Canada Student Visa for Indian Students: 2026 Study Permit Guide

Canada Student Visa for Indian Students
Canada Student Visa for Indian Students

The Canada student visa for Indian students is, in law, a study permit: the document that lets you study at an approved institution inside Canada. Under the 2026-2028 Immigration Levels Plan, Canada plans up to 408,000 study permits in 2026, according to CIC News. Fewer slots mean officers now refuse weak files that once passed, so preparation decides the outcome.

You and your family are planning a real budget against a permit that has changed more in the last 18 months than in the previous decade. The fast-track route is gone, the money bar is higher, and a new attestation letter is now part of the file. The sections below set out the current proof-of-funds rule, a full first-year bill in INR, and a refusal-risk plan built from live counselling files.

Written by
Country Head-Canada
Canada head with 6 years of experience and guided over 600 students
89% Visa Success Rate
Reviewed by
Managing Director
Mr. Kongara Sridhar, Director of AOEC India, has over 12 years of experience in overseas education consulting, admissions, and student visa guidance.
Over 12 years Experience
Last updated on 16 Jun 2026

Key Takeaways

  • A “student visa” for Canada is really a study permit; IRCC adds the matching entry visa automatically on approval.
  • The fast-track Student Direct Stream closed in November 2024, so every Indian applicant now files through the slower regular stream.
  • You must show CAD 22,895 in living funds for a single applicant outside Quebec, beyond tuition; the bar rose in September 2025.
  • Master’s and doctoral students at public colleges and universities skip the attestation letter from 2026; most undergraduate and diploma applicants still need it.
  • A GIC is no longer mandatory but stays the cleanest single proof of funds for Indian families.
  • Refusal rates for Indian applicants spiked, so a genuine study plan, a clean money trail, and honest documents matter most.

2026 Quick Facts

Item2026 answer
Correct termCanada study permit (commonly called the student visa)
Study permit feeCAD 150 (about INR 10,330) per person
Biometrics feeCAD 85 (about INR 5,853) per person
Minimum living fundsCAD 22,895 (about INR 15.77 lakh) outside Quebec, excluding tuition and travel
Off-campus workUp to 24 hours/week while classes are in session, if eligible
PAL/TALNeeded by most applicants; public-DLI master’s and doctoral students exempt from 1 January 2026
SDSEnded 8 November 2024; Indian students now use the regular study permit stream
Main refusal risksWeak or untraceable funds, an unclear study plan, thin home-ties evidence, and document or LOA fraud concerns

All INR conversions use the live Google-published rate captured on 11 June 2026: CAD$1 ≈ ₹68.39. Rates fluctuate intraday; figures are indicative.

Is a Canada student visa the same as a study permit?

A Canada student visa is everyday shorthand for two separate documents. The study permit authorises study inside Canada, while an entry visa or electronic Travel Authorization permits boarding and border crossing. In 2026, IRCC charges CAD 150 (about ₹10,259) for the study permit, per its official study permit fee list, and issues the matching entry document automatically on approval.

Here’s what trips up most families: no document is literally called a “student visa.” When people say Canada study permit, they mean the permit itself. Once IRCC (Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada) approves it, the matching entry document, a temporary resident visa for Indian passport holders, is issued together with it. You never file the two separately.

A few terms recur throughout the process:

  • DLI (Designated Learning Institution) is a college or university approved by government to host international students. A permit is tied to a DLI.
  • POE Letter of Introduction (Port of Entry letter) is the approval letter you carry to the airport; a border officer exchanges it for your printed study permit on arrival.
  • R216 / dual intent is the legal principle that you may intend to study now and apply to stay later without that being held against you.

Treat the whole exercise as one goal: showing an officer you’re a genuine student with the funds and ties to back your plan. If you’re starting from scratch on the country itself, our guide to studying in Canada sets the wider context before you reach the permit stage.

What changed for Indian students after 2024: SDS, the cap and PAL?

Canada overhauled its student route across 2024 and 2025. As of November 8, 2024, the Student Direct Stream closed and all applicants moved to the regular stream, according to CIC News. For 2026, the 408,000-permit plan is a 16% cut from the 2024 target of 485,000, also per CIC News, sharpening competition for every file.

If you’ve read older blogs, treat almost everything about a fast, predictable Canada route as outdated. The Student Direct Stream (SDS), the priority track most Indian students once used, no longer exists. As of November 8, 2024, IRCC stopped accepting SDS applications, and every study permit for Indian students now runs through the regular stream, according to CIC News reporting the IRCC notice. That means slower, more discretionary processing for everyone.

