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Nori Nori · Study in Canada · Study Permit · Study Permit · 2026-5-24 00:22
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How to Show Large Bank Deposits Without Over-Explaining for a Study Permit

I’ve been going through the proof of funds requirements for a Canada study permit, and I keep seeing advice about “explaining large deposits” — but honestly, it’s confusing. I have the required amount saved, and I’ve transferred a significant sum recently (like 30,000 CAD) into my account. The money is mine, from a family gift, but I’m worried that showing a single big deposit will raise red flags, even if everything is legitimate.

I know IRCC just wants to see that I can cover tuition and living costs — but how do I present this cleanly without sounding like I’m hiding something or over-explaining? I’ve been told to keep things simple: just show where the money came from, how it moved, and that it’s still in my account now. But I’m not sure what details are actually needed — should I include a letter from the donor? A copy of the transfer confirmation? Or is that overkill?

I’ve also been thinking about how to organize the bank statements. Should I highlight the deposit and the transfer date? Or just let the timeline speak for itself? And is it okay to show just a few months of statements, or do I need to go back further?

Here’s what I’m trying to do:
- Show the source (e.g., family member’s account)
- Prove the transfer happened (bank transfer slip or online record)
- Confirm the funds are still there (current balance)
- Match the total to my tuition receipt and a basic living cost estimate

But I’m not sure if I’m missing something obvious. What’s the line between “too much” and “not enough” when it comes to documentation?

If you’ve been through this, what’s the one thing you checked first when preparing your proof of funds? What details did you include — or leave out — that made a difference? I’d love to hear how others handled large deposits without overcomplicating things.
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