University of Saskatchewan
Travel guide for Indian students — Saskatoon, Canada. Nearest international gateway: YXE (Saskatoon).
the University of Saskatchewan is a popular choice for Indian students in Saskatoon.
Getting around Saskatoon
Saskatoon Transit serves the campus, and most students get a UPass; the Varsity View and Sutherland areas near campus are affordable.
From the airport to campus
Saskatoon is served by the regional airport YXE; from there a local transit bus or a short taxi reaches campus. Many students instead fly into a larger hub and connect onward.
When to book flights
Book 6-10 weeks ahead of the August/September intake for the best fares from your nearest Indian metro - compare live carriers above.
Visiting your child at the University of Saskatchewan means flying into YXE (or a larger hub with an onward connection); Saskatoon is a small city where a local bus or short taxi reaches campus. Plan the Canada visitor visa well ahead.
Getting from YXE to campus
Visitor visa for parents
Indian parents need a Canada visitor visa (a Temporary Resident Visa, or TRV) - they are not eligible for the eTA that visa-exempt travellers use. It is filed online through the IRCC Secure Account (form IMM 5257), with biometrics required. Most TRVs are issued as multiple-entry visas valid up to 10 years (or until the passport expires), each visit up to 6 months.
- Processing only starts AFTER biometrics are given - add 1-2 weeks and book the biometrics appointment early.
- *Official IRCC times are dynamic; third-party trackers often cite 6-10 weeks, so apply at least 3 months ahead - Fall admits should submit by mid-May.
- A complete, well-documented file (strong home ties, travel history, clear funds and purpose) is the single best way to avoid delays and refusals.
- Super Visa (5-year stays) is only for parents of Canadian citizens or PRs - students are neither, so the standard visitor visa is the route for now.
Just admitted to the University of Saskatchewan? Here's your arrival checklist.
Arrival checklist
- Book your flight toward YXE (or a larger hub with a connection) early for the best August/September fares.
- Saskatoon is compact - a local transit bus or short taxi covers the airport-to-campus trip.
- Pack for cold prairie winters; arrange first-week housing near campus before arrival.
- Carry your study permit letter, proof of funds and acceptance letter in your cabin bag.
Saskatoon is an affordable prairie city - about CAD 1,050-1,500 a month all-in sharing and cooking. The University of Saskatchewan draws a steady Indian student community, most students get a UPass for Saskatoon Transit, and rents are among the lowest of any Canadian student city. Winters are cold.
Monthly cost of living in Saskatoon (a student estimate)
That's roughly C$12,500-18,000 a year for living costs, on top of tuition.
Finding accommodation
Saskatoon students share houses and apartments near the University of Saskatchewan; rent is low.
- Most students get a UPass for Saskatoon Transit.
- Varsity View and Sutherland put you near campus.
- Winters are very cold - budget for heating and warm gear.
Working part-time
On a study permit you can work off-campus up to 24 hours/week during academic terms (a permanent limit as of 2025) and full-time during scheduled breaks if you are full-time before and after. On-campus work has no set hourly cap. After graduating from an eligible program at a Designated Learning Institution (DLI), you can apply for a Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) - master's graduates can qualify for up to three years. Stay within the work limit: over-working can cost your status and PGWP eligibility.
Safety & student support
Saskatoon and its the University of Saskatchewan areas are generally safe by Canadian standards; use normal awareness at night.
- the University of Saskatchewan runs campus safety services (walk-home programs, alerts) - save the campus safety number.
- The campus and main student areas are busy and well-populated.
- A small, generally safe prairie city; normal awareness at night.
Indian community & food
Saskatoon has a growing Indian community, with desi grocers serving the student population.
Indian grocery stores
- Indian and South Asian grocers in Saskatoon carry spices, lentils and staples.
- Mainstream Real Canadian Superstore and No Frills have international aisles.
- Student demand keeps everyday desi staples easy to find near campus.
Student community
- The University of Saskatchewan has an active Indian/South Asian student association with Diwali and Holi.
- Saskatoon has a Hindu temple and gurdwara.
- A growing set of Indian restaurants across Saskatoon.
Cost & living figures for Saskatoon last verified Jun 2026. Figures are estimates and change over time.
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