Every year, billions of dollars in scholarships and bursaries go unclaimed across Canada — not because students don't need the money, but because they don't know the funding exists or don't apply. This guide covers how to find, apply for, and win free money for your education in 2025.
Entrance scholarships are awarded when you first enroll at a university or college, typically based on your high school grades. Most Canadian universities automatically consider students with high averages for entrance awards. These can range from $500 to full-tuition scholarships at highly competitive institutions.
Key entrance scholarships include:
Awarded based on academic performance during your studies — typically your GPA in the previous year. Many departments and faculties have dedicated scholarships for upper-year students that go undersubscribed because students don't apply.
Available from your institution's financial aid office. These are specifically for students demonstrating financial need, often with no application beyond your student aid assessment. Apply through your school's student awards or financial aid office every year.
Thousands of organizations — unions, employers, foundations, community groups — offer scholarships to students meeting specific criteria. These often go undersubscribed because few students know about them:
Generic applications lose. Read each scholarship's criteria carefully and tailor your application to show you are exactly the type of student they want to fund. Reference the organization's mission in your application.
Essays should show who you are, why you need the funding, and what you'll do with your education — not just list achievements. Admissions and scholarship committees read hundreds of applications; a story sticks.
Ask teachers, coaches, or employers who know you well and will write enthusiastically. Give them plenty of lead time (4+ weeks) and provide them with your application materials so they can align their letter with your themes.
The time cost of applying for a $500 scholarship is low. Apply broadly — even small awards add up. Students who apply for 20 small scholarships often win 3–5, totalling $2,000–$5,000 or more.
In Canada, most scholarships received by full-time students are tax-free. You do not include scholarship amounts in your income if you are a full-time student enrolled in a qualifying educational program. Part-time students can exclude up to $500 per course from income. Bursaries are treated the same way as scholarships for tax purposes.
Every Canadian university and college has emergency bursary funds for students who encounter unexpected financial hardship mid-semester. These are not widely advertised but can provide $500–$2,000 quickly for students facing sudden crises (illness, family emergency, job loss). Contact your financial aid office directly if you face a financial emergency during your studies.
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