Four years of university in Canada costs $50,000–$130,000 depending on where you live, what you study, and whether you live at home or on campus. Tuition alone ranges from $3,200 per year in Newfoundland to $8,200+ in Ontario, and professional programs like engineering, business, and law can run $12,000–$22,000 annually — before residence, food, textbooks, and living expenses.
The most effective cost-reduction strategies stack: living at home for the first two years saves $15,000–$25,000 per year, a co-op program can earn $15,000–$25,000 per work term, and maximizing an RESP from birth captures up to $7,200 in free CESG grants plus decades of tax-sheltered compound growth. For students from low- to middle-income families, the Canada Student Grant provides up to $4,200 per year that never has to be repaid — yet many eligible students don’t apply. International students face dramatically higher costs at $40,000–$65,000 per year, making Canada one of the more expensive destinations globally for foreign undergraduates.
Average Tuition by Province (Domestic Undergraduate)
If moved 40+ km for school with scholarship income
Student loan interest credit
15% of interest paid (federal)
Textbook amounts
No longer available federally
Transfer to parent/grandparent
Up to $5,000/year of unused tuition credit
The Bottom Line
The cheapest path to a Canadian degree is studying in a low-tuition province (Newfoundland, Quebec, Manitoba) while living at home, combining student grants with RESP withdrawals, and working part-time or in co-op terms. Apply for at least 10 scholarships per year — even small $500–$2,000 awards add up, and many go unclaimed because of low application volume. Transfer your unused tuition tax credits to a parent or grandparent each year (up to $5,000) to put money back into the family.