Canada also tightened the national numbers, which is partly why officers read files so closely now:

408,000

Study permits planned for 2026 (155,000 new + 253,000 extensions) CIC News, 2026

-7%

2026 plan vs the 2025 target of 437,000 CIC News, 2026

-16%

2026 plan vs the 2024 target of 485,000 CIC News, 2026

Under the 2026-2028 Immigration Levels Plan, Canada plans up to 408,000 study permits in 2026, with 155,000 reserved for new arrivals and 253,000 for extensions, according to CIC News. The blunt takeaway for the 2026 study-permit cap year: fewer slots, harder scrutiny, no shortcut stream. If you and your parents are weighing the timing, apply early in the cycle and build a file an officer struggles to refuse. Your strongest lever is no longer speed; it’s evidence.

Do you need a PAL in 2026, or are you now exempt?

A Provincial Attestation Letter confirms a student counts within a province's capped allocation of study permits. Beginning in 2026, master's and doctoral students at public Designated Learning Institutions no longer need a PAL or TAL, according to CIC News, removing one major document for those postgraduate applicants while most others must still include it.

The Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL), or Territorial Attestation Letter (TAL) in a territory, is a letter from the province confirming you sit inside its capped share. Your DLI usually requests it after you accept your offer. No PAL where one is required is an automatic refusal, so a PAL for study permit applications sits at the heart of eligibility in 2026.

Public-DLI master’s or PhD

From 2026, you skip the PAL/TAL entirely. One less document, one less point of failure.

Bachelor’s, college diploma, most others

Plan for the attestation letter and confirm your DLI will issue it before you pay IRCC.

Studying in Quebec

Quebec issues its own CAQ (Certificat d’acceptation du Quebec, a provincial study clearance) alongside the federal permit.

For the 2026 cap year, IRCC will accept a maximum of 309,670 study permit applications for processing from PAL/TAL-required students, according to CIC News. So if you’re heading into a public-university master’s, you’ve cleared one hurdle for good. If you’re going into a bachelor’s or a diploma, the attestation letter is your responsibility to chase early. We’ve watched files stall purely because a student paid IRCC before the PAL was in hand. The PAL is one of several admission requirements; our requirements to study in Canada guide sets out the full checklist.

Proof of funds in 2026: the CAD 22,895 rule and your GIC route

Proof of funds is the evidence that a student can cover living costs beyond tuition. Effective September 1, 2025 and applying to all 2026 applications, the requirement for a single applicant outside Quebec is CAD 22,895 (about ₹15,66,090), according to CIC News. A Guaranteed Investment Certificate is the cleanest way to evidence this sum.

This is the figure parents fix on first. Effective September 1, 2025 and applying to all 2026 applications, you must show CAD 22,895 (about ₹15,66,090) in living funds for a single applicant outside Quebec, according to CIC News. Until 31 August 2025, that bar was CAD 20,635 (about ₹14,11,228), per the same CIC News report, so the jump is recent. This is the core of Canada study permit proof of funds, and it sits on top of first-year tuition, never instead of it.

IRCC weighs where the money came from, not just today’s balance, so every large deposit needs a clean, traceable source. If you’re the parent researching this for your child, that single point prevents most fund-related refusals: don’t let a lump sum land the week before you apply. For funding options that build a credible trail, our Canada scholarships and funding guide is worth a read before you size your savings.

How the GIC route works, end to end

A Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) is a Canadian fixed deposit you buy before you travel; the bank releases it to you in instalments after you land, which proves you can pay your way. For 2026 applications, a GIC of CAD 22,895 (about ₹15,66,090) at a participating Canadian bank is the most common way to evidence the living-cost proof, according to CIC News. The route runs in four plain steps:

  1. Open a GIC account with a participating Canadian bank and transfer CAD 22,895 from India.
  2. Receive the investment certificate, then attach it to your study permit application as proof of funds.
  3. After you land, the bank gives you an initial release, then pays the balance in monthly instalments across the year.
  4. Keep tuition proof separate; the GIC covers living costs only.

GIC versus a fixed deposit: since SDS closed, the GIC is no longer compulsory. A sanctioned education loan from HDFC Credila, Avanse or SBI, bank statements, or an Indian FD are all accepted. The difference: a GIC abroad is self-releasing living money an officer reads instantly, while a locked Indian FD still needs you to prove it can actually reach you in Canada. Many families pick the GIC simply because it's the cleanest single proof.

What does a Canada study permit really cost? 

The first-year cost of a Canada study permit combines tuition, government fees, and the living-cost proof. For the 2025/2026 academic year, international undergraduate tuition averages CAD 41,746 (about ₹28,55,000), per Statistics Canada (Tuition in Canada, 2025/2026), while permit and biometrics fees together total CAD 235 per applicant.

