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Canada Postdoctoral Research Award (CPRA) — Empowering the Next Generation of Researchers

As Canada reforms and streamlines its scholarship and fellowship system, one of the flagship instruments in this new landscape is the Canada Postdoctoral Research Award (CPRA). Launched in 2025 as part of the harmonized Canada Research Training Awards Suite (CRTAS), CPRA replaces several earlier postdoctoral fellowship programs and provides a unified, competitive, and flexible funding mechanism across disciplines.

CPRA is designed to recognize and support outstanding early-career researchers—both Canadian and international—at a pivotal moment in their career trajectory. It offers substantial funding, cross-disciplinary flexibility, and opportunities to pursue research in Canada or abroad.

In this article, we offer a comprehensive overview of CPRA: its objectives, eligibility criteria, funding structure, application process, evaluation criteria, and tips to enhance your proposal.

Background & Rationale

Reform in Canada’s Research Training Architecture

The CPRA emerges from a transformational shift in Canada’s approach to funding graduate and postdoctoral researchers. In 2025, Canada consolidated several funding and fellowship programs across the three federal granting agencies—CIHR (Canadian Institutes of Health Research), NSERC (Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council), and SSHRC (Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council)—into a streamlined Canada Research Training Awards Suite (CRTAS).

As part of this consolidation, the traditional NSERC Postdoctoral Fellowship, CIHR and SSHRC postdoctoral awards, and other programs were sunset, and CPRA was introduced as their successor at the postdoctoral level.

Mission & Objectives

CPRA aims to:

  • Recognize and invest in emerging scholarly talent across disciplines
  • Provide resources and flexibility to help awardees pursue high-impact, original research
  • Empower researcher training and career development
  • Strengthen Canada’s domestic research ecosystem while attracting international researchers
  • Encourage interdisciplinary, cross-sector, and novel research trajectories

By offering a single, competitive award mechanism, CPRA seeks to reduce duplication across agencies, clarify processes, and raise the profile of postdoctoral support in Canada.

Award Structure & Value

Funding Amount & Duration

  • CPRA is valued at CAD 70,000 per year for a duration of 24 months (2 years).
  • The award covers living and research-related costs, allowing recipients to pursue full-time research without teaching or administrative burdens.

Tenure & Location

  • Recipients may hold their CPRA at eligible Canadian institutions or international institutions, as long as those institutions meet the requirements of the funding agency.
  • However, Canadian federal government research institutions are generally not eligible host institutions.
  • For international tenure, certain restrictions apply: only Canadian citizens or permanent residents may hold part or all of the tenure abroad.
  • Note: The institution must have a strong research mandate and capacity to support postdoctoral researchers.

Eligibility Criteria

Eligibility for CPRA is designed to be broad yet rigorous, balancing support for rising scholars with competition. Below are the main requirements and exceptions:

Basic Requirements

  1. Doctorate or Health Professional Degree
    You must hold or expect to hold a PhD or health professional degree before the start date of the award.
  2. Not Holding a Faculty Position
    You cannot hold a tenure-track or tenured faculty position, and you cannot be on leave from one. The award is for postdoctoral research rather than continuing academic appointments.
  3. Time Since Degree Completion
    You must have completed all your doctoral requirements (defense, submission of corrected thesis) no more than three years before September 1 of the year of application.

    • The “completion date” is distinct from the convocation date.
    • In cases of career interruption (parental leave, illness, socio-economic barriers, mandatory service, etc.), extensions may be granted (up to 36 months) to account for lost research time.
  4. No Prior Postdoctoral Award from CPRA / Tri-Agency
    You must not have already received a CPRA or any other postdoctoral award from CIHR, NSERC, or SSHRC (including the Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship).
  5. Application Frequency & Lifetime Limit
    • Only one CPRA application per year per applicant is allowed (across CIHR, NSERC, SSHRC).
    • An applicant may apply up to three times in their career for the CPRA.

