My niece lives in Brussels now, but she’s studied at several respected universities around the world. Before she applies anywhere, she always checks two things:
- What kind of housing is available, and at what cost?
- Can she legally work while studying?
It’s a simple, logical process. Yet, in Canada, this same logic seems to have vanished.
If you have been following local news, you have likely seen the headlines: international students paying enormous tuition fees, only to discover there’s nowhere to live. Dorms are full. Rental prices are skyrocketing. Students end up sharing unsafe apartments or sleeping in parks because accommodation is nearly impossible to find.
So, why do our governments (both provincial and federal) allow this?
The answer lies somewhere between greed and neglect. Either Canada’s colleges and universities are misleading these students, or the international recruitment agencies working with them are. In both cases, the result is the same: bright, hardworking young people are arriving here under false pretenses, spending everything they have, and finding themselves stranded.
Our immigration and education systems share the same flaw: both invite people in with no guarantee of livable housing or employment. We are setting newcomers up for failure. In cities across the country, students are joining the homeless in parks and shelters, living in conditions unfit for anyone, let alone guests we have invited to study here.
Take a walk through a downtown park and you might already see what this looks like: tents, sleeping bags, and despair.
It raises a painful question: are Canada’s institutions of higher learning defrauding these students, and their families?
Parents overseas often work overtime, remortgage homes, or empty savings accounts to send their children here. They trust our schools’ glossy brochures and welcoming promises. Yet, too often, those same schools, and the agencies they partner with, treat students as nothing more than walking tuition cheques.
Colleges and universities have turned international recruitment into a billion-dollar business. These students pay more than double what domestic students pay, but receive less support, fewer services, and little empathy. They are cash cows funding campus renovations, staff bonuses, and “international engagement” offices that rarely engage when help is needed most.
It’s a protection racket in academic disguise: schools promise a safe, life-changing education, take the money, and vanish when things go wrong.
Canada’s post-secondary institutions love to brand themselves as global leaders in education and diversity. Yet, behind the marketing, they operate like profit-driven corporations. Their mission is revenue.
The fallout is enormous. Not only do these students suffer emotionally and financially, but Canada’s reputation also takes a hit. Word spreads quickly online. Families abroad are learning that Canada’s “welcoming” education system can turn into a nightmare once tuition is paid.
We need change. Fast.
Our governments must hold schools accountable for how they recruit and house foreign students. Any college that accepts international applicants should prove it can offer adequate, affordable accommodation, or have verified partnerships that do. Schools should also provide realistic employment guidance instead of empty assurances.
Foreign students are potential citizens, innovators, and community builders. When we exploit them, we lose their trust, their talent, and our credibility as a nation that prides itself on fairness and compassion.
Until our institutions stop seeing these young people as profit margins, Canada will continue to fail the very guests we claim to welcome.