Ontario's Bold Move: Lifting the Tuition Freeze After Seven Years
The Ontario government, under Minister of Colleges, Universities, Research Excellence and Security Nolan Quinn, unveiled a comprehensive postsecondary education strategy on February 12, 2026. This landmark announcement addresses long-standing financial pressures on the province's universities and colleges, including a dramatic drop in international student revenues due to federal visa caps. At its core, the plan lifts a seven-year freeze on domestic tuition fees—imposed in 2019 following a 10% cut—and introduces measured increases alongside a massive funding infusion. While institutions hail it as a step toward sustainability, students are raising alarms over added costs amid soaring living expenses.
This shift comes at a pivotal moment. Ontario's postsecondary sector has grappled with the lowest per-domestic-student funding in Canada, exacerbated by over $1 billion in lost international tuition revenue and nearly 10,000 job losses across campuses. The new framework aims to align education with labour market demands, create 70,000 new seats in high-demand programs, and ensure long-term viability.
Breaking Down the Tuition Changes: What Students Can Expect
Starting in fall 2026, publicly assisted colleges and universities in Ontario can raise domestic tuition by up to 2% per year for the first three years. Thereafter, increases are capped at the lower of 2% or the three-year average inflation rate. This positions Ontario among provinces with the most modest hikes, comparable to British Columbia and Manitoba.
Average university tuition currently hovers around $8,958 annually, meaning a first-year bump of about $179—or roughly $0.47 per day. For colleges, with lower base fees, the impact is smaller at approximately $0.18 daily. These figures account for full-time undergraduate programs and exclude ancillary fees.
- Year 1-3 (2026-2029): Up to 2% annual increase
- Post-2029: Lesser of 2% or average CPI
- Low-income protection: Enhanced Student Access Guarantee (SAG) absorbs costs for eligible students
Institutions like the University of Toronto have pledged additional bursaries to offset pressures, signaling a collaborative approach to affordability.
OSAP Reforms: From Grants to Loans – A Major Shift
The Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP), the province's primary need-based aid mechanism, faces its most significant overhaul since inception. Effective fall 2026, students can receive no more than 25% of OSAP funding as non-repayable grants, with at least 75% structured as low-interest loans. Previously, grants could comprise up to 85% of awards.
Private career college students lose grant eligibility entirely, aligning with federal policy changes, though loans remain available. OSAP loans carry no interest while in study and prime-minus rates post-graduation, far below commercial options. The redesign includes bolstering SAG to cover tuition, books, and fees not met by OSAP for low-income recipients.
This pivot mirrors other provinces, where loans dominate aid packages, but critics argue it ignores Ontario's acute housing and food insecurity crisis. Average graduate debt already stands at about $28,000, with half of postsecondary completers carrying $27,000-$30,000 in loans.
The $6.4 Billion Funding Lifeline for Universities and Colleges
Central to the strategy is a $6.4 billion investment over four years, elevating annual operating grants to $7 billion—a 30% jump and historic high. Per-student base funding rises 6% for full-time university students and 30% for part-time college learners. This targets sustainability amid federal international student curbs that slashed revenues and prompted 600+ program suspensions.
Council of Ontario Universities President Steve Orsini dubbed it a "bold, substantial investment," while Colleges Ontario's Maureen Adamson called it a "game changer." The model streamlines 400+ agreements into 45 five-year mandates, prioritizing in-demand fields like healthcare and trades, with extra for rural, northern, French-language, and Indigenous institutes.Full government details here.

Student Backlash: Voices from Campuses Across Ontario
Student organizations have mobilized swiftly. Canadian Federation of Students-Ontario's Kayla Weiler warned, "The major changes to OSAP are going to just burden more students with student debt. Students are already paying their fair share." Ontario Undergraduate Student Alliance's Omar Sayyed and Sayak Sneddon-Ghosal expressed disappointment over the loan-heavy OSAP, noting part-time work struggles amid 20%+ food inflation.
College Student Alliance's Bella Fischer highlighted long-term debt risks for middle- and low-income families. Social media buzzes with #StopTheHike and Reddit threads decrying the timing during youth unemployment peaks. While no large-scale protests have erupted yet—unlike 2019 OSAP walkouts—Sudbury students plan Friday demonstrations, echoing historical discontent.
NDP critics like Peggy Sattler decry it as exacerbating inequality, with interim Liberal John Fraser labeling it insufficient after years of austerity.
Photo by REVTLProjects on Unsplash
University and College Leaders Weigh In
Unlike students, institutional heads largely endorse the package. University of Toronto's Vice-Provost Melanie Woodin affirmed commitments to expanded aid. Durham College and others anticipate relief from chronic deficits projected at $265 million for 2025-26. The funding addresses a "perfect storm" of stagnant tuition (post-2019 cut/freeze), federal policies, and rising program costs.
- Revenue hit: $1B+ from intl students
- Job losses: 8,000-10,000
- Program cuts: 600+ suspensions
This infusion, proponents argue, prevents deeper cuts and preserves quality at Ontario's 24 universities and 26 colleges serving 800,000+ students.
Faculty Perspectives: Progress, But Not Enough
Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations (OCUFA) welcomes the 6% per-student boost but stresses Ontario trails national averages by needing 13.5% compounded annual increases over five years. "Even with this, funding remains lowest in Canada," said OCUFA's Rob Kristofferson. OPSEU's JP Hornick calls it "too little, too late" after two decades of underfunding brinkmanship.
Professors advocate sustained investment to match peers, warning tuition hikes alone can't bridge gaps without equitable provincial support.
University Affairs analysisAffordability Crunch: Debt, Living Costs, and Equity Concerns
Ontario students already shoulder heavy loads: average debt $28,500, with university grads at $31,800 versus college $25,900. RAP usage hovers at 23-27%, signaling repayment strains. New policies risk amplifying this amid rents up 10% yearly and food banks serving 1-in-5 students.
Enhanced SAG offers a buffer—automatically topping up aid for families below thresholds—but excludes middle-income earners. Equity for Indigenous, Black, and first-gen students remains focal, with targeted seats.

Historical Context: From 2019 Cuts to 2026 Reforms
The saga traces to Doug Ford's 2019 election: 10% tuition reduction, freeze, and OSAP grant expansions that ballooned costs unsustainably. Subsequent intl booms masked deficits until 2024 caps hit. Protests then—walkouts, Queen's Park marches—foreshadow today's tensions.
Today's plan reverses course, prioritizing stability over expansion.
Navigating the Changes: Actionable Advice for Students
Prospective and current students should:
- Apply early for OSAP to maximize SAG eligibility
- Explore scholarships via AcademicJobs.com scholarships
- Budget with tools; consider part-time higher ed jobs
- Rate courses/professors on Rate My Professor for informed choices
Institutions expand work-study; federal aid complements OSAP.
Photo by Roman Kraft on Unsplash
Looking Ahead: Protests, Policy Tweaks, and Workforce Impacts
With fall 2026 looming, expect rallies if debt fears mount. Success hinges on implementation: will funding flow swiftly? Can sector match labour needs in AI, green tech? Ontario's reforms could model national resilience—or ignite backlash if affordability falters.
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