This document was updated in December 2006 in collaboration with the Labour Market Integration Unit, Ontario Ministry of Citizenship and Immigration. Requirements may have changed by the time you apply. Please contact the College of Medical Radiation Technologists of Ontario before completing your application.
Copyright in this career map is held jointly by the Queen's Printer for Ontario and the College of Medical Radiation Technologists of Ontario, © 2006. This career map may be used or reproduced by any third party for non-commercial, not-for-profit purposes, provided that no fee, payment or royalty of any kind shall be charged by the third party for any further use or reproduction of the career map by any person. Any proposed commercial or for-profit use or reproduction of this career map requires a written licence from the Queen's Printer for Ontario and the College of Medical Radiation Technologists of Ontario.
The College of Medical Radiation Technologists of Ontario (CMRTO/The College) regulates medical radiation technologists working in Ontario. The CMRTO is responsible for protecting the public by ensuring that all registered medical radiation technologists in Ontario are qualified to practise and are practising professionally.
To practise as a medical radiation technologist in Ontario, you must register with the CMRTO. You may not use the title “Medical Radiation Technologist” or the abbreviation “M.R.T.” without being a member of the College.
Medical radiation technologists work in health care facilities, including hospitals, clinics and cancer centres. There are four specialties for medical radiation technologists:
Radiography is the use of x-rays to produce images of parts of the body for the diagnosis of disease, trauma and congenital abnormalities. Medical radiation technologists registered in radiography may perform general x-rays, fluoroscopic examinations, angiography, mammography and computed tomography.
Nuclear medicine is the use of radiopharmaceuticals to produce images of the body and treat disease. Medical radiation technologists registered in nuclear medicine use gamma cameras and computer systems to assess organ function and structure, and help in the diagnoses of numerous disorders. Nuclear medicine is used in the treatment of thyroid diseases, certain blood disorders, and bone metastases.
Radiation therapy is the use of ionizing radiation to treat diseases such as cancer. Medical radiation technologists registered in radiation therapy work together with oncologists to plan treatment, administer treatment and educate the patient on how to cope with side effects.
Magnetic resonance is the use of electromagnetism (static magnetic fields and radio frequencies) to produce diagnostic images. Medical radiation technologists registered in magnetic resonance play a significant role in imaging the brain, spine, abdomen, pelvis and the musculoskeletal and cardiovascular systems.
A medical radiation technologist may not perform a radiographic, nuclear medicine or magnetic resonance examination or a radiation therapy treatment on a patient unless a member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario orders the procedure.
To get a Certificate of Registration as a medical radiation technologist in Ontario you must meet the requirements as set out in the College’s registration regulation. The regulation requires you to:
You must satisfy these requirements in the same specialty for which you apply. If you wish to apply to the CMRTO in more than one specialty, you must complete an application form, and submit the application and evaluation fee, for each specialty.
Before you come to Ontario, contact the CMRTO by telephone, fax, e-mail or mail and request an Application for Registration as a Medical Radiation Technologist for a person who has completed an educational program outside Canada. Complete the application and submit it with all supporting documents and fees to the CMRTO. The address is listed at the end of this career map.
You can apply for registration with the CMRTO before your immigration application is complete. The CMRTO may permit you to start meeting some of the requirements for registration as a medical radiation technologist before you immigrate to Canada.
If you did not complete and send an application form to the CMRTO before you arrive in Ontario, you must file one when you arrive. Contact the CMRTO to request an Application for Registration as a Medical Radiation Technologist for a person who has completed an educational program outside Canada. The address is listed at the end of this career map.
When filing an application for registration with the CMRTO, you must submit a completed application form, all the supporting documents, and the application fee and evaluation fee ($371.00 Canadian) to the CMRTO. The application for registration as a medical radiation technologist requires:
If any of these documents is not available, you must provide an explanation. Keep a copy of the original documents because your documentation will not be returned to you.
