Student Debt Repayment Strategies for Canadian Graduates

Crossing the stage at convocation is supposed to be one of life’s great milestones — a celebration of years of hard work and the beginning of a promising career. But for the vast majority of Canadian graduates, that diploma comes with a financial shadow: student debt that can take years or even decades to repay.
The numbers are staggering. The average Canadian bachelor’s degree graduate leaves school with roughly $28,000 in student loan debt. For those who pursued graduate degrees, professional programs, or studied out of province, the figure can easily exceed $50,000 or even $100,000. And unlike many other types of debt, student loans in Canada come with unique rules, programs, and strategies that every graduate should understand.
This guide is your comprehensive roadmap to student debt repayment in Canada. Whether you just graduated last month or you have been making payments for years and feel like you are getting nowhere, the strategies outlined here can help you take control of your student loans and move toward financial freedom faster than you thought possible.
Canadian student loan repayment is not a one-size-fits-all proposition. The federal and provincial governments offer multiple assistance programs — including the Repayment Assistance Program (RAP), interest relief, and provincial loan forgiveness programs — that many graduates never take advantage of because they do not know they exist. Before committing to any aggressive repayment strategy, make sure you are using every program available to you. Free money and interest relief are always the best first step.
Understanding Your Student Loans: The Canadian Landscape
Before you can develop an effective repayment strategy, you need to understand exactly what you owe and to whom. Canadian student loans come from multiple sources, each with different terms, interest rates, and repayment rules.
Types of Student Loans in Canada
| Loan Type | Source | Interest Rate | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada Student Loans (CSL) | Federal government (administered by NSLSC) | 0% (as of April 2023 — interest-free) | Interest-free, RAP eligible, tax credit for interest paid |
| Provincial Student Loans | Provincial governments | Varies by province (0% to prime + 1%) | Terms vary by province, some integrated with federal loans |
| Student Lines of Credit | Banks and credit unions | Prime + 0% to Prime + 3% | Not eligible for government assistance programs |
| Private Student Loans | Private lenders | 6% to 15%+ | No government protections, highest interest rates |
| Institutional Loans | Universities and colleges | Varies (often 0%) | Terms set by the institution |
The National Student Loans Service Centre (NSLSC)
If you have federal Canada Student Loans, your loans are managed through the National Student Loans Service Centre. This is where you will make payments, apply for assistance programs, and manage your account. Creating an account at the NSLSC website should be one of the first things you do after graduation.
Some provinces integrate their provincial loans with the NSLSC for consolidated payments, while others maintain separate administration. Check your province’s system:
| Province | Integrated with NSLSC? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario (OSAP) | Yes | Federal and provincial loans combined in one payment |
| British Columbia | Yes | Federal and provincial loans combined |
| Saskatchewan | Yes | Federal and provincial loans combined |
| New Brunswick | Yes | Federal and provincial loans combined |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | Yes | Federal and provincial loans combined |
| Alberta | No | Provincial loans managed separately through Alberta Student Aid |
| Quebec | No | AFE manages Quebec loans separately (and Quebec does not participate in CSL program) |
| Manitoba | No | Provincial loans managed separately |
| Nova Scotia | No | Provincial loans managed separately through Nova Scotia Student Assistance |
| Prince Edward Island | No | Provincial loans managed separately |
The Grace Period: Your First Strategic Window
After you finish your studies, you enter a grace period before you must begin making loan payments. Understanding and using this period strategically can set you up for success.
Federal Canada Student Loans
The federal grace period is six months after you leave school. During this period, no payments are required and no interest accrues (as of the April 2023 change making federal student loans permanently interest-free).
