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anuj_juneja2005

Star Member
Apr 23, 2012
66
0
hi
i am planning to do a hospitality course from lambton college toronto or a college in vancouver.

i intend to start in the spring intake

what is the average student cost of living in vancouver and toronto?

what is the scope for ODD job opportunities for indian students at cafes, factories, farms and other minimum wages jobs? Do these cities have ample or few job opportunities?

is it possible to cover expenses like travel,food,

accomodation adding upto 1000$ per month by working 20 hours a week

through such jobs?

Please help me with this problem, Because it is already late, i want to start my admission process as soon as possible .
 
the following is from another member, in a similar topic... try searching for more if you want...




All,

I'm an International student from New Delhi who received a lot of information from this forum when I was applying for my visa/College. I got admission, then Visa and am currently in Canada doing my pg studies.

I will be providing some information that might be useful for you guys. Starting with living cost in Canada.

Of course, it really depends upon individual to individual and some areas are expensive than others. I will be providing data for Toronto since I'm here for past 6 months.

Let's categorise the major expense in groups:
Rent [250-600]
Transportation [100]
Food [150-300]
Entertainment [0-150]
Phone: 55

Total Monthly Expense [550-1100]


RENT
This is what I've seen in the area:
Single room in a house (Sharing Kitchen, personal bathroom): 600-750/month
Single room in a house (Sharing Kitchen, Sharing bathroom): 500-550 [Can also find small room as low as 450]
Basement: 700-800 [2 people can easily stay]
College/University Hostel: usually around 800/month. Have to give 8 month rent in advance. For some college you also have to buy a meal plan. Room is very small, and bathroom is shared. Usually no kitchen and only microwave and a fridge is provided.
1 BHK : about 800-900 (3 people can easily stay, even 4 can be managed]
Rent Conditions: You have to sign a 1 year contract [Can't leave accommodation before 1 year but can sublet]. Two months notice period. First and last required (two month rent in first go, then monthly rent)


Transportation
Car: Forget about car. car is cheap (can even buy in just 3000) but insurance is costly (usually 400/month, yes!)
Cab: usually $8-10/km
Public Transport: Excellent service, very comfortable: Subway or Streetcar (Tram) or Buses. Monthly pass of $99 for students, 120 for general public.

Food
Grocery is cheap and you get all Indian stuff here, even maggy. I once saw a prestige 5 L cooker in Walmart in just 35 bucks (dollars), a price similar to Indian market price. Eating out is very expensive, usually 7-10 times expensive than cooking yourself.

For example, you can cook pasta at home and the grocery/oil cost etc would be less than $1 [may be just 40-50 cents]. One single time pasta in college cafeteria would be $6-$8. Try to learn cooking before you arrive. This will save hundreds of dollars a month for you.

If you cook regularly at home, and eat out occasionally, then you are estimating about 150-200 a month.

Entertainment
Movies {English, and even Hindi/Punjabi} DVD is available free in Toronto Public Library. Library membership is free. You can rent upto 50 book.DVD at a time.

Movies in hall: $10

Clubbing: Not as expensive as they are in India. Sometimes the entry is free, sometimes 5 or 10 bucks. For special events and in Desi club, the entry is 20. A beer (350 ml) is 6 inside a club (outside it is 2).

Museum: Entry fees differs and is in range between 6 to 28. However, you can get free museum pass in Library on Saturday @ 9 am.

Phone: No contract. Own handset. Base plan 25 (free Toronto/GTA calling) + 20 (Unlimited India calling} + 5 (Unlimited Internet on phone) + tax ~ 55/month

Depending upon your lifestyle, you can assume monthly living expenses from a mere 550 to as high as 1100. major saving point: shared accommodation and cooking at home.

Stay hungry, stay foolish and keep trying. Best of luck to you all for your admission and visa.

GS
 
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Reactions: hemalcanadavisa
$12.25 is way higher than the min wage...the min wage is $10.25 which is even less for students who have a SIN number...students without a SIN have to work for $7-9 an hour....
 
anuj_juneja2005 said:
is it possible to cover expenses like travel,food,

accomodation adding upto 1000$ per month by working 20 hours a week

through such jobs?

