Picking the right loan mix saves real money. In 2025, OSAP combines a 0% interest federal portion with an Ontario portion that floats at prime + 1%. Private student lines of credit (SLOCs) ride prime too, often prime to prime + 1.5%, and usually start with interest-only payments. This guide shows exactly how those differences affect your monthly costs—with a clear table and a worked example using today’s prime rate.
What’s new in 2025 (quick facts)
- Federal (Canada Student Loan) interest: permanently 0% (since Apr 1, 2023).
- Ontario (provincial) OSAP interest: variable at prime + 1.0%; applies once you enter repayment.
- Prime rate today (Oct 30, 2025): 4.45% at major banks.
- Prime rate moves. On Oct 29, 2025 the Bank of Canada cut its policy rate to 2.25%; Big Six banks subsequently lowered prime to ~4.45%. Use today’s posted prime from your lender when modelling costs.
- Grace / non-repayment (leaving full-time): 6 months; Ontario portion accrues interest, federal stays at 0%.
OSAP vs private loans: side-by-side (2025)
| Feature | OSAP (Canada + Ontario) | Private student line of credit (SLOC) |
|---|---|---|
| Interest rate | Federal: 0% (permanent). Ontario: variable prime + 1% (e.g., 5.45% today). | Variable, typically prime to prime + 1.5%; program-dependent (often lower for professional programs). |
| While in school | Keep loans interest-free by maintaining interest-free status (CIFS). | Interest-only minimum payment each month on amount used. |
| Grace after school | 6 months; Ontario portion is charged interest. Federal stays 0%. | Many banks keep interest-only for up to 24 months after graduation; then principal + interest. |
| Start of principal repayment | After grace (unless you start early). Default amortization about 114 months (9.5 years); flexible. | After grace window ends, bank converts to amortizing payments; term varies (often 5–10 years). |
| Credit/co-signer | No co-signer; standard eligibility rules via OSAP/NSLSC. | Credit check; co-signer often required if limited history. |
| Repayment help | Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP): payments can be reduced to $0 if income under threshold; re-apply every 6 months. | No RAP; lender hardship options vary. |
| Tax credit on interest | Yes (Line 31900; government loans only). Unused interest can be carried forward for up to 5 years and claimed later. | No (LOC interest not eligible). |
Sources: NSLSC, Ontario OSAP pages, CRA, RBC/TD product pages, and bank prime-rate pages.
Notes on the table
- Ontario interest formula: prime + 1% on the provincial portion once you’re in repayment. Federal portion remains 0%.
- “While in school” interest-free for OSAP requires your loans to be placed/kept in interest-free status (CIFS) each study period if you’re not actively receiving new OSAP.
- RBC confirms interest-only minimums in school and a 24-month interest-only period after graduation before principal payments begin.
Worked example (today’s numbers)
Assumptions (transparent):
- Total need: $20,000.
- Today’s prime: 4.45%; Ontario OSAP rate = prime + 1% = 5.45%.
- Standard OSAP amortization after grace: 114 months (9.5 years).
A) OSAP only
OSAP is a blend of federal 0% and Ontario prime + 1% portions (share varies by assessment; example shown for two common splits):
- 70% federal / 30% Ontario → blended payment ≈ $190/month; ~$1,700 total interest over 9.5 years.
- 60% federal / 40% Ontario → blended payment ≈ $195/month; ~$2,267 total interest over 9.5 years.
(We used standard amortization math; your exact split and term on NSLSC may differ.)
B) Private SLOC at prime + 1% (5.45%)
- In school (2 years): interest-only ≈ $90.83/month → $2,180 interest over 24 months.
- After school (5-year paydown assumption): ≈ $382/month; ~$2,894 interest over the term.
- Total interest: ~$5,074 (≈ 3× the 70/30 OSAP scenario).
(Assumptions use typical bank practices; RBC confirms interest-only while in school and 24 months after grad; exact margins/terms vary by lender and program.)
Takeaway from the example: With today’s illustrative prime (4.45% -> Ontario 5.45%), OSAP’s blended effective rate is only about 1.64% (70/30 split) to 2.18% (60/40) – calculated as the Ontario share × 5.45% – which is far below typical SLOC pricing. The SLOC’s flexibility is useful, but long interest-only periods usually make lifetime interest much higher.
Rates change: re-run your numbers whenever prime moves.
When a private SLOC still makes sense
- OSAP not enough / ineligible costs (e.g., certain professional prep or living costs beyond OSAP caps).
- Cash-flow control: interest-only during school can help, but budget for a jump in payments after the grace window (banks will convert to principal + interest).
- Professional programs: some lenders offer better-than-prime pricing (e.g., medical/dental). Always confirm your prime link (±margin) in writing.
Practical steps (checklist)
- Max OSAP first (grants + 0% federal loan). Use the OSAP estimator and confirm interest-free status if you pause applying.
- Know your prime (it moves). Every 0.25% change affects SLOC and the Ontario portion of OSAP.
- Plan for grace: OSAP has 6 months; private LOCs may allow up to 24 months interest-only, but that’s still interest cost.
- Use RAP if income is tight (re-apply every 6 months; thresholds updated in 2025).
- Claim the tax credit for government loan interest (Line 31900). No credit for bank LOC interest.
FAQ
Is OSAP interest-free now?
Federal portion: yes, permanent 0%. Ontario portion: prime + 1% once in repayment.
Do I pay anything during school?
If you keep interest-free status, OSAP doesn’t accrue interest in school. SLOCs require interest-only payments while in school.
What’s the prime rate today?
As of Oct 30, 2025, 4.45% at major banks.
Is SLOC interest tax-deductible?
No. Only government student loan interest is eligible for the tax credit (Line 31900).
How long will I repay OSAP?
Default schedule is about 114 months (9.5 years), but you can choose shorter or longer terms with NSLSC.