Provincial Student Loans
Provincial grace periods vary:
| Province | Grace Period | Interest During Grace Period |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | 6 months | No interest (provincial portion interest-free) |
| British Columbia | 6 months | No interest (provincial loans interest-free) |
| Alberta | 6 months | No interest during grace period |
| Quebec (AFE) | 6 months | Interest accrues but government pays it |
| Manitoba | 6 months | No interest (Manitoba eliminated interest) |
| Saskatchewan | 6 months | No interest |
| Nova Scotia | 6 months | No interest (provincial loans interest-free) |
| New Brunswick | 6 months | No interest |
| Newfoundland | 6 months | No interest (provincial loans interest-free) |
| PEI | 6 months | No interest |
Even though you do not have to make payments during the grace period, this is an excellent time to start if you have income. Payments made during the grace period go entirely toward the principal (since no interest is accruing on most loans), which reduces your total repayment amount and shortens your repayment timeline. Even small payments during this period provide a head start.
Strategic Grace Period Actions
Use your grace period to:
- Log into the NSLSC and review your complete loan details
- Confirm your total loan balance, interest rate, and standard repayment amount
- Apply for the Repayment Assistance Program if your income is low
- Set up automatic payments (some lenders offer interest rate reductions for auto-pay)
- Create a budget that includes your upcoming loan payments
- Start making voluntary payments if you have the financial capacity
The Repayment Assistance Program (RAP): Your Safety Net
The Repayment Assistance Program is one of the most important and underused tools available to Canadian graduates. RAP is a federal program that can reduce your monthly payments or even cover them entirely based on your income and family size.
How RAP Works
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Apply through the NSLSC: You can apply online through your NSLSC account. You will need to provide information about your income, family size, and expenses.
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Assessment: The NSLSC calculates an affordable payment amount based on your income and family size. If this amount is less than your regular payment, the government covers the difference.
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Stage 1 (months 1-60): During the first five years of RAP, the government pays the interest portion that exceeds your affordable payment amount. Your principal is not growing, but your payments may not be reducing it either.
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Stage 2 (months 61+): If you are still on RAP after five years, the government begins paying both the interest and principal portions that exceed your affordable payment. This means your loan balance starts decreasing even if your payments are very low.
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Reapply every six months: RAP approval is for six-month periods. You must reapply every six months, and your payment amount is recalculated based on your current situation.
RAP Eligibility and Payment Calculations
RAP eligibility is based primarily on your gross family income relative to a threshold amount that varies by family size:
| Family Size | Approximate Income Threshold for Reduced Payments | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 person | Under $40,000 | Single graduate with no dependents |
| 2 people | Under $55,000 | Graduate with spouse or one dependent |
| 3 people | Under $65,000 | Family of three |
| 4 people | Under $75,000 | Family of four |
| 5+ people | Higher thresholds apply | Increases with each additional family member |
These income thresholds are approximate and change periodically. Always check the current thresholds on the NSLSC website or by calling them directly. Even if you think you might not qualify, apply anyway — the application is free, and many graduates are surprised to find that they are eligible for at least partial assistance.
Provincial Student Loan Assistance Programs
In addition to the federal RAP, most provinces offer their own assistance programs for provincial student loan borrowers.
Ontario
Ontario offers the Ontario Student Loan Rehabilitation Program for borrowers who have defaulted on their provincial loans. The program allows you to bring your loans back into good standing by making consistent payments based on your ability to pay.
British Columbia
BC has made provincial student loans interest-free and offers the BC Loan Forgiveness Program for graduates working in underserved communities in certain professions (health care, teaching, and others).
Alberta
Alberta offers the Alberta Student Loan Relief Program, which provides interest rate reductions and extended repayment periods for borrowers experiencing financial hardship.
Quebec
Quebec’s student financial assistance program (AFE) has its own repayment assistance provisions, including the Deferred Payment Program and the Debt Remission Program, which can forgive a portion of provincial loans after 10 years of income-based payments.
Manitoba
Manitoba has eliminated interest on provincial student loans and offers the Manitoba Bursary, which converts a portion of student loans into non-repayable grants.