Assume you would have to work closer to 40 hours per week.
 
dbss said:
$12.25 is way higher than the min wage...the min wage is $10.25 which is even less for students who have a SIN number...students without a SIN have to work for $7-9 an hour....
Cool signature dude
 
All i am going to say is my friend worked as a garbage man and he earned 12000 CAD in June-August.
 
do you have any idea about capilano university? is it a good university?

this is my programme:

http://www.capilanou.ca/business/diploma-graduate-inter-man/International-Management-Graduate-Diploma/

any information about the programme and university will be very helpful

do you know any website to get information about faculty and placement packages in universities?

Thank You
 
evanstp9 said:
the following is from another member, in a similar topic... try searching for more if you want...




All,

I'm an International student from New Delhi who received a lot of information from this forum when I was applying for my visa/College. I got admission, then Visa and am currently in Canada doing my pg studies.

I will be providing some information that might be useful for you guys. Starting with living cost in Canada.

Of course, it really depends upon individual to individual and some areas are expensive than others. I will be providing data for Toronto since I'm here for past 6 months.

Let's categorise the major expense in groups:
Rent [250-600]
Transportation [100]
Food [150-300]
Entertainment [0-150]
Phone: 55

Total Monthly Expense [550-1100]


RENT
This is what I've seen in the area:
Single room in a house (Sharing Kitchen, personal bathroom): 600-750/month
Single room in a house (Sharing Kitchen, Sharing bathroom): 500-550 [Can also find small room as low as 450]
Basement: 700-800 [2 people can easily stay]
College/University Hostel: usually around 800/month. Have to give 8 month rent in advance. For some college you also have to buy a meal plan. Room is very small, and bathroom is shared. Usually no kitchen and only microwave and a fridge is provided.
1 BHK : about 800-900 (3 people can easily stay, even 4 can be managed]
Rent Conditions: You have to sign a 1 year contract [Can't leave accommodation before 1 year but can sublet]. Two months notice period. First and last required (two month rent in first go, then monthly rent)


Transportation
Car: Forget about car. car is cheap (can even buy in just 3000) but insurance is costly (usually 400/month, yes!)
Cab: usually $8-10/km
Public Transport: Excellent service, very comfortable: Subway or Streetcar (Tram) or Buses. Monthly pass of $99 for students, 120 for general public.

Food
Grocery is cheap and you get all Indian stuff here, even maggy. I once saw a prestige 5 L cooker in Walmart in just 35 bucks (dollars), a price similar to Indian market price. Eating out is very expensive, usually 7-10 times expensive than cooking yourself.

For example, you can cook pasta at home and the grocery/oil cost etc would be less than $1 [may be just 40-50 cents]. One single time pasta in college cafeteria would be $6-$8. Try to learn cooking before you arrive. This will save hundreds of dollars a month for you.

If you cook regularly at home, and eat out occasionally, then you are estimating about 150-200 a month.

Entertainment
Movies {English, and even Hindi/Punjabi} DVD is available free in Toronto Public Library. Library membership is free. You can rent upto 50 book.DVD at a time.

Movies in hall: $10

Clubbing: Not as expensive as they are in India. Sometimes the entry is free, sometimes 5 or 10 bucks. For special events and in Desi club, the entry is 20. A beer (350 ml) is 6 inside a club (outside it is 2).

Museum: Entry fees differs and is in range between 6 to 28. However, you can get free museum pass in Library on Saturday @ 9 am.

Phone: No contract. Own handset. Base plan 25 (free Toronto/GTA calling) + 20 (Unlimited India calling} + 5 (Unlimited Internet on phone) + tax ~ 55/month

Depending upon your lifestyle, you can assume monthly living expenses from a mere 550 to as high as 1100. major saving point: shared accommodation and cooking at home.

Stay hungry, stay foolish and keep trying. Best of luck to you all for your admission and visa.

GS
whao, nice job you have done here, so if one can spend 700 in Toronto he/she might as well spend less in small towns that are not as big as toronto.Nice on
 
Is it legal to work for 40 hours a week part time for students?? And won't the studeis get affected by this?

No - it's not legal to work 40 hours a week during your studies. The maximum you can work is 20. You can only work 40 hours a week during scheduled breaks (like summer).
 
Ahaan!
And thar would be legal right??

No - it's ILLEGAL to work more than 20 hours per week while you are studying. This is a violation of your study permit that can result in the permit being revoked and being forced to leave Canada. You can only work more than 20 hours per week during scheduled breaks.