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TUE · 2026-04-14 · 21:22 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0414-68362
News/Canada was once a dream destination for Indian students. Is …
NSR-2026-0414-68362News Report·EN·Economic Impact

Canada was once a dream destination for Indian students. Is that changing?

Canada's appeal as a prime destination for Indian students seeking permanent residency is declining due to policy changes and economic pressures. In early 2024, Canada imposed a two-year cap on international undergraduate and diploma student admissions, significantly impacting Indian applicants.

BBC News - WorldFiled 2026-04-14 · 21:22 GMTLean · CenterRead · 3 min
Canada was once a dream destination for Indian students. Is that changing?
BBC News - WorldFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
750words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
6entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Canada's appeal as a prime destination for Indian students seeking permanent residency is declining due to policy changes and economic pressures. In early 2024, Canada imposed a two-year cap on international undergraduate and diploma student admissions, significantly impacting Indian applicants. Simultaneously, rising living costs, a doubling of the required Guaranteed Investment Certificate, and increasing study permit rejection rates (from 38% to 52%) have created financial barriers and uncertainty. Concerns about fraudulent applications and rising asylum claims also led to the scrapping of the fast-track Student Direct Stream visa system. These factors have shifted the focus for many Indian families from how to immigrate to Canada to whether it is a viable option at all.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 6
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Economic Impact
Human Interest
Tone
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AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
4
Well sourced
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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For many families, securing that amount is difficult - and with the risk of visa rejection, they hesitate.

quoteSushil Sukhwani of consultancy Edwise Overseas Education
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Approval rates under SDS for Indian applicants rose from 61% in 2022 to 98% in 2024.

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The Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) was doubled from C$10,000 to more than C$20,000 in 2024.

factualnull
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Study permit rejections rose from 38% in 2023 to 52% in 2024 in Canada.

statisticICEF Monitor
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Canada announced a two-year restriction on international student admissions to undergraduate and diploma programs, capping it at around 350,000 study permits per year in early 2024.

factualnull
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1.00
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Full report

3 min read · 750 words
For years, Canada held a strong appeal for middle-class Indian families. Its private colleges offered a seemingly reliable pathway - even for average students - to study abroad and eventually settle there.The route was mostly straightforward: enrol in a two-or three-year vocational course, find a job after graduation and, within a few years, apply for permanent residency. The process typically took around five years, experts say.It worked - until it didn't.The shift has been driven by a mix of policy changes and economic pressures.In early 2024, Canada announced a two-year restriction on how many international students could be admitted to its undergraduate and diploma programmes - capping it at around 350,000 study permits per year (postgraduate courses were unaffected). This was a big blow for many Indian students.At the same time, living costs surged and jobs became harder to find. Rents climbed sharply across major cities, while financial requirements tightened.The Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) - proof of funds required to study and live in Canada - was doubled from C$10,000 ($7,227; £5,378) to more than C$20,000 in 2024."For many families, securing that amount is difficult - and with the risk of visa rejection, they hesitate," says Sushil Sukhwani of consultancy Edwise Overseas Education. "That became a major barrier." As consultants note, getting a study visa has also become harder.Study permit rejections rose from 38% in 2023 to 52% in 2024 in Canada, according to ICEF Monitor, which focuses on international student mobility. In price-sensitive countries like India, where studying abroad depends on careful financial planning, families are now far less willing to take that kind of risk.So the question has shifted from how to go to Canada to whether to go at all."There's real fear. Even if you get there, can you make it work?" Anand says.AFP via Getty ImagesUntil 2023, Canada was a favoured destination among Indians aspiring to move abroadThe Canadian auditor general's report also mentions concerns around a now-scrapped fast-track visa system known as the Student Direct Stream (SDS). Popular among Indian applicants, it allowed quicker processing for those who met certain financial and language requirements. Approval rates under SDS for Indians rose from 61% in 2022 to 98% in 2024, even as officials flagged risks such as fraudulent applications, students not attending classes and rising asylum claims. By the end of 2024, the scheme was scrapped and scrutiny has since tightened.His story reflects a broader pattern. The visa cap hit undergraduate colleges the hardest, while elite institutions and universities were largely insulated.McGill University president Deep Saini told the BBC that Indian students broadly fall into two camps. "One group is academically driven - they apply to top universities in Canada, the US or Europe for quality education. The other sees education primarily as a pathway to migration and tends to enrol in smaller colleges," he adds. That distinction helps explain who was hit hardest by the crackdown. Canada's visa restrictions were largely aimed at students enrolling in smaller, lesser-known colleges as a cheaper and easier route to gaining permanent residency - not those coming purely to study.Top universities like McGill, which draw more academically motivated students, were mostly shielded from the impact. Saini says his university did see a slight dip in international admissions after 2023, driven both by tighter visa rules and diplomatic tensions - but calls it "collateral damage" rather than a direct hit.International student numbers - particularly Indians - at McGill are now returning to normal, he adds. EPATies between India and Canada have improved after Mark Carney (L) took office as Canada's PMAs diplomatic relations improve, there are signs of hope.Prime Minister Mark Carney visited India earlier this year, accompanied by officials from several top Canadian universities.There are efforts to rebuild relations, including new education partnerships and scholarship initiatives.But for students like Tanishq Khurana, the decision is no longer as straightforward. The 17-year-old had planned to apply last summer, but a conversation with a consultant made him pause."I was told about rising visa rejections and colleges limiting undergraduate admissions. That made me rethink everything," he says.At one point, Khurana considered staying in India for his undergraduate studies and going abroad later. But the pull of Canada remained and he has now decided to apply again to pursue a bachelor's degree in clinical psychology."The reason for my choice of Canada is fairly simple. My sister is settled there and so are many of my cousins. So the country is familiar and the education and job opportunities are better than in India," he says.
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Entities

6 identified
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
canada
0.90
indian students
0.90
study abroad
0.80
study permits
0.70
international students
0.70
permanent residency
0.60
visa rejections
0.60
policy changes
0.50
economic pressures
0.50
student direct stream
0.40
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