Additional Conditions for International Applicants

  • To be eligible as an international applicant, you must either
    a) be enrolled in or have completed your doctoral degree at a Canadian institution, or
    b) already be conducting postdoctoral research at a Canadian institution by the application deadline.
  • Up to 20% of CPRA awards may be allocated to international applicants (non-Canadian citizens/permanent residents).
  • For the portion of the award held abroad, only Canadian citizens or permanent residents are eligible to take that portion overseas, subject to agency rules.

Apply: 1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)

2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)

3. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)

Subject-Matter & Research Focus

  • The proposed research must be predominantly research-oriented, and distinct from your doctoral thesis (i.e., it should not simply extend or repeat doctoral work).
  • Projects intended primarily for tasks such as translating a thesis into a book, editing manuscripts, or foreign language acquisition are not eligible.
  • The research must align with the mission and subject-area of the agency to which you apply (CIHR, NSERC, or SSHRC). Your proposal should fall within its mandate (e.g. health research, natural sciences, social sciences, etc.).

Application Process

Applying for CPRA involves multiple steps and coordination among the applicant, supervisor(s), and the host institution. It’s crucial to begin early and adhere to all deadlines and submission standards.

1. Select the Appropriate Funding Agency

You must choose among CIHR, NSERC, or SSHRC based on the primary discipline and subject-matter of your proposed research. Your choice determines which portal, review committee, and criteria apply.

  • CIHR handles health sciences, biomedical, clinical, population health, etc.
  • NSERC takes on natural sciences, engineering, mathematics, computer science, etc.
  • SSHRC manages social sciences, humanities, arts, and related fields.

Make sure your topic fits predominantly into one agency’s remit; applications submitted to the “wrong” agency may be disqualified.

2. Coordinate with Supervisor & Host Institution

  • Identify a supervisor (or co-supervisor) who will support your research and evaluate parts of your proposal.
  • For SSHRC applications, the department head or institutional authority must complete an Institutional Nomination and Commitment form.
  • Ensure that your host institution is able to provide necessary infrastructure, mentorship, and office resources.

3. Prepare and Submit the Application

Applications are submitted through each agency’s online system:

  • CIHR: via ResearchNet.
  • NSERC: via its online portal.
  • SSHRC: via the SSHRC online system, using SSHRC’s curriculum vitae tool and forms.

Key components often include:

  • Applicant’s curriculum vitae (using the designated format, e.g. Canadian Common CV)
  • Research proposal, with objectives, methods, timeline, feasibility
  • Letters of appraisal by referees
  • Research appraisal by your supervisor
  • Institutional nomination or commitment letters
  • Appendix or supplementary material (if allowed within page limits)
  • Budget, resources, and justification of costs

Make sure you preview and verify each section of the application—many systems require explicit verification before submission.

Importantly, once submitted, you cannot make changes to your application (except personal contact updates).

4. Respect Deadlines and Internal Review Procedures

  • SSHRC’s CPRA application deadline is September 11, 2025 (8 p.m. Eastern)
  • CIHR’s deadline is September 17, 2025
  • NSERC’s deadline is October 17, 2025
  • Many universities set internal deadlines in advance of these agency deadlines to allow institutional review and sign-off.
  • Late or incomplete applications are not accepted.

5. Review, Decision & Notification

  • Results are typically announced by March 31 following the application year.
  • Successful applicants will receive an award letter and instructions for administrative onboarding.
  • Unsuccessful applicants usually receive feedback or reviewer comments (depending on agency policies).

Apply: 1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)

2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)

3. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)

Evaluation & Selection Criteria

CPRA applications are evaluated on a merit basis using standardized criteria, though agency-specific emphases may differ slightly. Some of the primary factors considered include:

Research Excellence & Innovation

  • Originality, novelty, and significance of the research proposal
  • Clarity of research questions, hypotheses, methodology, and feasibility
  • Potential for scholarly impact, knowledge advancement, or societal contribution

Candidate’s Potential & Track Record

  • Past excellence in research, publications, awards, contributions
  • Demonstrated capacity for independent, original work
  • Excellence in interdisciplinary or high-impact outputs (datasets, software, policy contributions)

Research Training & Career Development

  • Quality of mentorship and supervisory support
  • Training plan (technical and professional skills)
  • Opportunities for networking, collaboration, dissemination

