IELTS Is One Test. Canada Accepts Several Others — and Sometimes None at All.

There is a persistent assumption among international students that IELTS is the gateway to studying in an English-speaking country. You cannot apply without it. You cannot get a visa without it. You cannot get in.

That assumption is understandable — IELTS is the most widely recognised English language test in the world, and it appears on almost every university requirements page as the first test listed. But listed first does not mean listed only. And for a significant number of students, it does not need to be listed at all.

Canada's universities and colleges require evidence that you can study effectively in English. That requirement is real, consistently applied, and non-negotiable — every lecture, assignment, examination, and dissertation in an English-medium Canadian programme happens in English, and institutions have a genuine responsibility to ensure that students they admit are prepared for that environment.

But the way that requirement is demonstrated is more flexible than most students realise. TOEFL has been accepted at Canadian universities for decades. PTE Academic has a growing and now substantial acceptance rate across the sector. The Duolingo English Test has moved from novelty to mainstream at a large number of Canadian institutions. And for students from specific educational backgrounds — those who completed previous programmes in English, or who are citizens of countries where English is the primary language of education — many Canadian universities and colleges offer a full language waiver that removes the requirement for any formal test at all.

This guide explains all of it: who qualifies for a waiver, which alternative tests are accepted and at what scores, how different institutions approach the question, and how to navigate your application if your English language situation does not fit the standard template.


Why Canadian Institutions Require English Proof — and Why the Method Is Flexible

Understanding the purpose of English language requirements makes the alternatives and waivers easier to understand.

Canadian universities and colleges are not collecting IELTS certificates because they enjoy administering requirements. They are collecting evidence — credible, verifiable evidence — that an applicant can function at a university level in English. They need to be satisfied that you can read complex academic texts at speed, write analytically in English under time pressure, participate meaningfully in seminars and group work, and produce assessed work — essays, reports, technical documents, presentations, examinations — entirely in English.

Different tests measure these abilities in different ways, through different formats, assessed by different methods. IELTS measures them one way. TOEFL measures them another. PTE measures them differently again. What the institution is evaluating is whether the evidence you provide credibly and reliably establishes the required level of English competence — not which specific test produced the evidence.

This is why the system has more flexibility than it first appears. As long as the evidence is credible and the source is one the institution recognises, the specific test is secondary. And when previous educational experience already constitutes credible evidence — because you spent four years completing a bachelor's degree delivered and assessed entirely in English — no additional test evidence may be needed at all.


Who Can Study in Canada Without Any English Test

There is a meaningful and often underappreciated group of international students who are not required to submit any English language test results to any Canadian university or college. If you fall into one of the categories below, you may be eligible for a full English language waiver — and you should explore this before investing time and money in a test that you may not need.

Citizens of Majority English-Speaking Countries

If you are a citizen of a country where English is the primary official language and the primary language of education and government, most Canadian institutions will waive the English language requirement automatically or on request.

Countries that consistently qualify include:

  • United Kingdom
  • United States of America
  • Australia
  • New Zealand
  • Ireland
  • Jamaica
  • Trinidad and Tobago
  • Barbados
  • The Bahamas
  • Belize
  • Guyana

Some Canadian institutions also extend the automatic waiver to citizens of countries where English is one of several official languages and where English-medium education is prevalent — this can include Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, and similar countries, though the policy varies between institutions. If your country is not on a published waiver list at your target institution, contact the admissions office and describe your educational background — the decision is often made on a case-by-case basis rather than purely by nationality.

Students Who Completed Previous Education in English

This is the most widely applicable waiver route and the one that covers the largest group of international students seeking to avoid IELTS.

If you completed your secondary school education, undergraduate degree, or a previous postgraduate qualification in English — meaning that English was the primary language of instruction and assessment throughout your programme, not merely a subject studied alongside others — most Canadian universities and colleges will consider this sufficient evidence of your English proficiency.

This route is particularly relevant for students from:

Pakistan — where English is an official language and the primary medium of instruction at many private and public secondary schools, colleges, and universities. Students who completed an O-Level and A-Level education in English, or who graduated from an English-medium Pakistani university, have a well-established basis for a waiver request at most Canadian institutions.

India — where a substantial portion of the university sector delivers programmes in English, particularly in sciences, technology, engineering, business, and management. Graduates of English-medium Indian universities are commonly granted waivers at Canadian institutions that have a formal policy for doing so.