Tuition is the biggest and most variable part of the bill, and it shifts by program and province. For 2025/2026 it averages CAD 41,746 (about ₹28.55 lakh) for undergraduates and CAD 24,028 (about ₹16.43 lakh) for postgraduates, per Statistics Canada, with Ontario the priciest province. Our cost of studying in Canada breakdown takes tuition province by province and city by city; for the permit itself, the costs are fixed and predictable:

Permit-related costCADINR (approx.)Scope
Study permit feeCAD 150Rs 10,259one-off, per person
Biometrics feeCAD 85Rs 5,813one-off, per person
Living-cost proof of fundsCAD 22,895Rs 15.66 lakhannual, single, outside Quebec
Illustrative Year 1 (national-average UG)CAD 64,876Rs 44.37 lakhUG tuition + living + fees

The living-cost proof is money you’ll actually spend on rent and food, not a sunk fee, so when you and your parents calculate the budget, treat it as real spending you must show upfront.

Which documents does your study permit application actually need?

A complete application bundles the Letter of Acceptance, a Provincial Attestation Letter where required, proof of funds, a valid passport, an immigration medical exam, and biometrics. In 2026, IRCC charges CAD 150 (about ₹10,259) per person for the study permit, per its fee list, and a missing mandatory document is the most common cause of delay for Indian applicants.

These are the core study permit requirements behind every Canada student visa for Indian students. Gather everything before you open your IRCC account, because a half-built file invites trouble:

  • Letter of Acceptance (LOA) from a DLI, the foundation of the whole application.
  • PAL or TAL if your program needs one (most undergraduate and college applicants do).
  • Proof of funds: a GIC, bank statements, a sanctioned loan, or a combination covering CAD 22,895 plus tuition.
  • Valid passport covering your full study period.
  • Form IMM 1294 (Application for Study Permit Made Outside of Canada), the main application form.
  • Immigration medical exam by an IRCC-approved panel physician (an authorised doctor, not your family GP).
  • Biometrics: fingerprints and a photo, given at a VFS Global Visa Application Centre.
  • Statement of Purpose / study plan explaining your course choice, career plan and ties to India.

What Indian families specifically have to document

The form list is the same worldwide, yet the financial paperwork looks particular for an Indian file, and the funds section is scrutinised hardest:

  • Bank statements for roughly six months, showing the funds did not appear overnight.
  • Income Tax Returns (ITRs) of your parents or sponsor for the last two to three years, proving the income behind the savings.
  • Education loan sanction letter from a recognised lender such as HDFC Credila, Avanse or SBI, if a loan funds you.
  • Sponsor affidavit and relationship proof where a parent or relative funds you, plus their salary slips or business-income proof.
  • Fixed deposit certificates and asset papers that evidence a credible source of funds and genuine ties to India.

From the visa briefings we run each intake at our Hyderabad office, the document students underestimate most is the study plan. An officer reads it line by line, so explain why this course, why this DLI and why Canada in your own words. If you would rather not assemble the file alone, our Canada consultants in Hyderabad build these applications with families every intake.

Step by step: how do Indian students apply through IRCC and VFS?

A Canada study permit application runs through IRCC's online portal and a VFS Global centre for biometrics. As of the IRCC processing-time data published May 20, 2026, applications from India showed about 5 weeks, according to CIC News, though this figure changes often and already includes biometrics and the medical exam.

The process is logical once you see it as a sequence of decision points, not a flat checklist. Here is how to apply for the Canada study permit application from India, framed around what you decide at each stage:

  1. Create your IRCC secure account using a GCKey (the government’s secure login). Decide here whether you apply yourself or with guided support.
  2. Lock your LOA and PAL. Accept the offer, pay any deposit, and have your DLI request the attestation letter; the real decision is which DLI and province fit your plan.
  3. Arrange funds. Choose a proof method, GIC, bank statements or a sanctioned loan, that shows a clean, traceable source.
  4. Complete Form IMM 1294 and a language test if your DLI, program or future PGWP plan needs the score.
  5. Upload documents and pay the CAD 150 permit fee and CAD 85 biometrics fee.
  6. Give biometrics at a VFS Global Visa Application Centre (VAC), then complete the medical exam with a panel physician.
  7. Wait for the decision. IRCC issues the POE Letter of Introduction and the matching entry visa together.

As of the IRCC processing-time data published May 20, 2026, the estimate for India was about 5 weeks, according to CIC News, but this number is volatile and tends to lengthen in peak intake months. Allow three to four months end to end and start the moment your offer arrives. The single biggest time-saver is sequencing: never pay IRCC before your PAL and funds are ready.

What are your approval odds in 2026, and how do you cut refusal risk?

Study permit approval has tightened sharply for Indian applicants since Canada capped permits. According to immigration-department data provided to Reuters, about 74% of Indian study permit applicants were refused in August 2025, up from about 32% in August 2023, as reported by CP24/CTV News, making a credible, well-documented file essential.

