From Nigeria, how toApplyto a Canadian school.
The route from a shortlist of schools to a Letter of Acceptance in your name. Get this right and the study permit comes next.
The schooldecides.
No agent, anywhere, can guarantee you admission. The offer is the university or college's call, made on your grades, your documents and your fit. Anyone promising a place for a fee is selling you a story.
What you can control is the strength and honesty of your application, and the school you aim at. It must be a Designated Learning Institution, the only kind that can host international students, and ideally a program that keeps your later options open. We help you choose well and apply well. The decision stays theirs.
Offer to acceptance.
Six steps take you from a shortlist to a Letter of Acceptance. Tap each to see what it involves, and the honest catch.
Shortlist DLIs and programs
We build a list of Designated Learning Institutions and programs that fit your goal, your grades and your budget, and ideally keep later work options open. Aim for a sensible spread, not a scattergun.
Only a DLI can host international students. The wrong school choice can cost you a permit later, so this step matters most.
Check the entry requirements
Each program sets its own bar: minimum grades, prerequisite subjects, an English score, and sometimes work experience or a portfolio. We map yours against each target before you spend on applications.
Requirements differ by program, not just by school. Applying under the bar wastes a fee and your time.
Prepare your documents
Transcripts, certificates, your English test result, a statement of purpose, references and your passport. We help you assemble and polish a clean, consistent file.
A weak or generic statement, or inconsistent documents, quietly sink strong candidates. The details decide it.
Apply and pay the fees
We submit your applications, on the school portals or as an official partner of Canadian colleges and universities, and track each one. Most schools charge a non-refundable application fee.
Application fees are per school and not refundable, so a focused shortlist saves money and effort.
Receive your offers
Schools respond with a decision: a full offer, a conditional offer with requirements to meet, or a no. We help you read each one and weigh them honestly.
A conditional offer is not a final one. You must meet the conditions before it becomes a true place.
Accept and get your LOA
You choose an offer, pay any required deposit, and the school issues your Letter of Acceptance. That LOA is the document your study permit is built on.
The LOA is the start of the permit stage, not the end. Next come your attestation letter, funds and the permit itself.
Pick the right school.
The school you choose shapes your application, your permit and your options after. Six things we weigh with you.
It is a DLI
Only a Designated Learning Institution can host international students. If it is not a DLI, no study permit follows. This is non-negotiable.
The program fits you
The course should match your background and goal, so your application is believable and your studies are realistic.
It keeps options open
Where work after study matters to you, we favour programs and schools that keep a Post-Graduation Work Permit in reach. Eligibility depends on the program.
Cost is realistic
Tuition and the city's living costs must fit your funding honestly, since you will need to prove you can pay for the permit.
The intake works
We check the school admits for your target term and that the deadlines leave enough runway for your permit.
It is genuine and solid
A recognised, stable institution with real support for international students, not a name that raises questions at the visa stage.
What goes in.
A Canadian application rests on four things. Tap each to see what it is and how we strengthen it.
Your certificates and transcripts, sometimes with a credential evaluation, showing you meet the program's minimum grades and any prerequisite subjects. We check yours against each program before you apply.
A test result at the level your program requires, usually IELTS, CELPIP, TOEFL or PTE. We prepare you and, for IELTS and our ETS tests, you sit them with us.
A statement of purpose that explains, honestly and clearly, why this program and what you plan after. A specific, genuine statement beats a polished generic one every time.
Academic or professional references, where a program asks for them, from people who can speak to your ability. We help you choose the right referees and brief them well.
Requirements vary by program and school. Treat this as the shape of a file. We confirm the exact list for each of your targets so nothing is missing or wasted.
Levels and routes.
Canada admits at many levels, through both colleges and universities. The level you pick shapes your application and your options after.
Certificate and diploma
Shorter, career-focused programs, mostly at colleges. Practical and quicker, with entry bars that suit many applicants.
Bachelor's degree
An undergraduate degree, usually three to four years, at a university. The classic route straight from secondary or a diploma.
Master's and PG
Postgraduate study for those who already hold a degree. Often one to two years, sometimes course-based, sometimes research.
College vs university
Colleges lean hands-on and applied; universities lean academic and research. Both can be excellent. Both must be a DLI.
Pathway and foundation
A bridge program for applicants who are close but not yet at full entry level, leading into a degree once conditions are met.
Postgraduate at college
One-year graduate certificates at colleges, popular for adding a Canadian, job-ready credential to an existing degree.
Work after study is not automatic. Eligibility for a Post-Graduation Work Permit depends on the program and the school, and the rules have tightened. If working after matters to you, tell us early so we steer you to a program that keeps it in reach.
Work backwards.
Pick your target intake and read the plan in reverse. These are planning windows, not deadlines, schools set their own.
Shortlist and prepare
Choose DLIs and programs, book your English test, and gather transcripts and references.
Apply
Submit applications well before each school's deadline, conditional offers can come fast.
Offers and accept
Weigh your offers, accept one, pay any deposit and receive your Letter of Acceptance.
Permit stage
With the LOA, move to your attestation letter, proof of funds and the study permit application.
Fall starts
Classes begin. You travel once your permit is approved and the term is near.
Shortlist and prepare
Confirm which schools admit for January, book your English test and gather documents early.
Apply
Winter intake is smaller, so apply early to the schools that offer your program in January.
Offers and accept
Receive offers, accept and get your Letter of Acceptance with time to spare for the permit.
Permit stage
Attestation letter, proof of funds and study permit, the tighter window makes early action vital.
Winter starts
Classes begin in the new year, once your permit is approved.
Not every program runs every intake. Some admit only in Fall. We confirm which intakes your target programs actually offer before you build a plan around one.
Tap to bust it.
The application stage is where bad advice does real damage. Six myths, flipped.
We build the application.
From the first shortlist to the Letter of Acceptance in your hand, you are not doing this alone or guessing.
Choose and shortlist
We match you to DLIs and programs that fit your profile, budget and goals, and that keep your later options open.
Build the file
Documents, English test, statement and references, assembled and sharpened into a clean, honest, competitive application.
Apply and follow through
We submit, track and chase your applications, then help you read offers and accept the right one to get your LOA.
We are an official partner of Canadian colleges and universities, and we will be honest with you at every step. We cannot and will not promise admission, a scholarship or a study permit. What we promise is a strong, truthful application and straight advice.
Applying, asked.
Q1Do I need a school before I apply for a study permit?
Q2How many schools should I apply to?
Q3Can you guarantee I will be admitted?
Q4What English test do I need?
Q5What is a conditional offer?
Q6Does my program affect working after I graduate?
Q7When should I start?
Let's getyou in.
Tell us your level and what you want to study. We will shortlist real DLIs, build your file and apply with you, all the way to your Letter of Acceptance.






