What documents prove you can afford it, including the Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL)?
Affordability has to be documented, not just claimed. Officers want to see genuine, available funds, so a sudden large deposit right before applying can raise questions about where the money came from. Plan your proof of funds early and keep it clean. Most provinces also now require a Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL), which is a letter from the province confirming you have a spot under its share of study permit applications. Without an accepted PAL or an official exemption, most new study permit applications will be returned. Read the rules on the official Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL) page, and confirm exactly which documents your situation needs on the get the right documents page. Budgeting for an affordable college means budgeting time to gather these documents correctly, because a missing or weak document can cost you the whole intake.
How do you choose an affordable college without raising a red flag?
Pick the program first, then the price. Start from your own background and career goal, shortlist programs that logically follow from it, then within that shortlist choose the most affordable DLI that is PGWP-eligible. This order protects you, because the affordability now sits inside a study plan that already makes sense to an officer. Write a short, honest statement of purpose explaining why this program, why Canada, and why now, and make sure the answer is not simply "it was the cheapest." If the only reason you can give is price, you have a weak application no matter how good the tuition looks.
Use this quick checklist before you apply:
- Confirm the school is on the official DLI list.
- Confirm the specific program is PGWP-eligible if you want to work after graduating.
- Compare total first-year cost, not just tuition.
- Check that the program connects to your studies or work history.
- Prepare proof of funds and your PAL early and keep funds genuine.
Frequently asked questions
Which college in Canada is cheapest for international students?
There is no single cheapest college, because tuition changes every year and varies widely by program. As a pattern, public colleges in Manitoba, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Saskatchewan tend to post lower international tuition than large colleges in Toronto or Vancouver. Always confirm the current figure on the institution's own website, and remember that the cheapest tuition is not a good deal if the program is not PGWP-eligible or does not fit your background.
Which province has the lowest tuition fees in Canada?
Quebec and some prairie and Atlantic provinces such as Manitoba and Newfoundland and Labrador generally have lower published tuition than Ontario and British Columbia. That said, lower tuition can be offset by higher living costs in some cities, and Quebec runs separate immigration steps. Compare the total first-year cost, including the CAD $20,635 living-cost floor, before deciding a province is cheaper for you.
Which college in Canada is easiest to get into?
Admission difficulty depends on the program, your grades, and your language test scores, not on a college being "easy." Be careful here, because choosing a low-bar program purely because it is easy to enter can actually weaken your study permit if it does not match your background. A program that is realistic for your profile and clearly connected to your goals is a far safer choice than one picked only for easy admission.
Can I get a 100% scholarship to study in Canada?
Full-ride scholarships that cover all tuition and living costs for international students exist, but they are rare and highly competitive, and most are at the university level rather than at colleges. You should plan to fund your studies yourself and treat any scholarship as a bonus, not your main plan. Be very cautious of anyone promising guaranteed free study in Canada, because the government still requires you to prove you can support yourself regardless of any award.
Sources
This article is general information only and is not immigration advice for your specific case. For advice on your study permit and college choice, book a consultation with a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) at gofarglobal.com.