Canada Study Permit Fee from Nigeria (2026): Complete Cost Breakdown
How much does a Canada study permit really cost from Nigeria in 2026? Full breakdown of fees, medical exam, proof of funds, IELTS, and why the GIC requirement is now over ₦27 million.

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Canada's study permit looks cheaper than the UK at first glance — the government application fee is just CAD $150. But Nigerian students quickly discover the real financial requirement: IRCC now requires you to demonstrate access to CAD $22,895 in living funds (excluding tuition) before your application can be approved. Add first-year tuition, medical exam, IELTS, and other mandatory costs, and the total figure you need to evidence can exceed CAD $40,000 — over ₦48 million at current rates.
This guide breaks down every official, mandatory cost of a Canada study permit from Nigeria in 2026 — in naira — so you know exactly what to prepare before you apply.
⚠️ Exchange-rate disclaimer: Naira figures use an indicative rate of ₦1,200 per CAD $1 (NFEM mid-rate, May 2026). Exchange rates fluctuate daily. Always verify the live rate at the CBN website before making any payment. IRCC charges in Canadian dollars; your bank converts at the prevailing rate.
Canada Study Permit vs Student Visa — What's the Difference?
Canada does not issue a "student visa" in the way the UK does. Instead, Canada issues a Study Permit — the document that authorises you to study at a Designated Learning Institution (DLI) in Canada. As a Nigerian national, you also need a Temporary Resident Visa (TRV) to enter Canada. The good news: when you apply for a study permit online, IRCC assesses and issues the TRV alongside the study permit automatically, at no extra charge. You do not need to apply for them separately.
Nigeria is not a visa-exempt country, so you need a TRV (not an Electronic Travel Authorization). Your study permit will be linked to your passport and confirmed as a digital record. When you arrive at a Canadian port of entry, a border officer will stamp your study permit into your passport.
The Official Canada Study Permit Fee in 2026
Government Application Fees
These fees are paid directly to IRCC through the online application portal (IRCC Secure Account or GCKey) when you submit your study permit application. They are set by the Canadian government and have not changed as of May 2026.
| Fee Item | CAD | Approx. Naira* | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Study Permit application fee | $150 | ≈ ₦180,000 | Non-refundable whether approved or refused. |
| Temporary Resident Visa (TRV) | $0 | — | Issued automatically with your study permit for Nigerian applicants. No separate fee. |
| Biometrics (fingerprints and photo) | $85 | ≈ ₦102,000 | Required for most applicants. Valid for 10 years once enrolled. Collected at a VAC (Visa Application Centre) in Lagos or Abuja. |
| Total IRCC fees | $235 | ≈ ₦282,000 | Paid online at the time of application. |
*Based on ₦1,200/CAD. Verify the live rate before paying.
How to pay: Fees are paid online through the IRCC portal by credit or debit card. Cards that commonly work for Nigerian applicants include GTBank Mastercard, Access Bank Visa, and Zenith dollar or euro cards. Standard naira debit cards are frequently declined for international transactions — use a card enabled for international payments or a dollar card. Always verify the current IRCC fee schedule at ircc.canada.ca/fees on the day you apply, as fees can be updated.
Is the study permit fee refundable if refused? No. The $150 study permit application fee is non-refundable in all circumstances — refusal, withdrawal, or approval. The biometrics fee ($85) is also non-refundable.
Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL) — A Requirement Since 2024
Since January 2024, most study permit applicants must include a Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL) from the province or territory where their institution is located. This was introduced as part of Canada's international student cap. Your university or college will advise you on whether a PAL is required and how to obtain one — in most cases, the institution requests it on your behalf as part of the admissions process.
Without a PAL, your study permit application will be refused. Confirm with your institution that a PAL has been issued before you submit your application. Master's, doctoral, and certain other students may be exempt — your institution will advise.
Proof of Funds — The Biggest Financial Requirement
This is the section most Nigerian students underestimate. To be approved for a study permit, you must demonstrate to IRCC that you can financially support yourself throughout your studies. This is not a fee you pay to the government — it is money you must show you have access to.
