Total Cost to Move From Nigeria to Canada in 2026 (Real Numbers, Not Estimates)
Every other article about moving to Canada gives you a vague range: “around CA$3,000 to CA$10,000.” That’s useless when you’re trying to plan, save, and book a one-way flight from Lagos. So here’s the actual math — fees, documents, flights, proof of funds, settlement money — laid out for three real scenarios.
These are 2026 numbers, updated after IRCC’s fee increase on April 30, 2026. Where Nigerian-specific costs apply (Naira figures, local clinics, NPF clearance), I’ve included them. Where the cost is the same for everyone, I’ve noted that too.
Quick Answer (TL;DR)
Single applicant: CA$17,800 (₦19.6M) total — CA$2,400 in fees + CA$15,400 in proof of funds.
Couple: CA$24,800 (₦27.3M) — CA$4,600 in fees + CA$19,200 proof of funds. Add ~CA$500 if spouse takes IELTS.
Family of 4: CA$33,300 (₦36.6M) — CA$5,500 in fees + CA$28,400 proof of funds + CA$500 in additional child documents.
Plus flights (CA$1,200-2,500 per person one-way) and your first 3 months of living costs (CA$6,000-12,000 single, more for families).
That’s the headline. Now let me show you where every dollar goes — and which costs you might be able to skip.
1. Pre-Application Costs: Documents You Need Before Even Starting
Before you can submit an Express Entry profile, you need a stack of documents that take money and time to produce. Most applicants underestimate this category and end up paying ₦1.5M before they even click “submit.”
Language Test (IELTS General Training)
You need to prove your English. For Express Entry, IELTS General Training is the most common test, accepted by IRCC and easier to access in Nigeria than CELPIP.
- Cost: ₦400,000 (~CA$320)
- Test centres in Nigeria: British Council and IDP — Lagos, Abuja, Ibadan, Port Harcourt, Kano
- Timeline: Book 4-6 weeks ahead. Results in 13 days.
- Reality check: Most Nigerians need to retake the test at least once to hit IELTS 7.0+ in all bands. Budget for two attempts — ₦800,000 total.
WES Educational Credential Assessment (ECA)
You can’t submit your Express Entry profile without an ECA proving your Nigerian degree is equivalent to a Canadian one. WES is the most common assessor.
- Cost: CA$264 + courier (~CA$50) = ~CA$314 (~₦345,000)
- Where: wes.org/ca
- Timeline: 20-35 business days. Sometimes faster if your university responds quickly.
- Common trap: Your university must send the transcript directly to WES. If you send it yourself, WES will reject it.
Nigerian Police Clearance Certificate
- Cost: ₦15,000 – ₦30,000 (~CA$14-28)
- Where: Nigerian Police Force Headquarters in Abuja, or through approved processing agents
- Timeline: 2-4 weeks
- Watch out for: The certificate must be issued within 6 months of your visa submission. Don’t get it too early.
Police Clearance From Other Countries
If you’ve lived in any country (other than Nigeria) for 12+ months in the past 10 years, you need a clearance from each one. UK, US, UAE, and South African clearances cost roughly:
- UK ACRO certificate: £55 (~₦80,000)
- US FBI clearance: $18 + fingerprint costs (~₦25,000)
- UAE Good Conduct Certificate: AED 50-100 (~₦25,000)
Total for Pre-Application Documents
| Item | Cost (₦) | Cost (CAD) |
|---|---|---|
| IELTS General Training (×1) | ₦400,000 | $320 |
| WES ECA + courier | ₦345,000 | $314 |
| Nigerian police clearance | ₦25,000 | $23 |
| Document translations (if needed) | ₦40,000 | $36 |
| Subtotal | ₦810,000 | $693 |
2. IRCC Visa Application Fees (2026 Rates)
These are the fees paid directly to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC). They increased on April 30, 2026 — so any older article quoting CA$950 is now outdated.
| Fee | Amount (CAD) | Per |
|---|---|---|
| Principal applicant processing fee | $990 | 1× (you) |
| Right of Permanent Residence Fee (RPRF) | $600 | 1× (you) |
| Accompanying spouse processing fee | $990 | If applicable |
| Spouse RPRF | $600 | If applicable |
| Dependent child processing fee | $270 | Per child |
| Biometrics | $85 | Per person, max $170 per family |
| Medical exam (panel physician in Lagos) | ~$200-300 | Per adult |
Total IRCC + medical for a single applicant: CA$1,590 (fees) + CA$85 (biometrics) + CA$250 (medical) = CA$1,925
Total for a couple: CA$3,180 (fees) + CA$170 (biometrics, family rate) + CA$500 (medicals) = CA$3,850
Total for a family of 4: CA$3,180 (adult fees) + CA$540 (2 children) + CA$170 (biometrics) + CA$700 (4 medicals) = CA$4,590
Tip: The Right of PR Fee (CA$600 per adult) can be deferred — you don’t have to pay it when you submit your application. You pay it once your PR is approved. If your application is refused, you don’t pay it at all. Most applicants still pay upfront to speed up final processing.
