If you are applying to immigrate to Canada and French is part of your strategy, you will almost certainly encounter the term TCF Canada. But what exactly is it, how does it work, and what do you need to score?

This guide covers everything clearly — no assumed knowledge, no jargon left unexplained.

What is TCF Canada?

TCF Canada stands for Test de Connaissance du Français pour le Canada — the Test of Knowledge of French for Canada. It is the official French language test accepted by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) for immigration applications including Express Entry.

It is administered by France Éducation International, a French government body, and is available at certified test centres around the world — including in Nigeria.

Important: There are several versions of the TCF. Only TCF Canada is accepted for Canadian immigration purposes. TCF (general), TCF pour le Québec, and TCF ANF are different tests. Make sure you register for the correct one.

What does TCF Canada test?

TCF Canada measures your French across four skills:

Each skill is tested and scored separately. Your scores in each section are then converted to CLB (Canadian Language Benchmark) levels, which is what IRCC uses when calculating your immigration points.

TCF Canada scores and CLB levels

This is the table that matters most. Here is how TCF Canada scores convert to CLB levels, and what those levels mean for your Express Entry profile:

TCF Score Range CLB Level CEFR Equivalent Immigration relevance
0–99 CLB 1–3 A1 No points added
100–180 CLB 4–5 A2 Some CRS points
181–299 CLB 6 B1 Moderate CRS points
300–348 CLB 7 B1–B2 +50 CRS points — key target
349–395 CLB 8 B2 Strong CRS bonus
396–457 CLB 9–10 B2–C1 Francophone Mobility Program
458–699 CLB 11–12 C1–C2 Near-native proficiency

Score ranges above are approximate and based on the listening and reading components. Writing and speaking are scored on a different scale. Always refer to IRCC's official guidance for current conversion tables.

What score should you aim for?

CLB 7 is the primary target for most Express Entry applicants. Here is why:

In a competitive Express Entry draw, the difference between receiving an Invitation to Apply and not can be as little as 5–10 points. French at CLB 7 can be the deciding factor.

How long are TCF Canada scores valid?

TCF Canada results are valid for two years from the date of the test. This means you need to plan carefully — if you sit the test too early and your immigration application takes longer than expected, your scores may expire before your application is processed.

The general advice is to sit TCF Canada when you are within 18 months of submitting your Express Entry application, giving you a buffer.

Where can you sit TCF Canada in Nigeria?

TCF Canada is available at certified test centres in Nigeria, primarily through Alliance Française locations in Lagos and Abuja. Test dates are limited and seats fill quickly, so register well in advance.

To find current test dates and register, visit the France Éducation International TCF Canada page or contact your local Alliance Française directly.

How to prepare for TCF Canada

Preparation falls into two stages, and the order matters.

Stage 1 — Build your French foundation

TCF Canada at CLB 7 requires genuine conversational ability — real vocabulary, real listening comprehension, the ability to express yourself under pressure. You cannot shortcut this with exam technique alone.

Before you open a single TCF practice paper, you need to have built a solid spoken French foundation. That means 1,000+ real words and phrases in active use, a trained ear for native-speed French, and the confidence to express yourself without freezing.

Our free 6-week French course is designed for exactly this stage. It gets you to A1–A2 using real, conversational French — the foundation that makes TCF preparation actually work.

Stage 2 — TCF-specific preparation

Once your foundation is in place, move to dedicated TCF Canada preparation:

Note: Immigration requirements, point allocations, and accepted tests are set by IRCC and can change. Always verify current requirements at canada.ca/immigration. This article reflects information available in March 2026.

Start with the foundation — it's free.

TCF Canada preparation works best when you already have French in you. Our free 6-week course builds that foundation — no grammar rules, no credit card required.

Start my free French course → Read: French for Canada Immigration guide