Nearly 20,000 Indian students failed to attend classes after arriving in Canada. Reports surfaced in early 2025, exposing a troubling gap. Canada, long a magnet for international students, now faces scrutiny. Its reputation hangs in the balance.
Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) tracked 717,539 international students in March and April 2024. Of those, 49,676 didn’t show up at their designated schools. Indian students topped the list with 19,582 no-shows. That’s 5.4% of the 427,000 Indian students enrolled. Another 23,514 students remain unaccounted for due to lax reporting.
Fraudulent Colleges Strike
Fake colleges lured many victims. A 24-year-old from Haryana arrived in Brampton expecting a reputable school. He found a small office with no classrooms. Scammed, he paid $4,800 upfront. Others faced similar traps. Fraudulent institutions exploit Canada’s lax tuition rules. Unlike the U.S., Canada doesn’t demand upfront payment.
Visa Misuse Fuels the Fire
Some students gamed the system. A 27-year-old from Gujarat enrolled in a cheap college. He paid 7.5 lakh rupees, dodged classes, and worked illegally. Experts estimate most no-shows stay in Canada. They chase jobs, not degrees. Asylum claims by students spiked in 2024, hinting at their motives.
Racism and Exploitation Surge
Indian students also face hostility. In January 2025, a Punjabi student in Regina endured a racist attack. Assailants threw coffee and hurled slurs. Meanwhile, a viral video showed harassment in Ontario. A man taunted students, yelling, “Go back to India.” Exploitation compounds the chaos. A 21-year-old Punjabi woman in Edmonton turned to prostitution, citing financial ruin.
Policy Cracks Widen
Canada’s visa policies falter—stricter rules hit in November 2024, capping permits at 437,000 for 2025. Yet, oversight remains weak. “No-show” cases expose systemic flaws. Indian authorities probe links to illegal migration networks. Some students allegedly crossed into the U.S. Still, expert Henry Lotin argues most linger in Canada, working under the radar.
The Fallout Intensifies
Canada’s allure dims. Housing and job pressures mount. Racism festers, exploitation thrives. Meanwhile, 427,000 Indian students navigate a tightening system. Fraud and misuse erode trust. Consequently, Canada’s global hub status wavers. More arduous tracking and transparency loom as urgent fixes. For now, the mystery of the 20,000 persists, a stark warning of a dream gone astray.