Nova Scotia
Nova Scotia has made provincial student loans interest-free and offers the Nova Scotia Student Loan Forgiveness Program, which provides loan forgiveness for graduates who live and work in Nova Scotia after graduation.
Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan offers the Graduate Retention Program, which provides tax credits to graduates who remain in Saskatchewan after graduation, effectively offsetting a significant portion of student loan costs.
Provincial programs change frequently and are often enhanced during provincial budget announcements. Check your province’s student financial assistance website annually to see if new programs have been introduced. Many loan forgiveness and grant programs are targeted at specific professions (healthcare, teaching, social work) or specific regions (rural and northern communities), so even if you did not qualify previously, a career change or relocation could make you eligible.
Aggressive Payoff Strategies: Going Beyond Minimum Payments
If you are in a financial position to pay more than the minimum on your student loans, several strategies can accelerate your path to debt freedom.
Strategy 1: The Avalanche Method
The avalanche method targets the highest-interest debt first. For student loans, this typically means:
- Make minimum payments on all loans
- Put every extra dollar toward the loan with the highest interest rate
- Once that loan is paid off, redirect all payments to the next highest-interest loan
- Repeat until all loans are paid
For most Canadian graduates, this means targeting private student loans and student lines of credit first (which carry higher interest rates), then moving to provincial loans (if they carry interest), and finally addressing the interest-free federal Canada Student Loans last.
Strategy 2: The Snowball Method
The snowball method targets the smallest balance first, regardless of interest rate. This provides psychological momentum through quick wins. While mathematically less optimal than the avalanche method, research consistently shows that the snowball method has higher completion rates because people stay motivated longer.
Strategy 3: The Hybrid Approach
Many financial advisors recommend a hybrid approach:
- Start with one or two small debts (snowball) to build momentum and confidence
- Then switch to highest-interest-first (avalanche) for the remaining, larger debts
- This combines the psychological benefits of the snowball with the mathematical efficiency of the avalanche
Strategy 4: Bi-Weekly Payments
Instead of making one monthly payment, make half-payments every two weeks. Because there are 26 bi-weekly periods in a year (versus 12 monthly periods), you end up making the equivalent of 13 monthly payments per year instead of 12.
On a $30,000 loan at 5% interest with a 10-year repayment term:
| Payment Method | Payment Amount | Total Payments Per Year | Annual Amount Paid | Time to Pay Off | Total Interest Saved |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly ($318/month) | $318 | 12 | $3,816 | 10 years | Baseline |
| Bi-weekly ($159/bi-weekly) | $159 | 26 | $4,134 | 8.8 years | $850+ |
| Accelerated bi-weekly ($170) | $170 | 26 | $4,420 | 8 years | $1,400+ |
“The difference between a 10-year repayment and an 8-year repayment does not sound dramatic on paper. But those two years represent 24 months of freedom — 24 months of income that goes to your future instead of your past. That is a vacation, a down payment contribution, or the start of an investment portfolio.” — Canadian financial planning wisdom
Strategy 5: Windfall Allocation
One of the most effective accelerated repayment strategies is committing to applying windfall income to your student loans. Windfalls include:
- Tax refunds: The average Canadian tax refund is approximately $2,000. Applying this annually to your student loans can shorten your repayment by years.
- Work bonuses: If your employer provides annual or performance bonuses, directing even half of the bonus to loan repayment makes a significant impact.
- Gifts: Cash gifts from family for birthdays, holidays, or graduations can be put to work against your loans.
- Side hustle income: The gig economy provides numerous opportunities for supplemental income. Dedicating this income to loan repayment accelerates your timeline.
- Raises and promotions: When your income increases, maintain your current lifestyle and direct the difference to your loans — this avoids lifestyle inflation while rapidly reducing debt.
