IRCC is built to find inconsistencies
A file can look complete and still carry date conflicts, weak NOC duties, stale language results, or missing country evidence.
Canada immigration self-serve
Use the same serious Canada case engine behind the consultant product, with Express Entry-grade CRS, NOC, document, consistency, drafting, and package-readiness checks across supported Canada streams. Navisa helps you prepare the file; you review it and submit through IRCC yourself.
Start free — CRS calculator, pathway finder, and live draw tracker, no account needed. When you’re ready, prepare your full application for a one-time $29.
Reference letter duties point between two codes; review lead-statement and main-duty alignment before relying on NOC 21232.
Generated as an editable applicant draft with a final accuracy check before use.
Residence history creates one country-specific evidence slot before the file should be entered in IRCC.
Free to start
Get your number, find your path, and track every draw. Save your result and we’ll tell you the moment a draw lands in your range.
Your Express Entry score, live against the latest draw — with what-if scenarios that show how to gain points.
Open CRS CalculatorAnswer a few questions and see your real options ranked by the actual program rules — not a generic quiz.
Open Pathway FinderEvery draw and CRS cutoff, newest first. Enter your score and see which draws would have invited you.
Open Draw TrackerWhy check it
Self-filing is completely reasonable. Blind self-filing is where people get hurt.
A file can look complete and still carry date conflicts, weak NOC duties, stale language results, or missing country evidence.
The risk is rarely the document you know is missing. It is the fact you entered confidently that does not match another part of the file.
A Canada file is not one form. It is stream selection, eligibility, documents, personal history, drafts, package order, and post-filing tracking.
Full lifecycle
Navisa keeps the same end-to-end case grammar as the consultant product, but every step is written for you as the applicant.
Turn your facts into a structured Canada immigration case record.
01Check stream fit, eligibility gates, CRS where relevant, and strategy before you build the wrong file.
02Map documents to the evidence the file actually needs.
03Eligibility, risk, officer concerns, and cited policy analysis.
04Catch conflicts across intake, documents, work history, and identity.
05Prepare LoEs, reference guidance, and package notes from findings.
06Review an evidence map and final IRCC-entry checklist.
07After you file, track deadlines, IRCC letters, and next actions.
08The agents
The self-serve workspace runs specialist checks over the same application: documents, intake, consistency, eligibility, NOC, drafting, policy, and post-filing signals.
Reads passports, IELTS, ECA, employment letters, police certificates, and supporting evidence into case facts.
Checks what you answered against what your evidence actually says.
Looks for the date, name, work-history, status, and identity conflicts an officer may notice.
Runs CRS, stream fit, hard gates, refusal-risk bands, and anticipated officer concerns.
Compares claimed occupation, TEER level, lead statement, duties, and reference-letter gaps.
Turns findings into applicant-editable LoEs, reference-letter guidance, and package notes.
Watches official policy sources and tells you when a change may affect your application.
The analysis
Navisa does not give you a vague thumbs-up. It shows the reasoning, the evidence gap, the policy source, and the next action.
Policy intelligence
Draws, category rounds, provincial changes, work/study/visitor instructions, family-class guidance, NOC guidance, IRPA, IRPR, and IRCC program delivery instructions are not background noise. They can change what your application needs.
Ask Navisa why a finding matters and it answers from the case, documents, checklist, and retrieved policy. You still verify the output, but you are not starting from a blank browser tab and a dozen bookmarks.
Concrete file checks
The serious parts of a Canada application, surfaced before you submit. This is not a toy checklist; it is the same Canada case engine adapted for self-serve applicants.
Compare PR, work, study, visitor, family, and PNP pathways; estimate CRS where the stream needs it.
Map passport, IELTS, ECA, employment, police, funds, and supporting evidence to the checklist.
Catch date, name, work-history, identity, and evidence conflicts before they become officer concerns.
Compare your claimed occupation against duties, TEER level, lead statement, and ambiguity warnings.
Prepare LoE drafts, personal-history explanations, reference-letter guidance, and package notes.
Leave with an evidence map and final IRCC entry checklist for your own submission.
Resume says May 2021, reference letter says July 2021.
Review the gap before entering personal history in IRCC.Language test may expire before the final application or permit decision timeline.
Track the deadline and plan a retest if the file or submission timing is delayed.Claimed NOC 21232 but duties read like a lower-fit support role.
Strengthen employer letter or reconsider the claimed occupation.Travel/residence history creates a country-specific document need.
Add the missing certificate or prepare a documented explanation.Four months are missing between two employment periods.
Generate a draft explanation and reconcile dates across evidence.Output previews
You do not just get a checklist. The workspace turns your facts and evidence into reviewable outputs you can use while entering your own IRCC application.
A structured case record from your answers: identity, status, education, language, work, funds, and risk facts.
Ranked findings for document gaps, NOC ambiguity, expiry issues, and cross-document inconsistencies.
A working list tied to the selected Canada stream, not a generic upload bucket.
Applicant-editable explanations for gaps, missing documents, name issues, and unusual facts.
What an employer letter should fix: dates, hours, wage, signatory, duties, and NOC alignment.
A final IRCC-entry checklist that shows what to enter, what to upload, and what still needs review.
Software, not representation: you review every output for accuracy and decide what to submit through IRCC.
Even if you feel ready
Navisa is worth running even when you are confident, because the system is looking for connections you may not be thinking about: the document that contradicts the form, the country that triggers another certificate, the NOC duty that sounds close but not close enough.
Safety rails
Navisa is self-serve software. It is not a lawyer, RCIC, representative, autonomous legal advisor, or filing agent. The workspace helps you organize facts, understand risks, draft explanations, and prepare your package.
You must review every answer, decide whether to continue, and submit through IRCC yourself. If your file involves inadmissibility, misrepresentation risk, status restoration, criminal history, medical concerns, or NOC ambiguity, consider getting professional help before submitting.
Pricing
Pay once, create your account, and enter the application workspace. No consultant subscription, no firm setup, no representative relationship, and no submission automation.
Navisa is self-serve software, not a lawyer, RCIC, representative, autonomous legal advisor, or filing agent.
One-time workspace
Direct page access is available for internal QA, but applicant checkout is launch-gated until production readiness is complete.
FAQ
You get one Canada self-serve workspace with intake, document upload, stream fit, CRS where relevant, risk findings, drafting tools, Case Pilot, and a final package checklist.