Nigeria — where the university system operates in English and secondary school instruction is in English. Nigerian graduates frequently qualify for waivers at Canadian universities that assess educational background rather than nationality alone.

Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Zambia — where English is the medium of instruction in secondary and higher education across most institutions.

Malaysia and Singapore — where significant portions of the higher education system operate in English.

Philippines — where English is an official language and a primary medium of instruction at university level.

Bangladesh — where English-medium instruction is widespread at private universities and some public institutions.

The UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and other Gulf states — where many private universities and international schools deliver instruction in English.

To claim a waiver on the basis of previous English-medium education, you will typically need to provide:

  • A medium of instruction letter from your previous institution — on official headed paper, signed by a registrar, academic dean, or other authorised official, explicitly stating that English was the language of instruction and assessment throughout your programme. This is the key document. A letter that confirms your attendance without specifically addressing the language of instruction is insufficient.
  • Your academic transcripts — which demonstrate that you were taught, assessed, and graduated in English
  • In some cases, a brief written explanation in your application or cover email confirming that your studies were conducted in English

The medium of instruction letter must be specific and official. It cannot be a general reference letter that happens to mention English instruction in passing — it must address the language of instruction explicitly and be signed by an authorised institutional official.

Students Who Previously Studied at a Canadian Institution

If you have already completed a period of study at a recognised Canadian institution — whether a degree programme, a diploma, a college certificate, or a significant number of academic courses in English — most Canadian universities and colleges will accept this as sufficient evidence of English proficiency without requiring a separate test.

Your Canadian academic transcript and, where applicable, your credential certificate serve as evidence that you successfully completed coursework at a recognised Canadian institution in English. The institution you are applying to will typically confirm this directly with the admitting institution. Confirm the waiver policy with each new institution you apply to, as procedures vary.

Students Who Completed Secondary School in Canada

If you attended and completed secondary school at a Canadian institution — on a study permit or another immigration status — most universities and colleges will waive the English language requirement based on that educational record. Your high school transcript and diploma are accepted as evidence of English proficiency developed through the Canadian secondary education system.


Accepted English Language Alternatives to IELTS at Canadian Institutions

For students who do not qualify for a waiver and need to provide formal English test results, the following tests are accepted by Canadian institutions as alternatives to IELTS. The breadth of accepted tests in Canada has expanded meaningfully over the past several years — particularly following the disruptions of 2020 and 2021 — and continues to grow.

TOEFL iBT: The Most Established Alternative

TOEFL — Test of English as a Foreign Language — has been accepted at Canadian universities for longer than virtually any other alternative to IELTS and is recognised across all major Canadian institutions without exception. It is the most strategically safe alternative for students who need maximum flexibility across their shortlist.

The TOEFL iBT (internet-based test) assesses reading, listening, speaking, and writing over approximately three hours. It is available at test centres worldwide and as a home edition for online administration. Scores are reported on a scale of 0 to 120 and are valid for two years from the test date.

Score reports must be sent officially from ETS (Educational Testing Service) directly to each institution — self-reported scores may be used for initial review but official reports are required for enrolment confirmation.

Typical TOEFL iBT requirements at Canadian universities and colleges:

  • Community colleges and less selective institutions: 61 to 79
  • Mid-tier and regional universities: 79 to 88
  • Selective universities (Toronto, UBC, McGill, McMaster): 88 to 100
  • Competitive professional programmes (medicine, law, MBA): 100 and above

TOEFL uses American English conventions throughout and its scoring and format differ meaningfully from IELTS. Students who are accustomed to British English conventions and the IELTS format should take at least one full TOEFL practice test before deciding between the two tests — format familiarity is a genuine factor in performance.

PTE Academic: Fast Results and Growing Acceptance

PTE Academic — the Pearson Test of English Academic — is a computer-based, AI-assessed English test that has grown significantly in acceptance at Canadian institutions over the past four to five years. It is now accepted at a substantial number of Canadian universities and colleges, particularly for postgraduate and professional programmes.

The PTE Academic is fully computer-administered and AI-assessed — there is no human examiner component. Many students find this format less stressful than tests involving human assessment of speaking performance. Results are typically released within 48 hours of the test.

