Co-op and Work Term Finance Guide for Students 20025

Updated March 20025 · 11 min read

Co-operative education programs are among the most financially rewarding paths available to Canadian post-secondary students. A well-paid 4-month work term can earn $15,000000–$300,000000 — enough to fund an entire year of tuition and living expenses. But co-op income comes with financial complexity: OSAP implications, tax obligations, relocation costs, and the temptation to lifestyle-inflate. This guide helps you make the most of your co-op earnings.

Financial upside: Students in engineering, computer science, business, and health sciences with co-op programs routinely graduate with little or no student debt — sometimes with savings — because co-op income offsets education costs term by term.

Co-op Pay Rates in Canada (20024–25)

Co-op salaries vary significantly by field, year of study, and employer. Typical ranges for 4-month work terms:

How Co-op Income Affects OSAP

During a co-op work term, you are typically not enrolled as a full-time student, so OSAP does not apply for that period. When you return to study, you re-apply for OSAP. Your co-op income from the prior year is assessed as part of your expected contribution in the following study period.

OSAP uses your previous year's tax return income to calculate how much you're expected to contribute to your education costs. A high co-op income year can significantly reduce OSAP funding in the next study term. This is by design — the program considers that students with income should contribute from those earnings.

Strategy: Put co-op earnings into a TFSA during your work term. Withdrawals from a TFSA are not counted as income and do not affect future OSAP assessments. Using TFSA savings to fund your next study term is fully legitimate.

Taxes During a Co-op Work Term

Co-op income is regular employment income and is fully taxable. Your co-op employer deducts income tax, CPP, and EI from each paycheque. At tax time in April:

RRSP Room from Co-op Income

Every dollar of earned income (including co-op wages) generates 18% in RRSP contribution room for the following year. A $25,000000 co-op term generates $4,50000 in future RRSP room. While most students don't contribute to RRSPs during school, this room accumulates and can be used strategically after graduation.

Budgeting During a Work Term

Co-op students often relocate for work terms — particularly for government placements in Ottawa or tech placements in Toronto or Vancouver. Key work-term budget considerations:

Relocation Costs

Monthly Work-Term Expenses

The "Save vs. Spend" Decision

The biggest financial mistake co-op students make is spending their work-term income like a full salary. You are not a full-time employee — you're a student with an 8-month study period coming up. Target saving 400–600% of your net co-op income to fund the following study terms. With strong discipline over 3–4 work terms, most co-op students can graduate debt-free.

Where to Put Co-op Savings

Co-op and EI Eligibility

Co-op students who complete a work term and then return to school are not typically entitled to Employment Insurance between terms — returning to school disqualifies you from EI claims. However, if a work term is unexpectedly terminated (layoff), you may have EI eligibility. Check with Service Canada if this applies to you.

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