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How to File Taxes as a Student in Canada 2026

Updated

Student Tax Filing Guide 2026

Why Students Should File Taxes

BenefitEstimated Value
GST/HST creditUp to $519/year (single)
Provincial credits (e.g., Ontario Trillium)$100-$500/year
Carbon rebate (CAIP)$200-$400/year
Tuition credit carryforward15% × tuition for future tax savings
Refund of withheld taxesWhatever your employer deducted
RRSP contribution roomBuilds for future use
Potential total$500-$1,500+/year

Even with $0 income, filing gets you $500+ in credits.

What You Need to File

DocumentWhere to Get It
T2202 (tuition)Your university/college online portal
T4 (employment income)Your employer or CRA My Account
T4A (scholarships/bursaries)Your school or CRA My Account
SINYour SIN card/letter
Direct deposit infoFor faster refund
Rent receipts (some provinces)From your landlord

Setting Up CRA My Account

StepAction
1Go to canada.ca → CRA My Account
2Sign in or register (use bank sign-in for easiest access)
3Once verified, you can access auto-fill and view T-slips

How to File Step-by-Step

Using Wealthsimple Tax (Free)

StepActionTime
1Go to wealthsimple.com/tax, create account2 min
2Enter personal info (name, SIN, address)2 min
3Use CRA auto-fill to import T4, T4A slips2 min
4Add T2202 (tuition) from your school’s form3 min
5Check if you have any other income (interest, freelancing)1 min
6Review — software calculates refund/credits2 min
7NETFILE to CRA1 min
8Wait 2-3 weeks for refund via direct deposit
Total~15 minutes

Student Income: What’s Taxable

Not Taxable ✅

Income TypeTax Status
Most scholarships and bursariesTax-free (for full-time students)
Canada Student GrantTax-free
Government student loansNot income
Gifts from parentsNot taxable
RESP withdrawals (EAP)Taxable to student (but usually $0 tax)

Taxable 💰

Income TypeT-SlipNotes
Part-time jobT4Tax withheld, get refund if low income
Co-op/internshipT4Taxable employment income
Freelancing/tutoringNone (self-report)Report on T2125
Interest incomeT5If over $50
Tips (cash)None (self-report)Technically taxable

Tuition Tax Credit

How It Works

DetailAmount
Credit rate15% federal + provincial rate
Example: $8,000 tuition$1,200 federal credit + ~$400-800 provincial
Can carry forward?✅ Yes, indefinitely
Can transfer?✅ Up to $5,000 to parent or spouse

Carry Forward vs Transfer

OptionWhen to Choose
Carry forwardIf you expect higher income after graduation (best for most students)
Transfer to parentIf parent has high income now and you won’t for years
Use nowIf you have enough income this year to offset

Best strategy for most students: Carry forward tuition credits until you’re working full-time after graduation, when they’ll offset taxes at a higher income level.

Example

YearSituationCredits AvailableUsedRemaining
Year 1-4 (student)$8,000/yr tuition, $10,000 income$4,800 accumulates$0 (no tax owing)$4,800
Year 5 (graduated)$55,000 salary$4,800 carried forward$4,800$0
Tax savings at graduation~$1,500

Scholarship and Bursary Tax Rules

Full-Time Students

TypeTaxable?
Entrance scholarships❌ Tax-free
Academic scholarships❌ Tax-free
Research grants (related to program)❌ Tax-free
Bursaries❌ Tax-free
RESP EAP withdrawal✅ Taxable (but offset by BPA)

Full-time students enrolled in a qualifying program pay $0 tax on scholarships/bursaries.

Part-Time Students

TypeTaxable?
Scholarship/bursaryTaxable above tuition + materials cost
Basic Personal AmountCovers first $16,129 of income

GST/HST Credit for Students

Eligibility

RequirementDetails
Age19+ (or younger if married/common-law/parent)
ResidentCanadian resident
File a tax returnMust file to receive it
Income-basedFull amount if income under ~$45,000

Amount (2026)

StatusAnnual AmountQuarterly Payment
SingleUp to $519~$130
Married/common-lawUp to $680~$170
Per child+$179+$45

This alone makes filing worth it. Most students receive the full amount.

Student-Specific Deductions and Credits

Credit/DeductionWho QualifiesValue
Tuition creditStudents with T220215% × tuition
Student loan interestPost-graduation15% of interest paid
Moving expensesMoved 40+ km for school/workActual costs
Transit pass (some provinces)Ontario eliminated federal, check provincialVaries
Canada Training CreditAges 26-65 (future benefit)$250/year accumulates
Work-from-home (if applicable)Remote work/co-op$2/day or detailed

Filing as an International Student

Requirements

DocumentDetails
SINApply at Service Canada with study permit
ITN (if no SIN)Apply with first tax return
Residency statusUsually “deemed resident” if in Canada 183+ days

Benefits Available

BenefitAvailable to International Students?
GST/HST credit✅ Yes (after 19th birthday)
Provincial credits✅ Most provinces
Tuition credit✅ Yes
Canada Child Benefit✅ If you have children in Canada
Carbon rebate✅ Yes

First-Time Filing Tips

  1. Get your SIN from Service Canada before filing
  2. Use Wealthsimple Tax — it handles newcomer situations well
  3. File for every year you’ve been in Canada
  4. Enter your date of entry into Canada
  5. Claim tuition credits from Canadian institutions

Common Student Tax Mistakes

MistakeFix
Not filing because “I don’t earn enough”File anyway — you’re missing $500+/year in credits
Forgetting to enter T2202Get it from your school’s student portal
Not claiming GST/HST creditCheck the box when filing
Transferring credits instead of carrying forwardCarry forward is usually better
Not keeping rent receiptsSome provinces have rent credits
Missing scholarship reporting on T4AEnter it — most is tax-free but must be reported