What You Must Show (Outside Quebec, 2026)
Since September 2025, IRCC requires a single student studying outside Quebec to demonstrate the following:
| Requirement | Amount (CAD) | Approx. Naira* |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum living expenses for 1 year | $22,895 | ≈ ₦27,474,000 |
| First-year tuition fees | Varies by school | Typically CAD $15,000–$35,000 |
| Return travel costs | ~$2,000 (IRCC guidance) | ≈ ₦2,400,000 |
| Typical total to evidence (example) | ~$40,000–$60,000 | ≈ ₦48M–₦72M |
*Based on ₦1,200/CAD. Total varies significantly by institution and programme.
For students planning to study in Quebec, different rules apply. From January 2026, Quebec's proof-of-funds requirement increased significantly — a single student over 18 must show CAD $24,617 for living expenses alone, on top of tuition. Quebec students must also obtain a Quebec Acceptance Certificate (CAQ) from the provincial government before applying for the federal study permit.
IRCC accepts the following as proof of financial capacity:
- Bank statements from the last 4–6 months showing a consistent balance
- A Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) from a participating Canadian bank
- Proof of a student loan from a regulated financial institution (in your name)
- Scholarship or bursary award letters confirming amounts
- A sponsor's bank statements with a signed letter of support and proof of relationship
- Proof that tuition has already been paid upfront
The GIC — Still Useful Even Without SDS
A Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) is a deposit you make with a participating Canadian bank before you arrive in Canada. Although the SDS programme that required it has been closed, a GIC is still one of the most commonly accepted and trusted forms of proof of funds under the regular stream — because it is verifiable, held in a Canadian institution, and demonstrates genuine financial commitment.
Participating banks include Scotiabank, CIBC, and National Bank of Canada. The minimum GIC amount to cover living expenses is aligned with the IRCC threshold — approximately CAD $22,895 for a single student. Scotiabank's Student GIC Programme is the most widely used by Nigerian applicants and can be opened entirely online from Nigeria before you travel.
The GIC is not a fee — you get the money back. Once you arrive in Canada and activate your account, the funds are released to you in monthly instalments to cover your living costs. You are not spending this money on the application — you are moving it into a Canadian account as evidence.
The challenge for Nigerian applicants is the banking process. Wiring CAD $22,895 (approximately ₦27.5 million) through Nigerian banking channels takes time, and delays in international wire transfers are common. Budget at least 4–6 weeks for the GIC process before you plan to submit your application.
Mandatory Costs in Nigeria Before You Apply
These costs are paid in Nigeria before you submit your study permit application. They are not paid to IRCC — but they are required as part of a valid, complete application.
Immigration Medical Examination
Nigeria is on IRCC's designated country list, meaning a medical examination is required for all Nigerian study permit applicants. The exam must be conducted by an IRCC-approved Panel Physician in Nigeria. Your own doctor cannot complete this exam. Panel Physician results are uploaded directly to IRCC by the clinic — you do not receive the results yourself.
IRCC-approved facilities in Nigeria (verify current list at IRCC website):
- CLINA-LANCET Laboratories — Lagos and Abuja
- International Organisation for Migration (IOM) clinics — Lagos and Abuja
- International Medical Centre (IMC) — Lagos
Always verify the current approved list using the IRCC Panel Physician finder tool before booking, as the list is updated periodically. Medical exam results are valid for 12 months from the date of the examination.
Cost: approximately ₦100,000 – ₦150,000 depending on the clinic, tests required, and whether an X-ray is included. Some clinics have 2–3 week waiting lists — book early.
English Language Test (IELTS / PTE Academic)
An English language test is required for most Nigerian applicants unless your previous degree was taught entirely in English. The most widely accepted tests by Canadian universities are:
- IELTS Academic (British Council Nigeria or IDP) — most Canadian institutions require a minimum of IELTS 6.0–6.5 overall. Check your specific institution's requirement in your Letter of Acceptance.
- PTE Academic (Pearson) — accepted by most Canadian universities as an alternative. Equivalent score bands apply.
Cost (Nigeria, 2026): IELTS Academic — approximately ₦115,000 – ₦130,000 (British Council Nigeria). Book early — test slots in Lagos and Abuja fill up 4–6 weeks in advance.