Let’s be honest, because false optimism helps no family. According to immigration-department data provided to Reuters and reported by CP24/CTV News, about 74% of Indian study permit applicants were refused in August 2025, against about 32% in August 2023. Read that as a reason to strengthen your file, not to abandon the plan. A Canada student visa for Indian students still gets approved when it’s clean and honest; the refusals cluster in rushed, thin and document-flagged applications.

The volume shift tells the same story: Canada’s overall study-permit refusal rate was about 40% in August 2025, and Indian applicant volume fell from over 20,000 in August 2023 to about 4,500, according to CP24/CTV News reporting the same Reuters data. From the files we’ve reviewed this cycle, a study permit refusal almost always traces to a fixable gap rather than bad luck. Here is what each refusal reason looks like, and how to close it before submission:

Refusal reasonWhat to strengthen
Weak proof of fundsShow first-year funds in full plus a credible plan for the remaining study duration, with a six-month money trail.
Unclear study purposeExplain why this course, why this institution, why Canada, and how the program fits your past studies and career.
Poor home tiesAdd family, employment, assets and a realistic return or career plan, while being honest about dual intent.
Program mismatchJustify any change of field or a step down from your previous level so the academic progression reads as genuine.
Questionable documentsNever use a fake LOA, inflated funds or agent-manipulated paperwork; document fraud is exactly what the current scrutiny targets.
Immigration intent concernsPresent a genuine study plan, not a thinly disguised permanent-residence shortcut.

A study permit rejection has no formal appeal for most files, but you can reapply. Request your GCMS notes, fix the named reason, and resubmit as a fresh application. Reapplying with nothing changed simply repeats the result. For applicants coming straight out of school, our study in Canada after 12th guide shows how to frame a clean progression an officer trusts.

Working while you study and staying after: the 24-hour rule and PGWP

Study permit holders may work part-time during studies and apply for a Post-Graduation Work Permit afterward. In 2026, international students can work up to 24 hours per week off campus during academic terms, and unlimited hours during scheduled breaks, according to CIC News, with PGWP eligibility depending on study level and language ability.

For most families, the real draw is the path from study to work to settlement. In 2026, eligible students can work up to 24 hours per week off campus during academic terms, and unlimited hours during scheduled breaks, according to CIC News. That part-time income eases living costs, but it won’t replace your proof of funds, so don’t budget around it.

The PGWP rules that decide whether you can stay

The Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) is the open work permit that lets graduates work in Canada after studying, and it now turns on two tests. Getting a strong PGWP after study in Canada starts with choosing the right program before you ever apply.

CLB 7 vs CLB 5

Since November 1, 2024, university bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral graduates need CLB/NCLC 7; college graduates need CLB/NCLC 5, according to Fragomen. CLB (Canadian Language Benchmark) is Canada’s standard English scale.

The College Fork

Under the current PGWP rules, college and non-university applicants must graduate from an eligible field of study, while bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral graduates face no field restriction, according to Fragomen.

So a university degree avoids the field-of-study restriction entirely, and a language score at CLB 7 protects your stay-back option. On a working spouse, eligibility now depends on the type and length of your program, so undergraduate and many college students often cannot bring a spouse who can work; confirm your exact program against current IRCC guidance before you plan around it. For permit timing and the route into permanent residence, see our guide to the post-study work visa in Canada.

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Frequently Asked Questions

As of the IRCC processing-time data published 20 May 2026, applications from India showed about 5 weeks, according to CIC News. This figure moves often and already includes biometrics, so still apply three to four months before your intake. A clean, complete file moves faster than one IRCC must return for missing documents.

Yes. There is no formal appeal for most refusals, but you can reapply as a fresh application. Request your GCMS notes to see the officer’s exact reason, fix that gap such as weak funds or an unclear study plan, then submit again. Reapplying without changing anything usually fails a second time.

No. Since the Student Direct Stream closed in November 2024, a GIC is no longer compulsory. Bank statements, education loans and fixed deposits are accepted. Most Indian applicants still fund a GIC because it is the cleanest single proof of the CAD 22,895 living-cost requirement for 2026 applications.

It depends entirely on your program. Spousal open work permit eligibility now turns on the type and length of your study program, so undergraduate and many college students often cannot bring a working spouse. Rules in this area change, so confirm your exact program against current IRCC guidance before you plan.

The study permit lets you study inside Canada. The entry document, a temporary resident visa for most Indian passport holders, lets you board the flight and cross the border. IRCC issues the matching entry visa automatically when it approves your study permit, so you do not apply separately.

Every figure in this guide is checked against official IRCC, Statistics Canada and CIC News sources. For how we research, verify and update our content, see our editorial standards.

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