Quebec's Free Francisation Courses: Plan Your Linguistic Integration After TCF Canada

 

A fact that surprises many TCF Canada candidates: if your immigration destination includes Québec, the Quebec government offers fully funded French language courses to new immigrants — and in some formats, a weekly financial allowance while you study. Understanding this system before you arrive allows you to plan a deliberate two-stage linguistic journey: TCF Canada to immigrate, then francisation to advance your French to the level required for full professional and social integration in a French-speaking province.

This article complements our guide on Life in Canada: Cultural and Linguistic Context, our article on Maintaining French After Immigration to Canada and our guide on Francophone Life Outside Québec in 2026. It provides the specific operational detail of Quebec's francisation system that none of those articles covers fully.

The Quebec Francisation System: Key Facts

The Ministère de l'Immigration, de la Francisation et de l'Intégration (MIFI) administers Quebec's francisation programme — one of the most comprehensive immigrant language integration schemes in the world and a significant differentiator of Quebec immigration compared to other Canadian provinces.

FormatHours per WeekWeekly AllowanceEligibility
Full-time courses30 hours/week~CAD $185/week (unemployed adults)PR, citizens, some temporary permits
Part-time coursesVariable (evenings/weekends)NoneSame as above — for working immigrants
Workplace francisationDuring work hoursNone (employer-co-funded)Employees of MIFI partner employers
Online francisationFlexibleNoneSame — accessible from anywhere in Québec
The critical warning that must come first: Francisation is designed for linguistic integration after immigration — it cannot replace TCF Canada scores in a permanent residence application. IRCC requires your official TCF Canada results at the time of PR dossier submission. No francisation certificate, MIFI completion document or language assessment from a Quebec institution substitutes for the TCF Canada in the federal immigration process. Secure the highest possible TCF Canada score independently, then use francisation to advance after arriving.

Who Is Eligible for Free Quebec Francisation?

Immigration StatusEligibilityWeekly Allowance?
Permanent resident (Quebec-settled)✅ Yes — unconditionalYes (full-time, if unemployed)
Canadian citizen (naturalised)✅ YesNo
Temporary worker (valid Quebec permit)✅ Yes (most cases)No
International student☐ No (with rare exceptions)No
Asylum seeker✅ YesYes (specific conditions)
Tourist / Visitor❌ NoNo

The Programme Structure: Six Levels Aligned to the CECR

The MIFI francisation programme is organised in 6 progressive levels corresponding approximately to A1 through B2 of the Common European Framework. A placement assessment at registration determines your entry level.

Approximate level correspondences for TCF Canada candidates:

  • NCLC 4–5 (approx. B1) → Francisation levels 3–4 → 4 to 8 months of full-time study
  • NCLC 7–8 (approx. B2) → Francisation levels 5–6 → 2 to 4 months of full-time study
  • NCLC 9+ (C1 equivalent) → May be placed at level 6 or offered advanced-level alternatives → 1 to 2 months

These are approximations — the placement assessment at your CÉGEP or MIFI centre determines the actual entry level regardless of TCF Canada scores.

Using Francisation to Prepare a TCF Canada Retake

For candidates already in Québec on temporary status preparing a TCF Canada retake, the MIFI part-time francisation programme is an exceptional free resource that complements individual preparation. Our Retake Strategies 2026 article provides the preparation framework. The combination works as follows:

Enrol in part-time francisation upon receiving your eligible temporary status — 3 to 4 evenings per week in your CÉGEP or community centre
Work with the MIFI instructor to target your specific weak points — MIFI instructors use NCLC-aligned assessment tools and can advise on TCF Canada-specific areas
Combine francisation with individual targeted practice using the methods from the Targeted Improvement framework — the course accelerates contextual language acquisition while individual practice addresses TCF Canada-specific format requirements
Schedule your TCF Canada retake 3 to 4 months after starting francisation to benefit from course-driven progress before the exam — not before and not too long after

Federal Equivalents for Provinces Outside Québec

For Francophone immigrants settling outside Québec:

  • CLIC (Cours de langue pour les immigrants au Canada): Free federal French language programme available in all provinces, levels 1 to 8. Delivered through accredited community organisations and colleges.
  • CLICimmigration.ca: Free online French integration courses accessible to permanent residents anywhere in Canada, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. No geographic restriction.
  • LINC (Language Instruction for Newcomers to Canada): Free English classes for immigrants in all provinces — relevant for bilingual integration in English-majority provinces even for Francophone immigrants.
  • Public libraries: French conversation circles and language practice programmes in cities with active Francophone communities (Ottawa, Winnipeg, Moncton, Edmonton, Saskatoon).
"I arrived in Montréal with NCLC 7 — the minimum qualifying score for my immigration pathway. I enrolled in full-time francisation at Cégep du Vieux Montréal the week I received my permanent residence. After five months, with the MIFI participation allowance covering my basic expenses, I was at C1 level and speaking French naturally rather than deliberately. If I had understood this system before immigrating, I might have calibrated my TCF Canada strategy differently — but honestly, aiming for NCLC 9 from the start gave me much better CRS positioning, so I have no regrets." — Mourad, IT technician from Constantine, now in Montréal