Tax refunds deserve special attention for student loan borrowers. Interest paid on government student loans (Canada Student Loans and provincial student loans) qualifies for a 15% non-refundable federal tax credit. This means paying $1,000 in student loan interest reduces your federal tax by $150. While federal loans are now interest-free, this credit still applies to interest paid on qualifying provincial loans and to interest paid in previous years on federal loans. Check your tax situation and carry forward any unused interest amounts.
Refinancing Your Student Loans
Refinancing involves taking out a new loan at a lower interest rate to pay off your existing student loans. This strategy can save significant money on interest, but it comes with important trade-offs that every Canadian graduate should understand.
When Refinancing Makes Sense
- You have private student loans or student lines of credit at high interest rates
- Your credit score has improved significantly since you first borrowed
- You have stable income and can qualify for a competitive rate
- You do not need access to government repayment assistance programs
When Refinancing Is Risky
- You have government student loans with access to RAP and interest relief — refinancing with a private lender eliminates access to these programs
- Your income is unstable and you might need RAP in the future
- The refinanced rate is not significantly lower than your current rate
- You would be extending your repayment period, which could result in more total interest even at a lower rate
Refinancing Options in Canada
| Option | Typical Rate | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank personal loan | 6.99% – 12.99% | Fixed rate, fixed payments, structured repayment | Requires good credit (680+), lose government protections |
| Bank line of credit | Prime + 1% to Prime + 3% | Lower rate, flexible payments | Variable rate, temptation to draw more, requires good credit |
| Credit union personal loan | 5.99% – 11.99% | Often more flexible than banks, competitive rates | Membership required, lose government protections |
| HELOC (if homeowner) | Prime + 0.5% to Prime + 2% | Lowest rates available, flexible payments | Requires home equity, converts unsecured to secured debt |
| Alternative lenders | 9.99% – 29.99%+ | Available for lower credit scores | Higher rates, may not improve your situation |
Before refinancing government student loans with a private lender, carefully calculate the total cost difference over the full repayment period. Remember that Canada Student Loans are now interest-free at the federal level, so refinancing federal loans with any private lender that charges interest would actually increase your costs. Refinancing only makes financial sense for provincial loans that carry interest or for private student debts at high rates.
Employer Student Loan Repayment Programs
A growing number of Canadian employers are offering student loan repayment assistance as a benefit to attract and retain talent. While not yet as common as in the United States, this trend is gaining momentum in Canada, particularly in competitive fields like technology, healthcare, and professional services.
How Employer Programs Work
Employer student loan repayment programs typically work in one of several ways:
- Direct payments: The employer makes payments directly to your student loan servicer, typically $100 to $500 per month
- Matching contributions: The employer matches your student loan payments up to a certain amount (similar to RRSP matching)
- Lump sum payments: The employer provides an annual lump sum (for example, $2,000 to $5,000) specifically for student loan repayment
- Signing bonuses: Some employers offer signing bonuses specifically designated for student loan repayment
- Retention bonuses: Annual or milestone bonuses tied to continued employment, designated for loan repayment
Tax Implications of Employer Repayment Programs
In Canada, employer student loan repayment contributions are generally considered a taxable benefit. This means:
- The amount your employer pays toward your student loans is added to your taxable income
- You pay income tax on the benefit at your marginal tax rate
- Even after tax, the benefit is still valuable — receiving $5,000 toward your loans and paying $1,500 in tax on that benefit still nets you $3,500 in loan payments you would not have otherwise had
Finding Employers with Student Loan Benefits
When job searching, ask specifically about student loan repayment benefits during the interview process or benefits review. Industries most likely to offer these benefits include:
- Technology companies
- Financial services firms
- Healthcare organizations (particularly for nurses, physicians, and allied health professionals)
- Large professional services firms
- Government departments (through loan forgiveness rather than direct repayment)
Loan Forgiveness Programs in Canada
Several Canadian programs offer partial or full forgiveness of student loans for graduates working in specific fields or locations.
