Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Ontario Student Loans Guide 2025 — OSAP Explained

OSAP — the Ontario Student Assistance Program — is the primary source of government financial aid for students in Ontario. It combines both provincial and federal funding into a single application and delivers loans, grants, and bursaries to eligible students studying at colleges and universities in Ontario and beyond.

If you're an Ontario student wondering how OSAP works, how to apply, and what you'll owe after graduation, this guide breaks it all down clearly.

Important: Since April 2023, the federal portion of your OSAP loan charges zero interest. The Ontario portion still charges interest during repayment at prime + 1% (floating) or prime + 2% (fixed).

What Does OSAP Cover?

OSAP provides funding to help cover:

Your OSAP funding package typically includes a combination of loans (which you repay) and grants (which you don't). Students from lower-income families often receive a larger portion as grants.

Who Can Apply for OSAP?

To be eligible for OSAP, you must:

How to Apply

OSAP applications open in the spring for the upcoming academic year. Apply at osap.gov.on.ca. The process involves:

  1. Creating an account or logging into your existing OSAP profile
  2. Entering your personal and financial information
  3. Providing your parents' financial information if you're a dependent student
  4. Submitting your application and waiting for an assessment
  5. Confirming enrollment with your school once accepted
  6. Signing your loan agreement (Master Student Financial Assistance Agreement)

Apply as early as possible — ideally 4 to 6 weeks before your program starts.

OSAP Grants: Free Money First

Ontario has invested heavily in grants for students from middle- and lower-income families. The key grants include:

Grants are automatically assessed when you apply for OSAP — no separate application needed.

OSAP Loans

If grants don't fully cover your assessed need, OSAP will offer you a loan. Your OSAP loan is split into:

Both portions are managed through the NSLSC after graduation.

How Much Can You Get?

OSAP uses a needs assessment formula. For a single independent student, OSAP might fund up to $14,000–$18,000 per year in combined grants and loans, depending on your situation. Dependent students living at home receive less since parents are expected to contribute.

Your actual amount depends on your family income, the number of children in your family, your school costs, and other factors.

6-Month Grace Period After Graduation

After you leave school, you have a 6-month non-repayment period. No payments are required. During this time, the federal portion of your loan doesn't accrue interest. The Ontario portion does not charge interest during the grace period either — interest begins once repayment starts.

Repaying Your OSAP Loan

Repayment is managed through the NSLSC. Payments begin 7 months after your last study period. Standard repayment runs up to 10 years. Your monthly payment is calculated based on your total balance.

If you're struggling after graduation, apply for the Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP). It caps payments at 20% of your gross income and can eliminate remaining balances after years on the plan.

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