When completing the application form, ensure that your direct clinical supervisor reads and signs the section on the application called Validation of Clinical Supervisor on the Clinical Competence Form. Your direct clinical supervisor should be either a medical radiation technologist, radiologist or radiation oncologist who has supervised your daily work in your most recent or current employment. His or her signature confirms that you are competent in the procedures you have completed for your specialty, which are listed on the application form.
The application fee of $106.00 ($100.00 fee and $6.00 GST) and the evaluation fee of $265.00 ($250.00 fee and $15.00 GST) are non-refundable, regardless of the outcome of the application process. The College does not accept payment by credit card or direct transfer of funds. You must attach a cheque, international money order, or money order for $371.00 in Canadian funds for the application fee and evaluation fee to your application form.
You must ensure that both you and your most recent or current direct clinical supervisor have signed the application and that all the supporting documents have been attached to your application form. The College does not accept incomplete application forms. If your application is not complete, it will be returned to you with a list of items that are missing. The College does not keep any incomplete application forms.
All applications from internationally educated medical radiation technologists must undergo an assessment process. This means that the CMRTO reviews the educational training and experience in medical radiation technology that you may have from another country to see if it meets the requirements for registration with the CMRTO.
The CMRTO reviews all application forms received to ensure that they are complete. If you completed your education in medical radiation technology outside of Canada, your application form will be sent to the Registration Committee for review and a decision regarding your application for registration. You will receive a letter notifying you that the Registration Committee will be reviewing your application and explaining the reasons for the review. If you have any new or additional information at that time, you will have 30 days to submit it to the Registration Committee.
The Registration Committee will review your application in detail. Each step of the assessment process is described in the next section. If you meet all the requirements of the College, you will be able to continue the registration process. If you do not meet the requirements of the College, the Registration Committee has the authority to refuse to issue you a Certificate of Registration.
Once the Registration Committee completes the review of your application for registration, you will receive a letter to inform you of the Registration Committee’s decision. This letter will clearly explain the reasons for the Registration Committee’s decision. You will also be informed of your right to contact the Health Professions Appeal and Review Board to appeal the decision of the Registration Committee if you do not agree with it.
It will take at least four months from the time that your application for registration is accepted as complete to the time that you receive the final decision of the Registration Committee.
If the Registration Committee approves your application, you can expect to have five years from the last date of your employment as a medical radiation technologist to complete all the requirements to become registered. For example, if you last worked in January 2007 as a medical radiation technologist you can expect that you will have to complete all registration requirements and be registered by January 2012.
In order to meet the academic requirement, you must show the CMRTO that you have completed a program in medical radiation technology in your specialty that the Registration Committee considers to be substantially similar to an approved Ontario program.
If you trained outside of Canada you must send a notarized copy of your degree, diploma or certificate, or provide an original letter from your educational institution confirming successful completion of the program. You must also provide an original or notarized copy of your academic transcript of marks and a detailed curriculum or course outline for your program, certified by the educational institution or professional association. Your curriculum or course outline should contain a detailed list of the courses and description of the content of the courses that you completed during your training and the amount of time spent in both the theoretical and clinical components (in hours, days or weeks).
If your program required you to first complete another post-secondary educational program or courses prior to entering the program in your specialty (e.g. a Bachelor of Science, a medical radiation technology program in another specialty, or pre-requisite college or university courses or credits) you must also attach a notarized copy of your certificate, diploma or degree, or an original or notarized copy of your academic transcript, or provide an original letter from your educational institution confirming that you obtained a certificate, diploma or degree in another specialty of medical radiation technology or other field of study. You must also provide a detailed curriculum or course outline for the pre-requisite program or courses, certified by the educational institution or professional association. You must also provide detailed information on the clinical training you completed as part of your educational program or internship. This information may be from your educational institution or training hospital. It should include such details as: the amount of time spent in clinical training, the qualification of your clinical supervisor(s), the types of hospital(s) or clinical setting(s), the types of procedures completed, and the types of equipment used during your clinical training.
If any of these documents is not available, you must provide an explanation.