Federal Programs
Canada Student Loan Forgiveness for Family Doctors and Nurses: Provides up to $40,000 in federal student loan forgiveness for family physicians and up to $20,000 for nurses and nurse practitioners who work in rural or remote communities.
RAP Completion: Under the Repayment Assistance Program, if you remain on RAP for an extended period, your loan may eventually be forgiven. After 15 years of payments (or 10 years for borrowers with permanent disabilities), any remaining balance is forgiven.
Provincial Programs
- Ontario: Northern Ontario communities offer various incentive programs for professionals willing to work in underserved areas
- British Columbia: The BC Loan Forgiveness Program targets healthcare professionals, teachers, and social workers in underserved communities
- Saskatchewan: The Graduate Retention Program provides up to $20,000 in tax credits over seven years for graduates who stay in Saskatchewan
- Nova Scotia: Graduate loan forgiveness for students who live and work in Nova Scotia after graduation
- Newfoundland and Labrador: Various incentive programs for professionals in rural communities
Dealing with Student Loan Default
If you have missed payments on your student loans, or if your loans are already in default, you still have options. Understanding the consequences of default and the paths back to good standing is important.
What Happens When You Default
Student loan default occurs when you miss payments for a sustained period (typically nine months for federal loans). The consequences include:
- Your loan is sent to the Canada Revenue Agency for collection
- The CRA can withhold your tax refunds, GST/HST credits, and other government payments
- A negative notation appears on your credit report
- You lose eligibility for further student financial assistance
- You lose access to the Repayment Assistance Program
- Collection costs are added to your loan balance
Paths Out of Default
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Loan rehabilitation: Contact the NSLSC or your provincial loan administrator to discuss rehabilitation options. In many cases, you can bring your loan back into good standing by making a series of consistent payments.
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RAP application post-rehabilitation: Once your loan is rehabilitated, you can apply for RAP to reduce your payments to an affordable level based on your income.
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Lump sum payment: If you have access to funds, a lump sum payment to bring the loan current can accelerate the rehabilitation process.
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Consumer Proposal: If your student loans are combined with other significant debt, a Consumer Proposal through a Licensed Insolvency Trustee may be an option. However, government student loans can only be included if you have been out of school for at least seven years.
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Bankruptcy: As a last resort, bankruptcy can discharge student loans, but only if you have been out of school for at least seven years (or five years with a court application demonstrating hardship).
The seven-year rule for student loans in bankruptcy is one of the most important provisions for Canadian graduates to understand. If you are considering bankruptcy or a Consumer Proposal and you have been out of school for less than seven years, your government student loans will survive the process and you will still owe them. This is a critical factor in deciding whether insolvency is the right option for your situation.
Balancing Student Loan Repayment with Other Financial Goals
One of the biggest challenges for Canadian graduates is deciding how to balance student loan repayment with other financial priorities. Should you pay off your loans before saving for retirement? Should you prioritize an emergency fund? What about saving for a home?
The Priority Framework
Here is a recommended framework for balancing student loan repayment with other financial goals:
| Priority | Goal | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Emergency fund ($1,000 – $2,000 starter fund) | Prevents new debt when unexpected expenses arise |
| 2 | Employer RRSP match (contribute enough to get the full match) | Employer match is free money — guaranteed 50-100% return |
| 3 | Pay off high-interest debt (credit cards, private student loans above 8%) | Guaranteed return equal to the interest rate eliminated |
| 4 | Build full emergency fund (3-6 months of expenses) | Complete financial safety net before aggressive debt payoff or investing |
| 5 | Accelerate student loan repayment | Especially important for interest-bearing loans; less urgent for interest-free federal loans |
| 6 | Begin investing (TFSA, then RRSP) | Time in market is valuable; start even with small amounts |
| 7 | Save for major goals (home down payment, etc.) | Balance with continued debt repayment |
With federal Canada Student Loans now interest-free, the mathematical argument for aggressive repayment is weaker than it used to be. If your only student debt is interest-free federal loans, you may be better served by making regular payments and investing your extra cash in a TFSA where it can grow tax-free. A conservative investment returning 5% per year is 5% more than the 0% interest on your student loan. However, the psychological benefit of being debt-free has real value that cannot be quantified — only you can decide how to weigh that factor.
