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Student Loan Repayment Calculator Canada

Updated

Student Loan Repayment Calculator

$
%
$
$
Total Payment$30,000
Total Interest$0
Payoff Time86 months
Payoff DateMay 2033

Interest Rates by Loan Type

Loan TypeInterest Rate (2026)
Canada Student Loans (federal)0%
BC Provincial0%
Nova Scotia Provincial0%
Ontario (OSAP provincial)Prime (varies)
Quebec (AFE)Prime
Alberta ProvincialPrime
Other ProvincesVaries

The federal portion of most student loans is interest-free as of April 2023.

Average Student Debt in Canada

Education LevelAverage Debt
College diploma$15,000
Bachelor’s degree$28,000
Master’s degree$35,000
Professional degree$60,000+
PhD$40,000

Repayment Timeline Examples

$30,000 at 0% Interest

Monthly PaymentPayoff TimeTotal Paid
$25010 years$30,000
$3507.1 years$30,000
$5005 years$30,000
$7503.3 years$30,000

$30,000 at 5% Interest (Provincial Portion)

Monthly PaymentPayoff TimeTotal PaidInterest Paid
$25012.8 years$38,500$8,500
$3508.5 years$35,700$5,700
$5005.7 years$34,200$4,200
$7503.6 years$32,400$2,400

Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP)

If you’re struggling to make payments, RAP can help:

Stage 1: Reduced Payments

Gross Monthly IncomePayment (single, no dependents)
$0 - $2,183$0
$2,183 - $3,000Affordable amount
$3,000+Regular payment

Thresholds increase with family size.

Stage 2: Government Pays Remainder

After 60 months on Stage 1:

  • Government pays interest portion
  • Government pays principal reduction

RAP Eligibility

RequirementDetails
Canadian residentOr abroad for eligible reasons
Completed studiesOr left school
Out of grace period6 months after leaving school
Income-based needProven through application

Grace Period

Loan TypeInterest in Grace PeriodPayments Required
Canada Student Loans0%No
Ontario (OSAP)0%No
BC Student Loans0%No
Quebec (AFE)Yes (accrues)No
Private loansUsually yesCheck lender

The 6-month grace period starts after you graduate, leave school, or drop below part-time.

Strategies to Pay Off Student Loans Faster

1. Pay More Than Minimum

Extra PaymentEffect on $30,000 loan
$50/monthSave 10 months
$100/monthSave 18 months
$200/monthSave 30 months

2. Use the “Snowball” or “Avalanche” Method

MethodApproachBest For
AvalanchePay highest interest firstSaving money
SnowballPay smallest balance firstMotivation

3. Lump Sum Payments

Use windfalls (tax refunds, bonuses) to pay down principal:

  • Tax refund: $1,500 average
  • Work bonus: Variable
  • Gifts: Birthday, graduation

4. Biweekly Payments

Pay half your monthly payment every 2 weeks = 13 full payments/year instead of 12.

Student Loan Tax Credit

The interest on student loans is eligible for federal and provincial tax credits:

Interest PaidFederal Credit (15%)Provincial (~5%)Total Savings
$500$75$25$100
$1,000$150$50$200
$2,000$300$100$400

Credits can be carried forward up to 5 years.

Note: With federal loans at 0% interest, this mainly applies to provincial portions.

Should You Pay Off Student Loans or Invest?

Loan Interest RateRecommendation
0%Invest (any return beats 0%)
1-3%Invest (expect higher market returns)
4-6%Pay off OR invest (close call)
7%+Pay off first

With federal loans at 0%, mathematically it’s better to invest. But some prefer the peace of mind of being debt-free.

Private vs Government Student Loans

FeatureGovernment LoansPrivate Loans
Interest rate0% (federal)7-15%+
Repayment assistanceYes (RAP)No
Grace period6 monthsVaries
Tax credit on interestYesNo
FlexibilityHighLow

Avoid private student loans if possible. Government loans have much better terms.