Based on the documents you provide with your application, the Registration Committee will review your educational program to determine if it is substantially similar, but not equivalent, to an approved Ontario medical radiation technology program in your specialty. In the past, the Registration Committee has considered the following in its assessment of educational programs:
If you completed a program in medical radiation technology outside of Canada, the registration regulation requires you to demonstrate to the CMRTO that you are competent to practise in Ontario as a medical radiation technologist in your specialty. The CMRTO application form has a Clinical Competence Form which provides a detailed list of all the procedures for each specialty. You must list in detail on the application form all the types of procedures that you have performed during your most recent or current employment.
To confirm that you are competent in those procedures, and that your written certification is correct, your direct clinical supervisor in your most recent or current place of employment must read and sign the section called Validation of Clinical Supervisor. Your direct clinical supervisor must be either a medical radiation technologist, radiologist or radiation oncologist who supervised your daily procedures.
The Registration Committee will assess your competence to practise based on the details described in your application form. In the past, the Registration Committee has considered the following in its assessment of an applicant’s competence to practise:
You must list all the procedures that you completed at your last or current place of employment for the purpose of the Registration Committee’s assessment of your competence to practise.
You must also provide proof that you have worked as a medical radiation technologist within the last five years. A letter from your last or current employer stating your last date of employment will be required in order to meet this requirement.
If your professional training was in English or French, send confirmation from your training institution that the language of instruction and assessment in your program was English or French and this will be acceptable as proof of language proficiency. The evidence from your training institution should state clearly that all theoretical and clinical training and the examinations were in English or French.
If your professional training was not in English or French, you must show other proof of language proficiency. The Registration Committee accepts the internet based Test of English as a Foreign Language (iBT TOEFL) with a minimum total score of 45 in Reading, Listening, and Writing, and a minimum score of 23 in Speaking. The Registration Committee also accepts the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a score of at least 500 for the paper based test or 173 for the computer-based test, and the Test of Spoken English (TSE) with a score of at least 40. Proof that you have passed either the iBT TOEFL or the TOEFL and TSE may be submitted with the application form or later on in the registration process. Contact information for TOEFL is listed at the end of this career map.
As part of its assessment of whether an applicant is competent to practise in his or her specialty, in the past, the Registration Committee has also considered whether the applicant has:
Once the Registration Committee approves your application and upon your request, the CMRTO will send you the statutes, regulations, policies and guidelines dealing with the practice of medical radiation technology in Ontario and the CMRTO Legislation Learning Package. You will need to complete the CMRTO Legislation Learning Package and review the legislation in preparation for working in Ontario before you are approved to write the examination.
Before you write the exam you will need to provide evidence of having completed the CPR training. You must send a copy of proof of completing the CPR training to the CMRTO before you are approved to write the exam.
CPR courses are offered by different organizations in Ontario. The CPR Basic Rescuer Level C course is between 8 and 12 hours long. See the contact information at the end of this career map for information on how to find a CPR Basic Rescuer Level C Certificate course in Ontario.
The examination approved by the CMRTO Council is the national examination of the Canadian Association of Medical Radiation Technologists (CAMRT). Once your application has been reviewed and approved, the CMRTO will notify you if you are eligible to write this examination.
The CMRTO will also notify the CAMRT when you are ready and approved to write the examination. You must register for the examination directly with the CAMRT in Ottawa following the CMRTO’s approval for you to write the examination. The examination application form and examination preparation information can be found on the CAMRT website at www.camrt.ca/english/certification/international_educated.asp. You will need to review this information prior to writing the exam.
The CAMRT National Exam is a multiple-choice exam that will test your knowledge, skill and judgment (competencies) in one of the specialties of medical radiation technology (radiography, nuclear medicine, magnetic resonance or radiation therapy). This exam is one day long and is offered three times a year at various locations throughout Canada. Sample examination questions and a reading list are included in the CAMRT ’s Study Guide. The CMRTO will also provide you with a letter that will make it possible for you to join the library at The Michener Institute for Applied Health Sciences in Toronto. With that library card, you will be able to borrow the textbooks necessary to prepare for the examination.