3. Proof of Funds: The Number That Surprises Everyone
If you’re applying through Federal Skilled Worker (FSW) and you don’t have a Canadian job offer, IRCC requires you to prove you have enough money to settle. This is the single biggest line on your migration budget.
Proof of Funds Required in 2026
| Family Size | Amount (CAD) | Amount (₦) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 person | $15,263 | ~₦16.8M |
| 2 people | $19,022 | ~₦20.9M |
| 3 people | $23,398 | ~₦25.7M |
| 4 people | $28,362 | ~₦31.2M |
| 5 people | $32,167 | ~₦35.4M |
| 6 people | $36,280 | ~₦39.9M |
Important: This money is yours. You don’t give it to IRCC. It’s not a fee. You just need to prove you have it in liquid, accessible funds for 6+ months before you submit your application. Once you land in Canada, the money is yours to spend on rent, food, settlement, and emergencies.
Who’s exempt from proof of funds?
- You’re applying through Canadian Experience Class (CEC) — you’ve already worked in Canada
- You have a valid Canadian job offer (LMIA-approved or LMIA-exempt)
Common mistakes that get applications rejected at this stage
- Sudden large deposits. If you transferred ₦25M into your account three months ago and have no explanation for where it came from, the visa officer will flag it. Money must be aged in your account.
- Counting borrowed money. Loans, family gifts you have to pay back, and money you’ve promised to return don’t count. IRCC will ask for a sworn statement that the funds are unencumbered.
- Only counting one bank. You can combine accounts: Naira savings, dollar domiciliary, investment accounts. Just make sure each one is documented.
4. Flights and Initial Arrival Costs
You got your PR. Now you need to actually move.
One-Way Flights (Lagos → Toronto)
- Economy direct (Air Canada, Turkish Airlines): CA$1,200-2,500
- Best months for cheap fares: April, September, October
- Worst months: June-August (summer holidays), December (Christmas)
- Pro tip: One-way fares to Toronto/Montreal often cost the same as round-trip. If your timing is flexible, book a round-trip and forfeit the return — sometimes it’s still cheaper.
Excess Baggage
Most airlines allow 2× 23kg bags for international economy. Excess baggage is brutal — Air Canada charges roughly CA$100-200 per extra bag. Pack ruthlessly. Ship valuable items separately by sea freight (cheaper than air for non-urgent items).
Your First Month in Canada
You won’t have an income for at least a few weeks. Plan for these expenses:
| Expense | Cost (CAD) |
|---|---|
| Temporary accommodation (Airbnb, 30 nights) | $2,500 – $4,500 |
| SIM card + phone plan | $50/month |
| Public transit pass (Toronto/Vancouver) | $155/month |
| Groceries | $400 – $600/month per person |
| Winter clothing (if landing Oct-Mar) | $300 – $800 |
| Documents (SIN, OHIP, driver’s license exchange) | $50 – $200 |
| Bank account setup deposit | $0 – $200 |
| Total first month (single) | $3,500 – $6,500 |
For a family of 4, expect to spend CA$6,000-12,000 in the first month. Cities outside Toronto and Vancouver are 30-40% cheaper.
5. Hidden Costs Nobody Tells You About
These are the costs that aren’t in any visa fee table but show up in your bank statement anyway.
- Currency conversion losses: Sending ₦16M to a Canadian account through traditional banks loses you 3-5% in spread. Use Wise or Send to save ₦500,000+ on a typical proof-of-funds transfer.
- Document translation: If any of your documents are in a Nigerian language (Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, Pidgin), you’ll need certified translations. Typically ₦15,000-30,000 per document.
- Notarization and certification: Some employers, especially those issuing reference letters that don’t quite match NOC standards, need their letters notarized. Budget ₦10,000-25,000.
- Express Entry profile expiration: Your profile is valid 12 months. If you don’t get an ITA in that time, you redo the whole thing. New IELTS (₦400,000+ if expired), new ECA (CA$50 refresh), new police clearance.
- Settlement to a smaller city: Toronto and Vancouver are expensive. Moving to Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg, or Halifax saves 40% on rent — but you’ll need money for the second move (CA$1,500-3,000) if you don’t go there directly.