Scores are reported on a scale of 10 to 90 and are valid for two years. Score reports are sent electronically to institutions.

Typical PTE Academic requirements at Canadian institutions:

  • Community colleges and less selective institutions: 51 to 58
  • Mid-tier universities: 58 to 65
  • Selective universities: 65 to 72

PTE is a particularly practical option for students who need results quickly due to a compressed application timeline. Before registering, confirm that every institution on your shortlist accepts PTE Academic — it is not as universally recognised as TOEFL and some institutions, particularly at the more selective end, may not yet include it among their accepted tests.

Duolingo English Test: The Most Accessible Option

The Duolingo English Test has transformed the English language testing landscape since gaining widespread institutional acceptance around 2020. It is taken entirely online from home — requiring only a computer with a camera, microphone, and stable internet connection — takes approximately one hour to complete, and costs $59 USD. Results are available within 48 hours.

Scores are reported on a scale of 10 to 160. The test assesses literacy, comprehension, conversation, and production through integrated tasks that differ meaningfully in format from both IELTS and TOEFL.

Typical Duolingo English Test requirements at Canadian institutions:

  • Community colleges and less selective institutions: 95 to 105
  • Mid-tier universities: 105 to 115
  • Selective universities: 115 to 130

Acceptance of the Duolingo English Test among Canadian institutions has expanded considerably and continues to grow. It is now accepted at a substantial number of Canadian universities and colleges — including many well-regarded public universities and most Ontario colleges.

However, it is not yet universally accepted, and some institutions — particularly for medicine, dentistry, nursing, law, and other regulated professional programmes — retain a requirement for IELTS or TOEFL specifically. Before registering for the Duolingo test, check the English language policy page of every institution on your shortlist. Do not assume that acceptance at one institution means acceptance everywhere on your list.

CELPIP: The Canadian-Developed English Test

CELPIP — the Canadian English Language Proficiency Index Program — is a Canadian-developed English proficiency test that assesses listening, reading, writing, and speaking. It is delivered entirely on a computer with results typically available within five business days.

CELPIP has a particular relevance in the Canadian context because it is accepted by IRCC for permanent residency applications — meaning that students who take CELPIP for university admission can use the same test results for their future Express Entry or Provincial Nominee Program applications, avoiding the need to sit a separate immigration language test later.

CELPIP is accepted as an admissions English test at a growing number of Canadian institutions, though it is not yet as widely recognised for admissions purposes as IELTS or TOEFL. It is worth considering if:

  • Your target institutions accept CELPIP for admissions purposes
  • You are planning to remain in Canada after graduation and anticipate needing a language test for immigration purposes
  • You prefer a fully computerised Canadian test environment

Typical CELPIP requirements for university admissions where accepted: CELPIP-General score of 9 in all components for most postgraduate programmes, 7 to 8 for undergraduate and college programmes.

Cambridge English Qualifications: C1 Advanced and C2 Proficiency

Cambridge English qualifications — specifically the C1 Advanced (formerly CAE) and C2 Proficiency (formerly CPE) — are internationally recognised academic English qualifications accepted by a number of Canadian institutions.

Unlike the tests above, Cambridge qualifications do not expire. If you completed a C1 Advanced or C2 Proficiency examination as part of your secondary school or previous higher education — even several years ago — you may be able to use that result for your Canadian application without sitting a new test.

Typical requirements where accepted:

  • C1 Advanced: Grade B or above (score of 176 or higher)
  • C2 Proficiency: Any passing grade (score of 180 or higher)

Cambridge qualifications are most commonly listed as accepted options at Canadian institutions with strong international student pipelines from Europe, where Cambridge examinations are a standard feature of secondary education in many countries. They are less commonly listed at institutions whose primary international recruitment is from South Asia or Africa — though individual institutions may accept them on request. If you hold a qualifying Cambridge result, contact your target institutions before sitting a new test.

Michigan English Test (MET)

The Michigan English Test — developed by Cambridge Assessment English — is accepted at some Canadian institutions, particularly Ontario colleges. It is administered at test centres and online, with results typically available within two weeks.

MET is less widely recognised than the other tests in this guide and its relevance is primarily for applicants to Ontario colleges that specifically list it among accepted tests. Check whether your target institutions accept MET before considering it as your primary test choice.


