Travellers to Canada Now Face AI Screening š¤āļø
- Open Canada Immigration

- Sep 24
- 2 min read
If youāre planning a trip to Canada, hereās something new you should know! Individuals entering Canada at certain land ports of entry (POEs)Ā are now being screened using AI technology.
The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA)Ā has introduced a tool called the Travel Compliance Indicator (TCI)Ā to help officers evaluate people entering Canada more efficiently.

What is the TCI? š
The TCI assigns each traveler a ācompliance scoreāĀ that helps officers decide whether a personāand any goods theyāre bringingāshould go for a secondary examination.
Right now, the tool is being used at six land POEsĀ (the government hasnāt revealed which ones), but the plan is to roll it out to all land POEs by late 2027, with air and sea ports to follow.
The goal? Faster, safer, and smoother border crossings. By using predictive analytics from five years of CBSA data, officers can quickly spot travelers who comply with Canadaās entry rules and avoid unnecessary delays caused by false positives.
How Does This Affect You? š¤
The TCI is designed to reduce wait timesĀ and improve your experience at the border. Secondary security referrals caused by mistakes (false positives) can slow down processing for everyone, so the TCI helps officers focus on potential risksĀ while letting compliant travelers pass more easily.
That said, the CBSA notes that if an officer acts on an inaccurate AI recommendation, it could have longer-term consequences. The important part? Officers make all final decisionsāthe TCI is just a helpful guide.
How the AI Screening Works š„ļø
The TCI uses AI and predictive modelingĀ to generate a compliance score based on a travelerās information from multiple databases. Key factors include:
Travel history from CBSA records š
Means of transport (car, plane, or ship) šāļøš³ļø
Whether the traveler is alone or with companions š¤š„
Type of ID presented š
Vehicle details (like license plates) š
This information is compared to established compliance patternsĀ to predict whether someone is likely to follow Canadian regulations.
Remember, the score itself does not decide the outcome. It simply flags travelers whose information matches certain patterns, helping officers determine if secondary screeningĀ is needed.
The Bigger Picture š
The TCI has been piloted at six land ports since 2023. The project cost over $15 millionĀ with annual maintenance projected at around $700,000.
This is part of the CBSAās modernization initiative, aimed at:
Securing Canadaās borders š”ļø
Handling more travelers efficiently without hiring extra staff or building more infrastructure š®āāļøš¢
In short, if youāre traveling to Canada, you might be screened by AIĀ at certain land borders. But donāt worryāthe system is designed to make your journey smoother, not more stressful! ā
If you want to start your journey to Canada, book a consultation now!
Travellers to Canada Now Face AI Screening š¤āļø
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