OSAP 2025: Complete Guide to Ontario Student Loans
Grants, loans, repayment, and everything in between — explained clearly.
OSAP (Ontario Student Assistance Program) is the primary source of financial aid for Ontario post-secondary students. It combines federal Canada Student Grants/Loans with provincial Ontario grants and loans into a single application. Understanding how OSAP works — especially the grant vs. loan split — is essential to managing your finances as a student.
OSAP Basics: What Is It?
OSAP is a need-based financial aid program administered by the Government of Ontario. When you apply, your financial need is assessed based on your family income, tuition costs, living expenses, and other factors. The result is an award package that typically includes:
Ontario Student Grant — Free money. Does not need to be repaid.
Canada Student Grant — Federal free money. Also does not need to be repaid.
Ontario Student Loan — Provincial loan. Must be repaid after school.
Canada Student Loan — Federal loan. Must be repaid. 0% interest since April 2023.
Key Fact: Many students from families with income under $175,000 receive enough grant funding to cover a significant portion of tuition. Always apply — even if you think you won't qualify.
OSAP Grant vs. Loan: How It Works
Your OSAP package breaks down into a grant portion (free money) and a loan portion (repayable). The grant portion is determined primarily by your family income:
Family Income (2 parents)
Expected Grant Support
Under $50,000
High grant support — may cover full tuition
$50,000 – $100,000
Moderate grant + partial loan
$100,000 – $175,000
Smaller grant + larger loan portion
Over $175,000
Primarily loan-based or no OSAP
The Ontario Student Opportunity Grant (OSOG) also ensures that your loan portion after grants does not exceed your assessed need — a cap designed to protect lower-income students from excessive debt.
Who Is Eligible for OSAP?
Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or protected person
Ontario resident (typically living in Ontario for 12 months before starting school)
Enrolled at a designated post-secondary institution
Enrolled in at least 20% of a full course load (for part-time OSAP)
Demonstrating financial need based on the OSAP assessment
How to Apply for OSAP 2025
Create an account at ontario.ca/osap using your Ontario Education Number (OEN) or Social Insurance Number.
Complete your application — takes about 30–60 minutes. You'll need your previous year's tax return (or your parents') and your SIN.
Submit required documents — consent forms, income verification, and enrollment confirmation from your school.
Receive your OSAP assessment — usually within 1–2 weeks after all documents are submitted.
Accept your funding and confirm your enrollment at your school's financial aid office.
Funding is deposited directly to your bank account at the start of each semester.
Application Deadline: Apply as early as possible — ideally 1–2 months before your program starts. OSAP applications open in April/May for fall enrollment. There is no hard deadline, but late applications may delay your funding.
OSAP and Federal Canada Student Grants
When you apply for OSAP, you're automatically assessed for federal Canada Student Grants and Loans as well. Federal grants available include:
Canada Student Grant for Full-Time Students — Up to $4,200/year for students from low-income families
Canada Student Grant for Students with Disabilities — Up to $4,000/year for students with a documented disability
Canada Student Grant for Students with Dependants — Additional support for students with children
These federal grants are administered through OSAP — you don't need a separate federal application.
The 6-Month Grace Period After Graduation
Once you graduate, leave school, or reduce your course load below part-time, your OSAP loans enter a 6-month non-repayment period (grace period). During this period:
You are not required to make any loan payments
Federal Canada Student Loans: no interest accumulates (interest-free since April 2023)
Ontario Student Loans: interest begins to accumulate immediately after you leave school (the grace period is payment-free, not interest-free for provincial loans)
Use this 6 months to find employment, set up your budget, and register for repayment
After the grace period, you must begin making monthly payments. Your repayment schedule is typically set at 9.5 years (114 months), but you can choose a shorter or longer repayment window.
What If You Can't Afford Repayment?
If your post-graduation income is low, the Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) caps your monthly payment at an affordable percentage of income. See our full guide on Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP).
OSAP for Part-Time Students
Part-time students can receive part-time OSAP if enrolled in at least 20% but less than 60% of a full course load. Part-time OSAP is loan-only (no grants) and has lower maximum amounts. Applications are assessed the same way as full-time OSAP.
Continuing Eligibility: What Can Disqualify You?
Dropping below the required course load without notifying OSAP
Withdrawing from your program without repaying the current term's funding
Providing false information on your application
Exceeding the maximum weeks of student aid (OSAP has a lifetime limit based on your program length)
OSAP Tips to Maximize Your Funding
Apply early — April/May for fall enrollment
File your taxes on time each year — OSAP uses your prior year's income
If your family income dropped significantly, contact NSLSC about reassessment
Use the grant portion first and minimize the loan portion where possible
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OSAP is a powerful tool for Ontario students — especially because a large portion is often grant money you never have to repay. Apply early, understand your grant vs. loan split, and use the 6-month grace period after graduation to set up your repayment plan. If you're struggling to repay, RAP is available to reduce your payments to what you can actually afford.