English Requirements at Major Canadian Institutions: What to Expect

While requirements vary by programme and are updated periodically, the following gives a general picture of what major Canadian institutions typically require. Always verify current requirements on each institution's official admissions pages before applying.

University of Toronto

The University of Toronto accepts TOEFL iBT, IELTS Academic, PTE Academic, and CELPIP for most programmes. Duolingo is accepted for some graduate programmes but the policy varies by faculty.

Minimum requirements for most postgraduate programmes: IELTS 6.5 to 7.0; TOEFL 93 to 100; PTE 65 to 70. Some faculties require higher scores — the Faculty of Law, Rotman MBA, and some medical programmes have requirements at the upper end of this range or above.

Medium of instruction waivers are considered for applicants who completed their undergraduate degree at an English-medium institution, subject to documentation requirements.

University of British Columbia

UBC accepts TOEFL iBT, IELTS Academic, PTE Academic, and the Duolingo English Test for most programmes.

Minimum requirements for most graduate programmes: IELTS 6.5; TOEFL 90; PTE 65; Duolingo 120. The minimum for undergraduate programmes is generally IELTS 6.5 overall with no band below 6.0, or TOEFL 90.

UBC's English language waiver policy is explicitly stated — applicants who completed a full degree or diploma programme at an English-medium institution in a country where English is an official language may be exempt from the English language requirement, subject to departmental approval.

McGill University

McGill accepts TOEFL iBT, IELTS Academic, and CELPIP. The Duolingo test is accepted for some graduate programmes — check the specific faculty requirement.

Minimum requirements for most graduate programmes: IELTS 6.5; TOEFL 86 to 90. McGill's Faculty of Law requires IELTS 7.0; the Desautels Faculty of Management requires IELTS 7.0 or TOEFL 100 for the MBA.

Medium of instruction waivers are considered for applicants from recognised English-medium institutions. Contact the relevant faculty's graduate admissions office to confirm waiver eligibility and required documentation.

McMaster University

McMaster accepts TOEFL iBT, IELTS Academic, PTE Academic, and CELPIP. The Duolingo test is accepted for some graduate programmes.

Minimum requirements for most programmes: IELTS 6.5 overall with no band below 6.0; TOEFL 88; PTE 65. Health sciences programmes and some engineering programmes have higher requirements — IELTS 7.0 or equivalent.

University of Waterloo

Waterloo accepts TOEFL iBT, IELTS Academic, PTE Academic, and CELPIP. The Duolingo test acceptance varies by faculty.

Minimum requirements: IELTS 6.5 overall with no band below 6.0; TOEFL 90; PTE 63. Engineering and mathematics programmes may require higher minimum scores in specific test components.

University of Alberta

The University of Alberta accepts TOEFL iBT, IELTS Academic, PTE Academic, CELPIP, and the Duolingo English Test.

Minimum requirements: IELTS 6.5; TOEFL 90; PTE 63; Duolingo 120. The university has a published medium of instruction waiver policy for applicants from English-medium institutions.

Ontario Colleges (OCAS institutions)

Ontario colleges — including Humber, Seneca, George Brown, Algonquin, Sheridan, Centennial, and others — accept IELTS, TOEFL, PTE Academic, Duolingo, CELPIP, and in some cases MET.

Minimum requirements at most Ontario colleges for diploma programmes: IELTS 6.0 overall with no band below 5.5; TOEFL 80; PTE 58; Duolingo 105. Advanced diploma and graduate certificate programmes typically require slightly higher scores.

Ontario colleges are generally more flexible than universities in their English language test acceptance and their waiver policies — students from English-medium educational backgrounds frequently qualify for waivers at college level even when they might be required to provide test results for a university programme of equivalent level.

Memorial University of Newfoundland

Memorial accepts TOEFL iBT, IELTS Academic, PTE Academic, and CELPIP. Duolingo is accepted for some programmes.

Minimum requirements: IELTS 6.5 for most undergraduate programmes; TOEFL 80; PTE 63. Memorial's international student community is large and diverse, and the university has a well-established process for assessing medium of instruction waiver requests.


How to Apply for an English Language Waiver at a Canadian Institution

If you believe you qualify for a waiver based on your educational background, the process requires you to take the initiative. Canadian universities and colleges do not automatically identify waiver-eligible applicants — you need to raise the question, provide the appropriate documentation, and secure written confirmation of the waiver before submitting your application without test results.

