Once a dream study destination for lakhs of Indian students, Canada’s immigration tightening has fundamentally reshaped global student mobility trends. New data shows a steep decline in approval rates for Indian study permit applicants — signaling a major shift in Canada’s international education policy and its impact on aspiring Indian students.

📉 Sharp Spike in Rejections
Government data reveals that 74% of Indian study permit applications in August 2025 were denied, compared to 32% in August 2023. This is strikingly higher than:
- 40% overall global rejection rate
- 24% rejection for Chinese applicants
Even more concerning — applications from India dropped from 20,900 in Aug 2023 to just 4,515 in Aug 2025, a nearly 80% fall.
India has been Canada’s top source of foreign students for the past decade. The shift is both abrupt and unprecedented.
🕵️ Anti-Fraud Drive & Tighter Rules
Canada’s clampdown follows over 1,550 fraudulent applications linked to fake admission letters — largely from India — uncovered in 2023. By 2024-25, enhanced verification flagged 14,000+ questionable admission documents.
New measures include:
- Enhanced document verification
- Higher financial proof requirements
- Cap on student permits
- Stricter eligibility checks & interviews
Authorities say these measures are aimed at protecting the immigration system — not shutting doors on Indian talent.
🌏 Diplomatic Backdrop & Changing Sentiment
This shift comes amid strained Canada–India relations following allegations made by ex-PM Justin Trudeau in 2023. While officials state the clampdown is policy-driven, the timing has raised eyebrows.
Indian officials highlight that India produces top global talent, urging Canada to maintain academic ties. Universities, too, are concerned — Waterloo reported a two-thirds drop in Indian enrollments; similar declines are seen at Regina and Saskatchewan.
🎓 The New Reality for Students
Today’s applicants face:
- Intense scrutiny of financials
- Proof-of-funds audits
- Reduced PR pathways post-study
- Tougher job market outlook
Some rejected students even feel relieved — citing uncertain work and PR prospects in Canada.
