Canada Student Visa New Rules 2025

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Key Changes for 2025

 

Higher financial proof required

  • From September 1, 2025, proof of funds for a single international student (outside Quebec) will increase to CAD 22,895 per year (living expenses only, excluding tuition & travel) from the earlier CAD 20,635.
  • The required amount scales up if there are accompanying family members. E.g. for two people it’s ~CAD 28,502; for three ~CAD 35,040 etc.

Cap on number of study permits

  • Canada has set a cap for 2025 at around 437,000 new study permits. This is a drop from previous years.
  • Part of this is to manage pressures on housing, infrastructure, and public services.

New / adjusted Provincial or Territorial Attestation Letters (PAL / TAL)

  • Many applicants will need a PAL or TAL with their application—these letters show that the province or territory is okay with the number of international students coming in.
  • Exemptions apply: for example, K-12 students, or those already in Canada and applying for extension in the same study level & institution sometimes.

Changes in Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) eligibility

  • The “field of study requirement” was introduced for certain college programs: students must graduate from eligible programs to qualify for PGWP.
  • There was some fluctuation: some programs were removed, then later added back, and IRCC has delayed further large-scale changes until early 2026.

Visa rejection rates & stream/program changes

  • The rejection rate for student visas has increased. For example, for Indian students, there has been a sharper drop in approvals and higher refusal rates.
  • The Student Direct Stream (SDS) has seen changes: its faster visa route advantages have reduced or been removed for many applicants.

Implications / What to Watch Out For

  1. Budgeting and financial planning: You’ll need more funds upfront—not just tuition, but substantially more living cost funds depending on family size.
  2. Choosing your program carefully: Since PGWP eligibility depends on your program, verify whether your prospective course / college is eligible.
  3. Timing: Make sure your application, program start date, etc., align with the new rules. Some changes depend on when you start your program or when you apply for the permit.
  4. Prepare documentation thoroughly: Proof of tuition payment, housing, bank statements, etc., will be under stricter scrutiny.
  5. Alternative plans: With caps and higher rejection rates, having backup institutions / alternate courses can help in case your first choice runs into difficulties under the new rules.

Here’s a checklist and guidance (with 2025-updates) for Indian students applying for a Canada study permit under the new rules. Use this as your roadmap so you don’t miss anything.


 Checklist: Documents & Requirements

Item What to Prepare / Notes
Letter of Acceptance (LOA) From a Designated Learning Institution (DLI). It should include program name, start & end dates, tuition fee amount.
Provincial / Territorial Attestation Letter (PAL / TAL) Most applicants must include this. It confirms you are within the province’s allotted international student quota.  Exemptions apply (e.g. K-12 students, extensions at same DLI & same level)
Proof of Identity / Passport Valid passport / travel document. Copy of the biographical page.
Proof of Financial Support You must show enough funds to cover:

• Tuition fees

• Living expenses (housing, food, etc.)

• Transportation (return trips)

Methods: bank statements (last 4 months), student/education loan letter, proof of scholarship, bank draft in convertible currency etc. Updated requirement for 2025: living cost proof requirement increased to CAD 22,895 for a single student (excluding tuition & travel).

Medical / Health Examination If your country requires, you’ll need to undergo a medical exam by an IRCC-approved physician.
Police / Background Checks If required, you may need to submit a police certificate or proof of good conduct / no criminal record.
Biometrics You’ll likely be asked to give fingerprints & photo (unless exemption applies).
Application Forms For Indians, key forms include:

• IMM 1294 (Application for Study Permit)

• IMM 5483 (Document Checklist)

• Family Information (IMM 5707)

• Any other forms per visa-office instructions (IMM 5818, IMM 5957 etc.)

Passport-sized Photographs As per IRCC specifications.
Statement of Purpose / Letter of Explanation Explain your study plan, why that institution & course, how you’ll support yourself, intent to return etc. (Often recommended even if not strictly listed)
English / French Language Test (if required by institution) IRCC itself may not strictly mandate IELTS/TOEFL, but most Canadian institutions will require proof of English or French proficiency.

🔍 Additional / 2025-Specific Rules & Tips

  1. Cap on Study Permits (437,000)
    For 2025, IRCC has capped new study permits at 437,000 (a ~10% drop from 2024).
    Because of this, even having complete documents doesn’t guarantee issuance—quota constraints may come into play.
  2. Graduate / Master’s / Doctoral Students Must Use PAL
    Previously, master’s / PhD students were sometimes exempt from the attestation requirement, but in 2025 they are included under PAL / TAL requirement.
  3. Changing Schools / DLIs Requires New Study Permit
    From 8 November 2024, and fully in effect by 2025, most students wishing to transfer from one DLI to another must apply for a new study permit before making the switch. You can’t just notify IRCC and move.
  4. Field of Study Requirement for PGWP (Post-Graduation Work Permit)
    • New rule: for non-degree programs, to qualify for PGWP you must graduate from an eligible field of study linked to labor shortage / priority sectors.
    • On July 4, 2025, IRCC reinstated some previously removed fields, so the list of eligible fields was adjusted.
    • Importantly: If you applied for your study permit before June 25, 2025 and your field was eligible then, you remain eligible even if it was later removed.
  5. Higher Rejection Rates / More Scrutiny (Especially Indian Applicants)
    • Reports suggest Canada is rejecting a high percentage of Indian student visa applications in 2025 under stricter rules. Be extra careful about consistency, clarity in financials, and legitimacy of your LOA / sponsor documents.
    • Fraud checks are stricter: IRCC will more closely verify institution authenticity, transcripts, bank documents etc.
  6. Validity of Permits
    • A study permit is usually valid for the duration of your study program + extra 90 days to allow you to leave Canada or apply for extension.
    • If your permit will expire before you finish your program, you must apply to extend it.
    • You cannot extend to move to a de-designated institution (if the DLI loses its status) to begin a new program.
  7. Timing & Submission Strategy
    • Apply as early as possible. Processing delays and backlogs are growing (especially with high volume).
    • For school / program changes, leave ample lead time because of the requirement for a new permit.
    • Keep all documents authentic, clearly organized, and ready to submit extra evidence if asked.

If you like, We can send you a personalized checklist PDF  that you can tick off. Would you prefer we send that to you now? Then Contact Now !!!

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