Step One: Identify Your Waiver Basis

Establish clearly which waiver category applies to you before you contact any institution. Are you a citizen of a majority English-speaking country? Did you complete your previous degree entirely in English? Have you previously studied at a Canadian institution? Having a clear, specific basis for your request makes your communication more effective and your application more credible.

Step Two: Check the Institution's Published Waiver Policy

Most Canadian universities and colleges publish their English language requirement and waiver conditions on their international admissions or English language requirements page. Read the policy carefully before contacting the admissions office — if your situation clearly matches a stated waiver condition, you have a straightforward basis for your request. If the policy is ambiguous or your situation is not explicitly addressed, proceed to the next step.

Step Three: Contact the Admissions Office Directly

Email the admissions office or graduate programme coordinator for your specific programme. Explain your educational background concisely and specifically — your nationality, your previous institution, the country in which it is located, the language in which your programme was delivered, and the qualification you obtained. Ask explicitly whether you qualify for an English language waiver and what documentation is required to support the request.

Get the response in writing. An email confirmation that a waiver has been approved is your evidence if any question arises later in the admissions or enrolment process.

Step Four: Gather Your Supporting Documents

The documentation required to support a waiver request typically includes:

  • Medium of instruction letter — on your previous institution's official headed paper, signed by an authorised official (registrar, academic dean, or equivalent), explicitly stating that English was the language of instruction and assessment throughout your programme. This is non-negotiable — an institution that does not include this explicit statement has not provided an adequate medium of instruction letter.
  • Academic transcripts — demonstrating that you were assessed and graded in English throughout your programme
  • Degree certificate — confirming the award of your qualification at the English-medium institution

Some institutions also request a brief personal statement or cover note confirming your language background and your readiness to study in English at the graduate or undergraduate level.

Step Five: Include the Waiver Documentation With Your Application

Submit your waiver documentation alongside your application materials rather than raising it as a separate issue after your application has been submitted. Flag the waiver request clearly in any section of the application that addresses English language requirements — explain that you are requesting a waiver and indicate that supporting documentation is included.

Do not leave the English language section of your application blank without explanation. An unexplained blank is more likely to be interpreted as an incomplete application than as a waiver request.

Step Six: Follow Up Within Two to Three Weeks

Admissions offices at larger institutions manage high volumes of correspondence. If you have not received acknowledgement of your waiver request or confirmation of its approval within two to three weeks of submitting your application, a polite follow-up email is appropriate.


Choosing the Right Test If a Waiver Is Not Available

If you do not qualify for a waiver and need to submit a formal English test result, the choice between TOEFL, PTE Academic, Duolingo, and CELPIP comes down to several practical factors.

Choose TOEFL if your target institutions include selective universities that may not yet accept the Duolingo test or PTE, or if you want to maximise flexibility across a shortlist of institutions at different selectivity levels. TOEFL is accepted everywhere in the Canadian system without exception and is the test most familiar to Canadian admissions committees.

Choose PTE Academic if you need results quickly — typically within 48 hours — and all your target institutions confirm PTE acceptance. PTE is also well suited to students who prefer a fully computer-assessed environment with no human examiner component, and who find the AI-assessed speaking format less stressful than alternatives.

Choose Duolingo if convenience and cost are priorities, your test timeline is tight, and all your target institutions explicitly accept it. At $59 USD and with results in 48 hours, Duolingo is the most accessible option — but confirm acceptance at every institution on your list before registering, particularly for professional and competitive programmes.

Choose CELPIP if your target institutions accept it for admissions purposes and you anticipate needing an English language test for Canadian immigration purposes in the future. Using CELPIP for both admissions and immigration planning avoids the need to sit separate tests at different points in your Canadian journey.

Consider Cambridge C1 or C2 if you already hold a qualifying Cambridge result. There is no reason to sit a new test if a result you already have satisfies the requirement — confirm acceptance with each target institution and submit the result you have.

Regardless of which test you choose, invest in structured preparation before your sitting. English language tests are learnable — their formats are predictable, their question types are consistent, and students who prepare systematically consistently outperform those who sit the test without adequate preparation. Give yourself a minimum of six to eight weeks of focused preparation, use official practice materials for your chosen test, and sit at least one full-length practice test under timed conditions before your official sitting.


