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Student Money Guide Canada 2026 | Complete Financial Guide

Updated

Cost of Post-Secondary Education

Tuition by Province (Undergraduate, 2025-2026)

ProvinceAverage TuitionNotes
Quebec (resident)$3,000-$4,000Lowest in Canada (CEGEP is nearly free)
Quebec (out-of-province)$9,000-$10,000Much higher for non-residents
Newfoundland$3,500-$4,500Frozen tuition
Manitoba$5,000-$6,000Below average
British Columbia$6,000-$7,500Average
Alberta$6,500-$8,000Average
Saskatchewan$7,000-$8,000Average
Ontario$7,500-$9,500Highest in Canada
Nova Scotia$8,000-$9,000Higher (but grants available)

Total Annual Cost (Including Living)

ExpenseLiving at HomeLiving Away
Tuition$7,000$7,000
Rent$0$8,000-$15,000
Meal plan/groceries$2,000-$3,000$4,000-$6,000
Textbooks/supplies$500-$1,000$500-$1,000
Transportation$1,000-$2,000$500-$1,500
Phone/internet$500-$700$500-$700
Personal/entertainment$1,500-$3,000$1,500-$3,000
Total/year$12,500-$16,700$22,000-$34,200

Funding Your Education

SourceAmountRepayment?
RESP (parents/grandparents)Up to $50,000 + $7,200 grantsNo
Government grants (need-based)$1,000-$6,000/yearNo
Scholarships/bursaries$500-$40,000+No
Federal student loansBased on needYes (0% interest rate)
Provincial student loansAdditional based on needYes (interest varies)
Part-time work$5,000-$15,000/yearN/A
Parents/familyVariesGenerally no
Student line of credit$5,000-$15,000/yearYes (prime + 0-2%)

Student Loans

How to Apply

ProvinceProgramApply At
OntarioOSAPontario.ca/osap
British ColumbiaStudentAidBCstudentaidbc.ca
AlbertaStudent Aid Albertastudentaidalberta.ca
QuebecAFE (Aide financière aux études)afe.gouv.qc.ca
All provincesCanada Student LoansThrough your provincial program

Loan Details

FeatureFederal LoansProvincial Loans (varies)
Interest rate0% (permanent since 2024)0-prime rate (varies)
Interest during schoolNoNo
Repayment grace period6 months after graduation6 months (varies)
Repayment Assistance (RAP)Income-based paymentsVaries
Loan forgivenessAfter 15 years on RAPSome provincial programs

Scholarships and Free Money

TypeWhere to FindAmount Range
Entrance scholarshipsYour university/college website$1,000-$40,000+
In-course scholarshipsDepartment/faculty$500-$5,000
University bursariesFinancial aid office$500-$5,000
External scholarshipsScholarshipsCanada.com, Yconic.com$500-$10,000
Government grantsStudent loan application$1,000-$6,000/year
Employer scholarshipsParents’ employers, community businesses$500-$5,000
Professional associationsCPA, engineering associations$1,000-$5,000
Indigenous fundingBand, IndspireFull tuition + living

Student Budget Template (Monthly)

CategoryLiving at HomeLiving Away
Rent$0$700-$1,200
Groceries/meal plan$200-$300$350-$500
Transportation$100-$150$50-$125 (student transit pass)
Phone$30-$50$30-$50
Entertainment$100-$200$100-$200
Clothing$50-$100$50-$100
Personal care$30-$50$30-$50
Savings$50-$200$0-$100
Total$560-$1,050$1,310-$2,325

Ways to Save Money as a Student

CategoryTipsMonthly Savings
TextbooksLibrary reserves, used, PDFs, open textbooks$50-$100
FoodMeal prep, campus food bank, student discounts$100-$200
TransportationStudent transit pass, biking$50-$100
PhonePublic Mobile, Lucky Mobile student plans$20-$30
EntertainmentStudent discounts (Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Prime)$20-$30
BankingFree student bank account$15-$20
ShoppingStudent discount apps (UNiDAYS, Student Beans)$20-$50
HousingRoommates, off-campus vs residence$200-$600

Student Banking

BankStudent AccountFeatures
Scotiabank (SCENE+)Student Banking AdvantageFree, unlimited transactions, no minimum
TDStudent ChequingFree, unlimited transactions
CIBCSmart Account (free for students)Free, unlimited
RBCStudent BankingFree, unlimited
BMOStudent ChequingFree, unlimited
TangerineNo Fee Daily ChequingAlways free (not student-specific)

Building Credit as a Student

StepWhenDetails
1. Get a student credit cardYear 1$500-$1,000 limit, no annual fee
2. Use for recurring expensesMonthlyPhone bill, subscriptions, groceries
3. Pay full balance every monthMonthlyMost important rule
4. Keep utilization under 30%MonthlyE.g., spend under $300 on a $1,000 limit
5. Never miss a paymentMonthlySet up auto-pay for minimum at least
6. Graduate with 4+ years of historyGraduationScore should be 720+

Best Student Credit Cards

CardAnnual FeeCash BackLimit
BMO CashBack Student$03% groceries, 1% other$500-$1,000
Scotiabank SCENE+ Student$0SCENE+ points$500-$1,000
CIBC Dividend Visa Student$01% cash back$500-$1,000
Tangerine Money-Back$02% on 2-3 categories$500-$2,000

Part-Time Work

OptionPay RangeHours/WeekNotes
Campus job (work-study)$16-$20/hour10-15Subsidized, convenient
Tutoring$20-$40/hour5-10High hourly rate, flexible
Retail/food service$16-$18/hour10-20Widely available
Freelancing$20-$50+/hourVariableSkills-based (writing, design, coding)
Co-op/internship$18-$30+/hourFull-time (work terms)Best for career and résumé

Earning $10,000-$15,000/year from part-time work significantly reduces student loan needs.

Taxes for Students

What to KnowDetails
File a return every yearEven with $0 income — to get GST credit and build RRSP room
Basic personal amountFirst $16,129 of income is tax-free
Tuition credit15% of tuition reduces tax; unused amounts carry forward
Scholarship/bursary incomeGenerally tax-free
Use Wealthsimple TaxFree; auto-imports slips from CRA
Report all incomePart-time work, freelance, tips
GST/HST CreditUp to $350-$500/year for low-income students

Student Tax Benefits

BenefitAmount
Tuition tax credit (carry forward)15% × tuition = $1,050/year (on $7,000 tuition)
Transfer to parentUp to $5,000 of unused tuition credit
GST/HST Credit$350-$500/year
Moving expensesDeductible if moved 40+ km for school
Student loan interest15% federal credit
RRSP room building18% of earned income

After Graduation Priorities

PriorityActionWhy
1Build emergency fund ($3,000-$5,000)Safety net for job transition
2Start professional careerIncome is the biggest factor
3Review student loan repaymentBudget for payments (RAP if low income)
4Open TFSATax-free savings from day one
5Start RRSP (if employer match)Free money from employer
6Open FHSA (if planning home purchase)$8,000/year tax-deductible
7Continue building creditApply for regular credit card