Quebec plans to double university tuition for out-of-province students by 2024
MONTREAL — Quebec is doubling tuition for out-of-province students, more than half of whom come from Ontario, saying taxpayers shouldn’t subsidize English-speaking people who leave after graduating.
Tuition for Canadians outside Quebec will jump to $17,000 from $8,992, Higher Education Minister Pascale Déry announced Friday. She said the government will charge universities $20,000 for each international student they recruit and direct that money only to francophone universities.
The impact of the measures is expected to hit Quebec’s three English universities hardest as they have far more international and out-of-province students compared to the French institutions. Two are located in Montreal — McGill University and Concordia University — while the third, Bishop’s University, is in Lennoxville, Que., east of Montreal.
The new rate of $17,000 per year is closer to what it costs the Quebec state to educate a university student, Déry said, adding that most out-of-province and international students leave the province after graduating.


