The rules on when scholarship and bursary income is tax-free for Canadian students.
The short answer: most scholarships and bursaries received by full-time Canadian students are completely tax-free. But the details matter — graduate fellowships, prize money, and certain research stipends are treated differently. This guide explains the rules clearly so you know exactly what to report (and what you don't need to).
Full-time students: Scholarship income received in connection with full-time enrollment at a designated educational institution is generally exempt from tax. This includes scholarships, bursaries, fellowships, and most academic prizes.
Part-time students: Exempt up to the amount of eligible tuition and fees paid for the year.
| Award Type | Taxable? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Scholarship (undergraduate) | No (full-time) | Fully exempt for full-time students |
| Bursary (need-based) | No (full-time) | Fully exempt for full-time students |
| Academic prize / award | No (full-time) | Exempt if received for academic achievement |
| Graduate fellowship | Partially | See graduate section below |
| Research grant (working) | Yes | Treated as employment or research income |
| Athletic award | Conditional | Generally exempt if through designated institution |
| Prize money (competition) | Often yes | Not connected to enrollment — may be taxable |
Your school or award provider issues a T4A (Statement of Pension, Retirement, Annuity, and Other Income) for scholarships and awards. Box 105 on the T4A shows scholarship, bursary, and fellowship income. Even if the amount is tax-exempt, it still appears on your T4A and must be entered on your tax return — you then apply the exemption.
In Wealthsimple Tax or TurboTax, when you enter T4A Box 105, the software asks whether you were a full-time or part-time student to determine how much is exempt.
Graduate students often receive funding from multiple sources, and the tax treatment differs:
Federal graduate scholarships from the three major Canadian research councils are generally not taxable for students enrolled full-time in a graduate program:
However, if the award comes with specific service requirements that go beyond normal graduate study, consult CRA or a tax professional.
For part-time students, the scholarship exemption is limited to the total amount of eligible tuition and fees paid for the year. For example:
Athletes who receive payments from the Canadian Olympic Committee, national sport organizations, or similar bodies may have tax-free awards if the payment qualifies under the athletic exemption. Payments for being "on the team" or competing are generally exempt, while employment-type arrangements may not be.
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Open KOHO Free — No Fees — Code 45ET55JSYAFor most undergraduate Canadian students enrolled full-time, scholarships, bursaries, and academic awards are completely tax-free. You must still report them on your T4A, but you apply the exemption on your return. Graduate students need to be more careful — distinguish between fellowship income (usually exempt) and employment-type RA/TA income (always taxable). When in doubt, enter the T4A and let your tax software guide you through the exemption.