your specific circumstances are properly handled.
Limited Offer
Aiming for CLB 7+?
Join 15,000+ candidates efficiently preparing with our AI-powered simulator.
Life After Canadian PR: What Does It Actually Look Like?
Canadian PR allows you to:
Live and work anywhere in Canada (except Quebec, which has its own immigration system)
Sponsor immediate family members (spouse and dependent children) for PR
Access provincial healthcare (after a brief waiting period, typically 3 months)
Apply for Canadian citizenship after 3 years of physical presence in Canada (1,095 days of the 5 years before application)
Maintain PR indefinitely as long as you meet the residency obligation (730 days in Canada per 5-year period)
Many Indian PR holders in Canada maintain ties to the US:
Continue working for US companies (often remotely from Canada)
Keep US bank accounts and investments
Travel to the US regularly for work or family (Canadian PR does not affect US visa status)
Eventually apply for Canadian citizenship while deciding about long-term US ties
The Cities Where Indian Professionals Are Settling in Canada
The Indian professional community in Canada has established significant hubs:
Toronto and the Greater Toronto Area (Ontario): The largest South Asian community in Canada. Strong tech sector, major financial institutions, and significant startup activity.
Vancouver, British Columbia: Growing tech hub with connections to the US Pacific Northwest. The most expensive housing market but strong quality of life.
Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta: Growing tech sectors and significantly more affordable housing than Toronto or Vancouver.
Waterloo, Ontario: Canada's "Silicon Valley," home to the University of Waterloo tech ecosystem and major tech employers.
Ottawa, Ontario: Strong federal government and tech sector. Bilingual city with French exposure — valuable if you have built French skills for the PR application.
Limited Offer
Aiming for CLB 7+?
Join 15,000+ candidates efficiently preparing with our AI-powered simulator.
How PrepMyFrench Supports Indian Professionals in the US
At PrepMyFrench, we serve many Indian professionals from the US who are building their French for the Canadian Express Entry pathway. Our platform is designed for working professionals who need structured, flexible, outcome-focused preparation:
Live Zoom Classes with Guillaume: Structured group instruction from A1 through B1, 3 times per week. Our Summer 2026 Cohort begins June 4. Open to students across North America — all you need is a stable internet connection.
AI Speaking Simulations: Practice TEF/TCF Speaking on your schedule without waiting for a tutor.
Writing Evaluations: Expert NCLC-rubric feedback on TEF/TCF Writing tasks.
Class packages starting from $150 CAD (~$110 USD) for A1 level. Full A1+A2+B1 bundle: $500 CAD (~$365 USD).
For Indian professionals in the US green card backlog, the traditional advice was "be patient, the green card will come." For EB-3 applicants, that advice was already strained. For EB-2 applicants with 2025 priority dates facing 30–50 year waits, it has become professionally unconscionable.
The Canadian francophone pathway offers a concrete, measurable alternative: 6–20 months of French study, an exam, and 2–3 years of application processing. The math comparison is not even close. The question is no longer whether Canada is worth considering — it is whether waiting for a US system that has demonstrably failed to process the current backlog is worth the opportunity cost of the years you will spend waiting.