Police Clearance Certificate
Most Canadian study permit applicants over 18 are required to submit a police clearance certificate (also called a criminal record check). For Nigerian applicants:
- Nigeria Police Force (NPF) clearance: obtained from your state command headquarters. Cost: approximately ₦20,000 – ₦35,000. Processing time: 2–4 weeks.
- Interpol clearance: required if you have lived outside Nigeria for 6 months or more in the past. Check your specific visa officer's requirements.
Document and Credential Costs
| Item | Approx. Cost (₦) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Academic transcript notarisation | ₦5,000 – ₦15,000 | Required if documents are not in English. |
| WES credential evaluation | ₦60,000 – ₦80,000 | Required by some Canadian institutions. WES (World Education Services) costs approximately CAD $260 (~₦312,000). Check whether your specific school requires it — not all do. |
| Document courier / logistics | ₦15,000 – ₦25,000 | DHL or FedEx if sending physical documents. |
Total Cost Summary — What to Budget
The table below separates the costs you pay and lose (non-refundable fees) from the funds you must demonstrate (which remain yours). Naira figures use ₦1,200/CAD.
| Cost Item | CAD | Approx. Naira | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Study permit application fee | $150 | ≈ ₦180,000 | Non-refundable. |
| Biometrics | $85 | ≈ ₦102,000 | Non-refundable. |
| Medical examination | — | ≈ ₦100,000 – ₦150,000 | Non-refundable. IRCC-approved clinic only. |
| IELTS Academic / PTE | — | ≈ ₦115,000 – ₦130,000 | Non-refundable. |
| Police clearance certificate | — | ≈ ₦20,000 – ₦35,000 | NPF clearance. |
| Documents and courier | — | ≈ ₦15,000 – ₦80,000 | Higher end if WES evaluation is required. |
| Total out-of-pocket (fees only) | — | ≈ ₦550,000 – ₦700,000 | Money you spend and do not recover. |
Separately from the fees above, you must demonstrate access to at least CAD $22,895 for living expenses (≈ ₦27.5 million) plus your first-year tuition (typically CAD $15,000–$35,000 / ₦18M–₦42M). This money stays in your account or GIC — it is not paid to the Canadian government. However, you must be able to evidence it before your permit is approved. This is the real financial barrier for most Nigerian applicants.
How Long Does the Canada Study Permit Take from Nigeria?
With both the SDS and Nigeria Student Express permanently closed since November 2024, all Nigerian applications go through the regular stream. There is no fast-track option for Nigerian applicants in 2026.
Based on IRCC's publicly updated processing data (May 2026):
- Current average for Nigeria: approximately 6–8 weeks, though this fluctuates. IRCC publishes updated processing times weekly at canada.ca/check-processing-times. Always check the current figure before planning your submission date.
- During peak season (May–July) when fall-intake applicants flood the system, processing can extend by 2–4 additional weeks.
- Applications with incomplete documents, inconsistent financial records, or missing PALs take significantly longer and are more frequently refused.
Apply at least 12–16 weeks before your intended programme start date. This accounts for the current 6–8 week processing time plus 4–6 weeks for the GIC banking process, medical exam, and document preparation. Nigerian bank wire transfers for GIC deposits regularly take 2–3 weeks longer than expected. Do not book non-refundable flights until you have received your study permit.
Key Requirements — Study Permit Application Checklist for Nigeria
A complete study permit application from Nigeria must include all of the following. Missing any item significantly increases the chance of refusal:
- Letter of Acceptance (LOA) from a Designated Learning Institution (DLI) registered with IRCC. Verify your school's DLI status at canada.ca/dli-list.
- Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL) — required for most applicants since January 2024. Your institution will advise.
- Proof of funds covering at least CAD $22,895 living expenses plus first-year tuition (bank statements, GIC, loan letter, or combination).
- Immigration medical examination completed by an IRCC-approved Panel Physician in Nigeria.
- Valid Nigerian passport with at least 6 months' validity beyond your intended study period.
- Biometrics enrolled at a VAC (Visa Application Centre) in Lagos or Abuja.
- English language test results (IELTS or equivalent) unless exempt.
- Police clearance certificate from the Nigeria Police Force.
- Statement of Purpose (SOP) — a personal statement explaining why you chose Canada, your academic background, and your plans after graduation. This is not a formal IRCC requirement but is expected by visa officers and significantly affects outcomes.
