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Studying in Canada: what the process looks like now

PAL requirements, financial proof, DLIs, and what strong applications look like under the current rules.

Last updated: April 18, 2026

Who this is for

A prospective international student — or a parent or partner helping one — trying to figure out whether a Canadian study permit is realistic, what it actually requires now, and how to avoid the mistakes that lead to refusals.

The 2-minute version

The short answer before the detail

You need admission to a Designated Learning Institution (DLI). Most applicants also need a Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL) or Territorial Attestation Letter (TAL), proof of funds that meets the current minimum, and a clear, believable study plan. The school part is only half the process. The immigration side — intent, finances, ties to home — is where most refusals happen.

Does this program make sense for this person?

Officers reviewing a file are asking the same three questions, even if they're not written on the checklist. The first: does the program make sense for the applicant?

A 35-year-old experienced accountant applying for a second undergraduate business diploma in a small private college is going to get more scrutiny than a 20-year-old recent high school graduate applying for the same program. Not because one is better, but because the story has to fit.

If your program is a step up, a logical pivot, or a specialization that builds on what you've already done, that's easier to explain. If it looks like a backward step or an excuse to enter Canada, you'll need to explain why it isn't.

Can you actually afford this?

The financial side is where a lot of files fall apart. IRCC wants to see that you can pay tuition, living expenses, and return travel without working illegally or running out of money mid-program. The minimum living cost threshold was raised significantly in 2024 and is indexed annually.

Weak financial files usually share the same problems:

  • Large deposits made right before the application
  • Funds sitting in accounts that don't belong to the applicant
  • Income that doesn't match the bank activity

Officers see those patterns constantly.

What a strong study permit file contains

Beyond the letter of acceptance and application forms, a well-prepared file usually includes:

  • A Provincial or Territorial Attestation Letter (PAL/TAL), where required
  • Proof of funds meeting the current threshold, with clean transaction history
  • A study plan that reads like it was written by the applicant, not a template
  • Academic transcripts and credentials
  • Language test results, depending on the program and country
  • Explanation of any gaps, refusals, or unusual circumstances
  • Ties to the home country, where appropriate

The PAL requirement has been a common source of refusals since it was introduced. Not all applicants need one — graduate students, exchange students, and some other categories are exempt — but most undergraduate and college applicants do.

Studying, working, and what comes after

Most students arrive at this page with a second question: can studying lead to working, and eventually to permanent residence?

The honest answer is: often yes, but with more friction than there used to be.

Post-Graduation Work Permits remain available to eligible graduates of DLIs, and most applicants have up to 180 days after graduation to apply. But PGWP eligibility now depends on the program, the institution, and in some cases the field of study. A program that was PGWP-eligible two years ago may not be today. Anyone choosing a school and program with PR in mind has to check current eligibility rules, not older information.

Students on valid study permits can also work off-campus up to the current weekly limit during studies and full-time during scheduled breaks. The off-campus work hour cap has changed more than once in the past two years.

Things to avoid

Common mistakes

  • Using a generic statement of purpose. If an officer has read your exact paragraph five times today, they will not be persuaded by it a sixth time. Your statement should explain your specific background, your specific program choice, and your specific career goal.
  • Picking a cheap school that's not PGWP-eligible. Saving tuition up front can cost you the entire post-graduation pathway.
  • Financial documents that don't match your story. A large deposit the week before applying, from a source you can't clearly document, will raise questions.
  • Ignoring the PAL requirement. If you need one and don't have one, the application is refused almost automatically.
  • Assuming admission equals approval. Getting into a school is a school decision. Getting into Canada is an immigration decision. They are separate.

Quick answers

Frequently asked questions

How much money do I need in the bank?

The minimum depends on the current proof-of-funds threshold, which covers tuition, one year of living costs, and return travel. IRCC updates the living-cost figure annually, so check the current number before you apply.

Can my spouse come with me?

Sometimes. Spousal open work permits are available to spouses of students in specific programs and at specific institutions under current policy. The rules tightened in 2024.

Can I work while I study?

Yes, within the current hour limits. Students on valid permits can work off-campus and on-campus, subject to rules that have changed recently.

Do I need a PAL?

Most undergraduate and college applicants do. Graduate students, exchange students, and some other categories are exempt. Check the specific exemption list before assuming.

Does a study permit lead to permanent residence?

It can, through PGWP and then Express Entry, CEC, or a PNP. But the chain is no longer automatic, and the program you choose affects whether the chain works at all.

One next step

Ready to move forward?

Before you pay a tuition deposit, our Study Permit Application Kit helps you check whether your program, school, and financial position match what IRCC is currently approving.

Get the Canada Study Permit Action Kit: From Acceptance to Arrival — $29.00 Compare all kits ← All Pathways