The TFSA vs Student Loan Repayment Decision
This is one of the most debated questions in Canadian personal finance. With federal student loans now interest-free, the math clearly favours investing in a TFSA (where returns compound tax-free) over accelerating repayment on a 0% loan.
However, there are scenarios where aggressive student loan repayment still makes sense:
- Your loans carry interest (provincial loans in some provinces, private loans)
- You find debt psychologically burdensome and it affects your quality of life
- You need to improve your debt-to-income ratio for a mortgage application
- You are risk-averse and prefer the guaranteed return of debt elimination
- You do not trust yourself to invest the money rather than spending it
The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) and Student Loans
The First Home Savings Account is relatively new in Canada and deserves mention for graduates balancing student loan repayment with home ownership goals. The FHSA allows you to contribute up to $8,000 per year (lifetime maximum of $40,000) and receive a tax deduction on contributions while earning tax-free growth — combining the best features of both the RRSP and TFSA.
For graduates with interest-free federal student loans who are also saving for a first home, the FHSA may be a more efficient use of extra funds than accelerated student loan repayment.
Lifestyle Strategies for Faster Repayment
Beyond the mechanical strategies of payment methods and program enrollment, your lifestyle choices during the repayment period have an enormous impact on how quickly you become debt-free.
The Extended Student Lifestyle
One of the most effective (if not the most glamorous) strategies is to continue living like a student for one to two years after graduation. This means:
- Keeping housing costs low (roommates, smaller apartments)
- Cooking at home rather than eating out
- Limiting discretionary spending on entertainment and shopping
- Using public transit instead of buying a car
- Avoiding the temptation to upgrade your lifestyle immediately upon landing your first real job
The math is compelling: a graduate earning $50,000 who lives on $30,000 (student-level spending) can put $20,000 toward student loans in the first year alone — potentially paying off the average student loan balance in less than two years.
The Side Hustle Strategy
The gig economy and remote work have created numerous opportunities for supplemental income that can be directed entirely to student loan repayment:
- Freelancing in your field of study (writing, design, programming, consulting)
- Tutoring current students in subjects you excelled at
- Part-time work in the evenings or weekends
- Selling unused belongings
- Participating in the sharing economy (renting a spare room, etc.)
“Every dollar you earn from a side hustle and put toward your student loans is a dollar that will never accrue interest, never cause stress, and never stand between you and your financial goals. The temporary discomfort of working extra hours is nothing compared to the permanent relief of becoming debt-free.” — Graduate financial planning perspective
Mental Health and Student Debt
It would be incomplete to discuss student debt repayment without acknowledging the significant mental health impact that student loans have on Canadian graduates. Research consistently shows that student debt is associated with:
- Higher levels of anxiety and depression
- Delayed life milestones (marriage, home purchase, starting a family)
- Career decisions driven by salary rather than passion or fit
- Reduced job satisfaction and increased burnout
- Relationship stress, particularly when partners have different debt levels
If your student debt is affecting your mental health, please know that you are not alone and that help is available. In addition to the financial strategies outlined in this guide, consider:
- Speaking with a counsellor or therapist about financial stress
- Joining online communities of Canadian graduates managing student debt
- Contacting a non-profit credit counsellor for a free financial assessment
- Calling 211 to connect with local community resources
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GET STARTED NOWFrequently Asked Questions
Are Canada Student Loans really interest-free?
Yes. As of April 1, 2023, the federal government permanently eliminated interest on Canada Student Loans. This applies to both the fixed and floating rate options. Provincial student loan interest varies by province — several provinces have also eliminated interest, while others still charge interest on their portions.
Can I deduct student loan interest on my taxes?