- Strong ties to Nigeria — evidence that you intend to return after your studies (employment history, family ties, property, etc.). Visa officers look for this to assess whether you are a genuine student or an immigration risk.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Canada study permit fee refundable if my application is refused?
No. The study permit application fee (CAD $150) and the biometrics fee (CAD $85) are both non-refundable, regardless of the outcome. The medical examination fee paid to the Panel Physician is also non-refundable. If you used a GIC as proof of funds and your application is refused, the GIC funds remain in your account and are returned to you by the Canadian bank — they are never paid to IRCC.
Is the SDS (Student Direct Stream) still available for Nigerian students?
No. Both the Student Direct Stream (SDS) and the Nigeria Student Express (NSE) were permanently closed by IRCC on 8 November 2024. All Nigerian study permit applications are now processed under the regular stream. There is no fast-track option for Nigerian applicants in 2026.
How much money do I need to show for a Canada study permit from Nigeria in 2026?
As of September 2025, you must demonstrate a minimum of CAD $22,895 for living expenses (outside Quebec), on top of your first-year tuition fees. For a student attending a university charging CAD $18,000 in tuition, the total proof-of-funds requirement is approximately CAD $40,895 (≈ ₦49 million at May 2026 rates). This is money you must show you have — it is not paid to the Canadian government.
What is a GIC and do I still need one now that SDS is closed?
A Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) is a deposit held with a participating Canadian bank (Scotiabank, CIBC, or National Bank) that serves as proof of funds. SDS no longer exists, but a GIC is still one of the strongest and most accepted forms of financial evidence in the regular stream — because it is verifiable and held in Canada. It is not mandatory under the regular stream, but it significantly strengthens your application. The minimum amount should match or exceed the IRCC living expense threshold of CAD $22,895.
Can I work while studying in Canada?
Yes. Full-time international students at Designated Learning Institutions can work up to 20 hours per week off-campus during term time, and full-time during scheduled academic breaks (summer, winter). On-campus work has no hour limit. You do not need a separate work permit — the right to work is included on your study permit.
Can I bring my spouse or children to Canada as a student?
Spouses of full-time students at eligible institutions may apply for an Open Work Permit, which allows them to work in Canada. Each dependent must demonstrate sufficient additional funds — approximately CAD $4,000 per accompanying spouse and CAD $1,500 per child, on top of your own required funds. Each dependent also requires their own TRV. Budget and plan for dependent applications separately.
Which Canadian banks accept GIC applications from Nigerian students?
The three most commonly used are Scotiabank's Student GIC Programme, CIBC's Student GIC, and National Bank of Canada's Student GIC. Scotiabank is the most widely used by Nigerian applicants — the account can be opened entirely online from Nigeria without visiting Canada first. Always use the bank's official website and verify you are using the current GIC programme before transferring funds.
Do I need a WES credential evaluation?
It depends on your specific institution. Some Canadian universities and colleges require a World Education Services (WES) evaluation of your Nigerian academic credentials as part of admissions. WES costs approximately CAD $260 (≈ ₦312,000). Check your institution's admissions requirements — not all schools require WES, and it is never a requirement from IRCC itself (only from individual institutions).
What is a PAL and do I need one?
A Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL) is a document from the province or territory where your institution is located, confirming that your enrollment falls within Canada's international student cap allocation. It has been required for most new study permit applications since January 2024. Your institution will typically handle the PAL process — but confirm with your admissions office that one has been issued before submitting your study permit application.
Bottom Line
The out-of-pocket cost of a Canada study permit from Nigeria — fees, medical exam, IELTS, biometrics, and document costs combined — is approximately ₦550,000 – ₦700,000. That is significantly lower than the UK's equivalent visa costs. The real challenge is not the fees — it is assembling and evidencing CAD $22,895 in living funds plus first-year tuition (potentially ₦48 million or more) that convinces IRCC you are genuinely financially prepared.
With SDS and the Nigeria Student Express permanently closed, all Nigerian applicants now follow the regular stream with processing times of 6–8 weeks. Apply at least 12–16 weeks before your intake date, prepare your financial documentation carefully, and ensure your Statement of Purpose is strong. A refused application loses you all the non-refundable fees and sets your timeline back by months.
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