You will have three chances, in a period of two years, to pass the exam, provided that it is within the time frame designated in the Registration Committee’s decision.
As of the date of publication of this document, the Access & Options Program at The Michener Institute for Applied Health Sciences is available to assist landed immigrants with skills training, clinical experiences, personal support and guidance needed to pass the certification examination and to help prepare landed immigrants to work in Canada. Admission to the Access and Options Program is available only to those applicants who have received a decision from the College’s Registration Committee that states you are eligible to sit the CAMRT examination. Detailed information regarding this program is available at www.michener.ca/access/. See the contact information at the end of this career map for information on how to contact the Access and Options Program.
Once you have completed the requirements of the Registration Committee, passed the CAMRT exam, submitted your annual fee, and completed any other requirements as directed by the Registration Committee, you will be issued a Certificate of Registration and a CMRTO number. You will then be able to work in Ontario as a medical radiation technologist in the specialty indicated on the Certificate of Registration. The Certificate of Registration is proof to the public and your employer that you are authorized to practise as a medical radiation technologist in Ontario. To continue practising as a medical radiation technologist in Ontario, you must pay the annual fee on or before your birthday every year.
Registration with the CMRTO is not a guarantee of employment as a medical radiation technologist in Ontario. The CMRTO does not have any information on specific employment opportunities for medical radiation technologists.
In Ontario there are approximately 6,000 registered medical radiation technologists employed in hospitals, private clinics, cancer centres, research laboratories, industry, education and administration. Hospitals and clinics employ medical radiation technologists in the specialties of magnetic resonance and radiography. Major clinics, cancer centres and hospitals in large urban centres employ medical radiation technologists in the specialties of radiation therapy and nuclear medicine. Very few medical radiation technologists are self-employed.
Many medical radiation technologists work full time, with a forty-hour workweek including weekend, evening and stand-by work. About 20% of all employed medical radiation technologists in Ontario work part-time. Since the mid-nineties there has been a growing number of part-time, casual and contract positions available. There is a growing need for medical radiation technologists in Ontario.
The average annual salary for a full time medical radiation technologist is approximately CAN$51,000.00. The hourly pay for medical radiation technologists ranges from CAN$20.77 to CAN$34.04. This is above the average income for all occupations in Ontario.
For information on jobs for medical radiation technologists in Ontario, see the OAMRT web site at www.oamrt.on.ca. For general information on working as a medical radiation technologist in Canada visit the CAMRT web site at www.camrt.ca. The mailing address and telephone numbers for these associations are listed at the end of this career map.
For more information on labour market conditions in Ontario see Ontario Job Futures at www.ontariojobfutures.ca/. In Ontario, labour market information is also available at public libraries in your community or at Employment Resource Centres.
Make cheques, international money orders, or money orders for the application fee and evaluation fee payable to the College of Medical Radiation Technologists of Ontario (CMRTO). Your cheque for the application and evaluation fees will not be cashed until your application is complete. The application and evaluation fees are non-refundable.
CMRTO Application and Evaluation Fees |
$371.00 (includes $21.00 GST) |
CMRTO Annual Registration Fee |
$381.60 (includes $21.60 GST) |
CAMRT Examination Fee (each exam) |
$600.00 in 2007 |
IBT TOEFL |
US$140.00 |
CPR Level C Certificate Course |
ranges from $35.00 to $55.00 |
For more information on application requirements, examinations or fees, please contact: |
For more information on the Canadian Association of Medical Radiation Technologists, contact:
|
For information on the provincial professional association for medical radiation technologists:
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For information on CPR Level C Certificate courses in Ontario, contact: |
For information about accessing health related professions in Ontario, contact |
For information on where and how to get help with settlement in Ontario, contact: |
For more information on English language proficiency testing, contact: |
For information on the Access and Options Program, contact: |
Copyright in this career map is held jointly by the Queen's Printer for Ontario and the College of Medical Radiation Technologists of Ontario, © 2006.

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