You can claim a 15% non-refundable tax credit on interest paid on qualifying government student loans (Canada Student Loans and provincial student loans). This credit is only available for government student loans — interest on private student loans, student lines of credit, and other private borrowing does not qualify. Unused interest amounts can be carried forward for five years.
What happens to my student loans if I leave Canada?
Your student loan obligations continue even if you leave Canada. You are still required to make payments, and the NSLSC will continue to expect regular payments. If you stop paying, your loans will eventually go into default, and the consequences (including CRA collections when you return) can be severe. If you are living abroad, contact the NSLSC to discuss your options.
Can I include student loans in a Consumer Proposal?
Government student loans can be included in a Consumer Proposal only if you have been out of school for at least seven years. If you have been out of school for less than seven years, the student loan portion of your debt will survive the Consumer Proposal and you will still owe it. Private student loans can be included regardless of when you graduated.
Should I pay off my student loans before buying a house?
Not necessarily. While reducing your student loan balance improves your debt-to-income ratio (which helps with mortgage qualification), paying off an interest-free loan before buying a home may not be optimal. Talk to a mortgage broker about how your student loan payments affect your borrowing capacity, and then make a decision based on your complete financial picture.
What is the Repayment Assistance Program and how do I apply?
The Repayment Assistance Program is a federal program that reduces your monthly Canada Student Loan payment to an affordable amount based on your income and family size. You apply through the NSLSC website or by phone. Approval is for six-month periods, after which you must reapply. There is no cost to apply, and the program can reduce your payments to as low as zero dollars per month.
My student loans are in default. What should I do?
Contact the NSLSC or the CRA (if your loans have been transferred to CRA for collection) immediately. Ask about loan rehabilitation options, which typically involve making a series of consistent payments to bring your loans back into good standing. Once rehabilitated, you can apply for RAP to ensure your payments are affordable. Ignoring defaulted student loans only makes the situation worse, as collection costs accumulate and CRA can intercept tax refunds and government benefits.
Do employer student loan repayment benefits exist in Canada?
Yes, though they are less common than in the United States. A growing number of Canadian employers, particularly in technology, healthcare, and financial services, offer student loan repayment benefits. These benefits are typically taxable, meaning you will pay income tax on the amount your employer contributes. When evaluating job offers, ask specifically about student loan repayment benefits as part of the total compensation package.
Your Repayment Action Plan
Let us bring everything together into a concrete action plan you can start today:
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Today: Log into the NSLSC and review your complete loan details. Download your most recent credit report to identify all student-related debts.
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This week: Apply for the Repayment Assistance Program if your income qualifies. Research your province’s specific assistance programs.
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This month: Create a detailed budget that prioritizes loan repayment. Set up automatic payments to ensure you never miss a due date.
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This quarter: Implement one aggressive payoff strategy (bi-weekly payments, windfall allocation, or side hustle income).
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This year: Review your progress, reapply for RAP if applicable, and adjust your strategy based on any changes in income or financial situation. Research employer repayment programs and loan forgiveness opportunities.
Final Thoughts
Student debt is a reality for millions of Canadian graduates, but it does not have to be a life sentence. The Canadian government has made significant improvements to the student loan system — most notably by eliminating interest on federal student loans — and multiple assistance programs exist for graduates who are struggling.
The key is to be proactive. Do not let your loans sit in the background while interest accrues on provincial or private portions. Do not assume you do not qualify for assistance — apply and find out. Do not ignore your loans if you are struggling — contact the NSLSC and explore your options.
Every payment you make, every windfall you apply, and every strategic decision you make brings you closer to the day when your student loans are behind you and your income is fully yours. That day is coming. Your job is to make it come as quickly as possible while still living a life worth living along the way.
You invested in your education. Now invest the time and effort to manage the debt wisely. Your future self — the one who is debt-free, building wealth, and enjoying the career your education made possible — will be glad you did.
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