Feasibility & Institutional Support

  • Appropriateness of the proposed timeline, resources, and budget
  • Institutional facilities, infrastructure, and environment for the research
  • Institutional commitment, such as lab space, access to equipment, or administrative support

Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) Considerations

CPRA is aligned with Canada’s tri-agency EDI policies. Applications may be evaluated in the context of:

  • Whether the applicant belongs to historically underrepresented groups (e.g. Indigenous researchers, Black scholars, persons with disabilities)
  • Research that addresses Indigenous priorities or community-led research
  • Strength of inclusion plans, cultural safety, and partnerships in the research design

Some awards per agency are designated for specific groups, such as additional awards for Black postdoctoral researchers.

Alignment with the Agency’s Mandate

Finally, the project must fall within the subject-matter mandate of the chosen agency (CIHR, NSERC, SSHRC), and proposals that stray beyond may face disqualification.

Key Changes & Advantages in CPRA vs. Legacy Programs

Because CPRA is the new harmonized postdoctoral award, it brings several changes and advantages over prior fellowship programs:

  • Unified framework across three agencies reduces complexity and redundancy.
  • Greater award volume: the program is expected to support 220 additional awards at the postdoctoral level.
  • Removal of predecessor fellowship programs (such as NSERC PDFs, Banting, etc.) streamlines the postdoctoral funding landscape.
  • Enhanced flexibility in hosting location (Canadian or international) encourages global research mobility and collaboration.
  • Stronger emphasis on equity, diversity, and inclusion, with targeted supplements and supports for underrepresented researchers.

Tips for Strong Applications

To maximize your chances of success, consider these practical tips:

  1. Begin early — coordinate with supervisors and institutional offices well in advance of deadlines.
  2. Select the right agency — ensure your research aligns with the agency’s mission and mandates.
  3. Craft a clear, compelling narrative — succinctly present the problem, innovation, methods, and impact.
  4. Show independence and novelty — clearly differentiate your project from your PhD work.
  5. Highlight broader contributions — include outputs like datasets, tools, community engagement, policy influence.
  6. Demonstrate institutional support — secure letters and resource commitments upfront.
  7. Leverage equity & inclusion — where applicable, show how your research or identity contributes to EDI goals.
  8. Have strong referees — choose referees who know your work well and can speak to your potential.
  9. Proofread and adhere strictly to guidelines — formatting, page limits, PDF standards, and verification matter.
  10. Plan fallback or alternative research paths — reviewers appreciate realistic projections and contingency planning.

Common Questions (FAQs)

Can I submit multiple CPRA applications in a year?
No. Only one application per cycle (across all three granting agencies) is permitted.

If I am international, can I hold the award abroad?
Only portions of the award may be held abroad, and only Canadian citizens/permanent residents may do so, subject to agency rules.

Does the proposed research have to stay in Canada?
No; tenure abroad is allowed under certain conditions.

What counts as “career interruption” for eligibility extensions?
Eligible interruptions include, but are not limited to, illness, child care or adoption, mandatory service, socio-economic constraints, clinical training, or employment outside academia that interrupted research.

Will I get feedback if my application is unsuccessful?
Often yes; agencies may provide reviewer comments or summaries, depending on their policies.

Apply: 1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)

2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)

3. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)

Conclusion & Call to Action

The Canada Postdoctoral Research Award (CPRA) marks a significant advancement in Canada’s support for early-career researchers. By offering generous funding, cross-disciplinary scope, and flexibility in tenure locations, it seeks to attract and support the next generation of global research leaders. Whether you are a new PhD graduate or an early-career researcher looking to embark on ambitious research, CPRA presents a compelling opportunity.

If you plan to apply:

  • Visit the official CPRA pages on CIHR, NSERC, and SSHRC for full guidelines
  • Consult your university’s research or postdoctoral office for internal deadlines and support
  • Start planning early, coordinate with referees and institutional signatories, and give your proposal the care and polish it deserves

For more Opportunities, visit: opportunitiesforwomen.org/

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