- Credential recognition fees: If you’re a regulated professional (nurse, engineer, accountant), the Canadian regulatory body charges separate registration fees — often CA$500-2,000.
- Immigration consultant fees (optional): If you use a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC), expect CA$2,500-7,000 in fees. DIY is legal and saves this entire bucket — but read carefully and triple-check every form.
6. The Real Damage: Three Scenarios
Scenario A: Single Applicant From Lagos, FSW Route
| Item | Cost (CAD) |
|---|---|
| IELTS (one attempt) | $320 |
| WES ECA | $314 |
| Nigerian police clearance | $23 |
| Medical exam | $250 |
| IRCC processing fee | $990 |
| Right of PR Fee | $600 |
| Biometrics | $85 |
| Proof of funds (yours to keep) | $15,263 |
| One-way flight | $1,800 |
| First month in Canada | $4,500 |
| Pure migration cost (excl. proof of funds) | $8,882 |
| Total cash needed before landing | $24,145 (~₦26.5M) |
Scenario B: Couple Applying Together
| Item | Cost (CAD) |
|---|---|
| IELTS × 2 (you + spouse) | $640 |
| WES ECA × 2 | $628 |
| Police clearances × 2 | $46 |
| Medical exams × 2 | $500 |
| IRCC fees (you + spouse) | $3,180 |
| Biometrics (family rate) | $170 |
| Proof of funds | $19,022 |
| Flights × 2 | $3,600 |
| First month (couple) | $6,500 |
| Total cash needed | $34,286 (~₦37.7M) |
Scenario C: Family of 4 (2 Adults + 2 Children)
| Item | Cost (CAD) |
|---|---|
| IELTS × 2 adults | $640 |
| WES ECA × 2 | $628 |
| Police clearances × 2 adults | $46 |
| Medical exams × 4 (2 adults + 2 kids) | $700 |
| IRCC adult fees | $3,180 |
| Child processing × 2 | $540 |
| Biometrics (family max) | $170 |
| Proof of funds | $28,362 |
| Flights × 4 | $7,200 |
| First month (family of 4) | $9,500 |
| Total cash needed | $50,966 (~₦56M) |
7. Where You Can Realistically Save Money
Not all of these costs are negotiable, but some are.
- Skip the immigration consultant if you’re a confident self-researcher. DIY Express Entry is legal and IRCC’s forms are well-documented. Saves CA$2,500-7,000.
- Take CELPIP instead of IELTS if your English is strong. Some Nigerians find CELPIP’s Canadian-accented audio easier than IELTS’s British-accented audio. Costs about the same.
- Apply through CEC instead of FSW. If you can get to Canada first (study permit + post-graduation work permit), you skip the CA$15,263 proof of funds requirement entirely. Total study route is more expensive, but spread over years.
- Use Wise or Send for currency transfers. Saves 2-4% versus traditional banks. On a CA$15,263 transfer, that’s CA$300-600 saved.
- Land outside Toronto. Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Halifax, and Saskatoon all have established Nigerian/African communities and 30-40% cheaper housing. You can always relocate to Toronto later.
- Apply for a provincial nomination. A PNP adds 600 CRS points (virtually guaranteed ITA) and waives Express Entry’s proof-of-funds requirement in some streams. Costs CA$250-1,500 in application fees.
- Time your IELTS retake strategically. If you scored 6.5 in writing and 7+ in everything else, retake JUST writing — most test centers allow single-skill retakes for half the price.
Final Number to Remember
If you’re a single Nigerian applicant moving to Canada through Express Entry FSW in 2026, plan for ₦26-28 million total before you can comfortably land. About ₦17M of that is your proof of funds (which stays yours). The remaining ₦9-11M is the actual cost of migration — fees, tests, flights, and your first month.
If you’re a family of 4, the number is ₦55-60 million, with roughly ₦31M as proof of funds and ₦25-29M in actual migration costs.
These numbers are scary on a Nigerian salary. They’re meant to be. Canada doesn’t make this cheap because they want self-sufficient migrants. The good news: most Nigerians who make it through Express Entry earn back their migration cost within 6-12 months of starting work in Canada.
Next step: Use our free CRS Calculator to see your Express Entry score, then check the full Canada pathway page for the step-by-step application process. If Canada’s costs feel out of reach, the Eligibility Quiz will show you which of the 5 other countries might fit your budget better.
This article was last updated on May 25, 2026, with IRCC fee changes from April 30, 2026, and current Express Entry processing data. Costs in Naira use an exchange rate of approximately ₦1,100 = CA$1 and will fluctuate. Always verify the latest fees directly at canada.ca before submitting. Smart Migration Path is an independent information resource — not affiliated with IRCC or any immigration consultancy.