Since its inception, the Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR) has become increasingly influential in the field of second language (L2) education. In an effort to define the grammatical structures that English learners acquire at each CEFR level, the English Grammar Profile (EGP) provides a list of over 1,200 structure-level mappings derived from largely manual analysis of learner corpora. Though highly valuable for the design of didactic materials and examinations, the EGP lacks comprehensive quantitative methods to verify the acquisition levels it proposes for the grammatical structures. This paper presents an approach for revisiting the EGP structure-level mappings with empirical statistics. The approach utilizes automatic grammatical construction extraction, a large learner corpus, and statistical testing to empirically determine the level of each structure. The structure-level mappings resulting from our approach show limited agreement with that of the original EGP proposals, suggesting that frequency data alone does not provide enough evidence for the acquisition of the grammatical structures at the levels presented by the EGP.