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How to Pay for College Without Loans in Canada in 2026

Updated

Cost of University in Canada (2026)

Cost ComponentAnnual Range4-Year Total
Tuition (domestic undergrad)$7,000–$12,000$28,000–$48,000
Housing (on-campus residence)$8,000–$14,000$32,000–$56,000
Housing (off-campus shared)$6,000–$16,000$24,000–$64,000
Food (meal plan or groceries)$3,000–$5,000$12,000–$20,000
Textbooks and supplies$500–$1,500$2,000–$6,000
Transportation$500–$1,500$2,000–$6,000
Personal expenses$1,500–$3,000$6,000–$12,000
Total estimated cost$20,000–$38,000/year$80,000–$152,000

Tuition by Province (Domestic Undergrad Average)

ProvinceAverage TuitionNotes
Ontario$8,200Tuition cap since 2019
BC$6,500Moderate
Alberta$7,500Recently deregulated
Saskatchewan$7,600
Manitoba$5,200Lower than average
Quebec (residents)$3,500Heavily subsidized
Quebec (out-of-province)$9,500Higher for non-residents
Nova Scotia$8,500Highest in Atlantic
New Brunswick$7,800
Newfoundland$3,200Lowest in Canada
PEI$7,400

Strategy 1: RESP (Registered Education Savings Plan)

FeatureDetails
Contribution limit$50,000 lifetime per beneficiary
CESG (government grant)20% match up to $500/year ($7,200 lifetime max)
Additional CESG (low income)Extra 10–20% on first $500
CLB (Canada Learning Bond)$500 initial + $100/year for low-income families
Investment growthTax-sheltered until withdrawal
Withdrawal by studentTaxed in student’s hands (low/no tax)
Example: $2,500/year from birth~$95,000–$110,000 by age 18 (6% return)

Strategy 2: Scholarships and Bursaries

TypeAmountWhere to Apply
Entrance scholarships (merit)$1,000–$40,000/yearAutomatic or application to each school
In-course scholarships$500–$10,000Maintained with high GPA
Bursaries (need-based)$500–$5,000School financial aid office
External scholarships$500–$50,000ScholarshipsCanada.com, Yconic, UniBuddy
Employer-sponsored$1,000–$10,000Parent’s employer, part-time employer
Community/service clubs$500–$5,000Rotary, Lions, local foundations
Indigenous scholarships$1,000–$20,000Indspire, band councils
Athletic scholarships$1,000–$10,000U SPORTS programs
Realistic annual target$2,000–$10,000Apply broadly

Strategy 3: Government Grants (Not Loans)

GrantEligibilityAmount
Canada Student Grant (full-time)Low/middle incomeUp to $4,200/year
Canada Student Grant (part-time)Low income, part-time studentUp to $1,800/year
Canada Student Grant (disabilities)Students with disabilitiesUp to $22,000/year
Provincial grants (ON: OSAP grant)Low income (Ontario)Tuition covered for family income <$50K
Provincial grants (Quebec)Quebec residentsTuition nearly covered for residents

Apply through your provincial student aid portal — grants are free money that doesn’t need repayment.

Strategy 4: Work During School

Work TypeHours/WeekMonthly IncomeAnnual Income
Part-time campus job10–15 hrs$700–$1,100$5,600–$8,800
Part-time off-campus15–20 hrs$1,000–$1,500$8,000–$12,000
Work-study program10–15 hrs$700–$1,100$5,600–$8,800
Summer full-time40 hrs × 16 weeks$9,000–$14,000
Co-op work termFull-time, 4 months$3,000–$6,000/mo$12,000–$24,000
Freelance / tutoringVaries$500–$2,000$4,000–$16,000

Strategy 5: Reduce Costs

StrategySavingsDetails
Live at home$8,000–$15,000/yearCommute to a local school
Start at college, transfer to university$3,000–$5,000/yearCollege tuition significantly lower
Buy used textbooks / use library$500–$1,000/yearOpen textbooks, rental, PDF
Apply for tuition tax credit$1,000–$2,000/year (when working)Carry forward to post-graduation
Student discounts everywhere$500–$1,000/yearSPC, UNiDAYS, student ID
Cook at home$2,000–$4,000/yearSkip meal plans in upper years
Graduate in 3 years (extra courses)$20,000–$35,000Heavier course load, summer courses

Debt-Free Graduation Plan ($100,000 Total Cost)

Funding Source4-Year Total% of Cost
RESP (started at birth, $2,500/yr)$40,00040%
Scholarships / bursaries$12,00012%
Government grants$10,00010%
Part-time work (school year)$20,00020%
Summer employment$16,00016%
Parents (direct support)$2,0002%
Total$100,000100%