🇹🇳 Tunisia → 🇨🇦 Canada · Agriculture & Environment · 2026
Planning to study Agriculture & Environment in Canada from Tunisia — perhaps as an agronomist or environmental specialist? Here's the TOEFL you'll need, the score range universities there look for, and how to confirm it on the new 1.0–6.0 scale.
On the new 1.0–6.0 scale, university programmes commonly target roughly 4.0–5.5 overall (B2–C1); the retiring 0–120 equivalent most institutions still list is about 80–100. Set per programme — confirm both during the transition.
Nearly all Canadian universities accept TOEFL for admission (for PR, though, IRCC uses IELTS General Training, CELPIP or PTE Core — not TOEFL iBT). Globally, TOEFL iBT is accepted by more than 13,000 universities and institutions across over 160 countries. Confirm the exact score your programme needs on its official admissions page.
Your overall TOEFL score is now the AVERAGE of the four sections (Reading, Listening, Speaking, Writing), each scored 1.0–6.0 in half-band steps — not the old 0–120 sum. The scale is CEFR-aligned.
The Agriculture & Environment requirement is set per programme (postgraduate often higher) — confirm the current figure on the university's official page. Many universities and visa authorities are still updating their thresholds during the 2026–2028 transition — confirm the current figure (and which scale, new 1–6 or old 0–120) on the official source before you rely on it.
France-bound students use Campus France / Études en France and study in French; English-taught programmes (US, Canada, UK) need TOEFL.
Accredited Canada universities in our directory offer Agriculture & Environment. A few examples:
All Agriculture & Environment universities in Canada that accept TOEFL →
All four sections with honest AI feedback + a full mock test — original material, never copied from ETS.
Always confirm. TOEFL requirements change and vary by university, programme and visa route — always confirm the current figure with the official body before you rely on it. This page is honest guidance, not immigration advice.