Does a Canadian Study Permit Require IELTS?

This is a question that causes significant confusion among students preparing their study permit application.

The answer is straightforward: your Canadian study permit application does not require an IELTS certificate or any specific English language test result. IRCC does not independently assess your English language proficiency as part of the study permit process.

What the study permit requires is a valid letter of acceptance from a recognised Designated Learning Institution. If the institution has offered you a place — whether on the basis of an alternative English test, a waiver, or IELTS — your study permit application proceeds in the same way as any other student's. The study permit is an immigration document, not an academic admissions document, and it does not replicate the English language assessment that your institution has already conducted.


Common Questions About Studying in Canada Without IELTS

Do all Canadian colleges accept Duolingo?

Not all, but many do. Ontario colleges in particular have broadly adopted the Duolingo English Test as an accepted alternative. Check each college's English language requirements page individually — do not assume that acceptance at one college means acceptance at all colleges on your shortlist.

Can I use IELTS General Training instead of IELTS Academic for Canadian university admission?

No. Canadian universities and colleges require IELTS Academic for admissions purposes. IELTS General Training is designed for work and immigration applications and is not accepted for academic admissions in Canada. If you have taken IELTS General Training previously, that result will not satisfy the admissions requirement — you will need to sit IELTS Academic or an accepted alternative.

Is TOEFL harder than IELTS?

They measure similar abilities in meaningfully different formats. IELTS includes a face-to-face speaking component with a live examiner. TOEFL's speaking is recorded responses assessed by human raters. IELTS reading uses a wider variety of question types. TOEFL integrates listening and reading skills across its tasks. Neither test is objectively harder — most students find one format more natural than the other based on their learning background and communication style. Take a practice test for both before deciding which to register for.

Can I apply to a Canadian university before my English test results are available?

Yes, at most institutions. Most Canadian universities allow you to submit your application with a test scheduled but results not yet available, provided that official scores are submitted by the institution's stated deadline. Check the specific policy at each institution on your shortlist. Plan your test date to ensure results will be available at least two to three weeks before the relevant deadline.

What if my medium of instruction letter is from a university that is not widely known internationally?

The institution does not need to be internationally famous — it needs to be a legitimate, recognised institution in its country, capable of issuing an official letter on headed paper signed by an authorised official. Canadian admissions offices assess medium of instruction letters based on their content and authenticity rather than on the international profile of the issuing institution. If there is any doubt about whether your institution will be recognised, include additional context — the institution's website URL, accreditation details, or a brief explanation of the institution's standing in your country's education system.

Does the medium of instruction waiver apply if I studied some of my programme in English and some in another language?

This is where the waiver becomes less straightforward and more institution-specific. Some institutions grant waivers for programmes that were primarily delivered in English even where some components were in another language. Others require that the entire programme was delivered in English. The safest approach is to be transparent about your situation in your waiver request and let the admissions office make an informed determination. Do not overstate the English-medium nature of your studies — misrepresentation in an admissions waiver request has consequences that extend beyond a single application.


How Uni Navigators Can Help

Understanding English language requirements across dozens of Canadian universities and colleges — knowing which tests are accepted, whether your educational background qualifies for a waiver, and how to present your English proficiency evidence most effectively — is genuinely time-consuming to navigate on your own, particularly when you are doing it for institutions across multiple provinces with different policies.

At Uni Navigators, we assess your individual background and tell you clearly whether you are likely to qualify for a waiver at your target institutions, which test is the most strategically sound choice given your timeline and shortlist, and how to prepare and submit your English language evidence in the strongest possible way.

We work with students from Pakistan, India, Nigeria, Bangladesh, Kenya, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and many other countries who are applying to universities and colleges across Canada — from community colleges and regional universities to the University of Toronto, UBC, and McGill — at both undergraduate and postgraduate level.

Our team supports you with:

  • English language requirement assessment for your specific programmes and institutions
  • Waiver application guidance and medium of instruction letter support
  • Test selection advice based on your timeline, budget, and target institutions
  • Test preparation strategy and recommended resources
  • Full application support from university shortlisting through to study permit preparation

Contact Uni Navigators today for a free consultation and find out exactly what you need to meet the English language requirement for your Canadian university application.