New to Ontario? Start Here

Whether you arrived from another province, another country, or you are planning your move, this is your starting point. Here are the first things to do, in the order that makes the most sense.

πŸͺͺ
First Week
SIN + OHIP
πŸ“…
Driver's Licence
60-day deadline
πŸ₯
OHIP Wait
3 months
🀝
Free Help
Call 211

The First 30 Days

These are the essentials. Get them done in your first month and the rest of your settlement gets much easier. None of these tasks cost money.

2. Apply for OHIP

Free 3-month wait usually

Apply at any ServiceOntario centre with three identity documents. Most newcomers face a 3-month waiting period before coverage starts, so apply as soon as possible to start the clock. Buy private insurance for the waiting period.

Read the OHIP guide β†’

3. Open a Bank Account

Free most newcomer accounts

The big five banks (RBC, TD, BMO, Scotiabank, CIBC) all offer special newcomer accounts with no monthly fees for the first year. Bring your immigration document, passport, and proof of address. Some accounts can be opened before you arrive.

4. Set Up Utilities

Varies often $0 deposit

If you are renting, your lease may include some utilities. For everything not included, set up hydro, gas, internet, and water before move-in day. Newcomers without Canadian credit history may need a security deposit.

Read the utilities guide β†’

Within the First 60 Days

You can drive with your existing valid licence from another province, state, or country for 60 days. After that, you need an Ontario licence. Visit any DriveTest centre with your current licence, ID, and proof of Ontario residency.

If your country has an exchange agreement with Ontario (all U.S. states, all Canadian provinces, plus 16 countries including Australia, Japan, South Korea, and most of Western Europe), you may only need to pass a vision test. If your country does not have an agreement, your driving experience can still count toward skipping parts of the graduated licensing system.

Read the licence exchange guide β†’

Once you have a valid health card, register with Health Care Connect to find a family doctor or nurse practitioner. Wait times can be long, so apply as early as possible. While you wait, you can use walk-in clinics, Urgent Care Ontario for free virtual nurse practitioner visits, or call 811 for health advice.

Read the family doctor guide β†’

Public school in Ontario is free for children of permanent residents, refugees, and most temporary residents from kindergarten through grade 12. Contact your local school board to register. You will need your child's birth certificate, proof of immigration status, proof of address, and immunization records. School boards offer English as a Second Language (ESL) programs at no cost for children who need them.

Find your school board on your municipality's website, or call 211 for help finding the right school for your child's age and address.

If you have a foreign degree, diploma, or trade certificate, get it assessed so Canadian employers and educational institutions understand its equivalent. The two main credential assessment services are World Education Services (WES) and International Credential Assessment Service of Canada (ICAS). Each costs $200 to $300 and takes 4 to 8 weeks.

If you worked in a regulated profession (medicine, nursing, engineering, accounting, teaching, etc.), you also need to contact the relevant Ontario regulatory body to apply for a licence to practice. The Office of the Fairness Commissioner (fairnesscommissioner.ca) lists every regulated profession and the path to licensing.

Free Help From Settlement Agencies

Ontario funds settlement agencies across the province that help newcomers with everything from finding housing to filling out government forms. The services are free, multilingual, and open to permanent residents, refugees, citizens, and most temporary residents.

Filling out government forms (SIN, OHIP, driver's licence, school enrolment)
Free English or French language classes (LINC and CLIC programs)
Employment counselling, resume help, job search support
Foreign credential evaluation referrals
Help finding housing and understanding tenant rights
Connecting you to community programs, food banks, and clothing banks
Citizenship test preparation classes
Translation and interpretation services

How to find help:

β€’ Call 211 from any phone (free, 24 hours, multilingual). They connect you to local settlement agencies and community services.
β€’ Visit 211ontario.ca to search by city or postal code
β€’ Visit settlement.org for the Settlement.Org online newcomer hub
β€’ YMCA Newcomer Information Centres in the GTA offer free in-person and virtual settlement meetings

Within the First Year

If you are a permanent resident, your PR card is your official proof of status. New PRs receive their first card automatically about 4 to 6 weeks after landing, sent to the address you provided to IRCC. If you change addresses within 180 days of landing, you must update IRCC within 180 days of arrival or your card will not be mailed and you will have to apply for it (which costs $50 and takes months).

Update your address with IRCC at ircc.canada.ca by signing in to your account.

Even if you earned no income in Canada in your first year, file a Canadian tax return. Filing makes you eligible for benefits like the GST/HST credit, the Canada Child Benefit, and the Climate Action Incentive. The deadline is April 30 of each year for the previous year's income.

Many community settlement agencies and charity tax clinics file simple newcomer returns for free through the CRA's Community Volunteer Income Tax Program (CVITP). Search "CVITP" plus your city to find a free clinic near you.

Canadian credit history is essential for renting apartments, getting better insurance rates, buying a car, and eventually getting a mortgage. Your credit history from your home country does not transfer. Start building Canadian credit by:

β€’ Getting a secured credit card from your bank (you deposit a small amount as security; the bank issues a card with that limit)
β€’ Paying every credit card bill on time and in full
β€’ Putting utilities or phone bills in your own name
β€’ Avoiding "buy now pay later" services that report to credit bureaus

After 6 to 12 months of activity, you can request your credit report for free at Equifax.ca or TransUnion.ca to see your score.

After 3 to 5 Years

After you have been physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days (3 years) within a 5-year period, you may be eligible to apply for citizenship. You also need to have filed taxes for at least 3 of those years and demonstrate basic English or French.

The application is processed by IRCC, not Ontario. Cost is $630 for adults. Processing typically takes 12 to 18 months. After approval, you take the citizenship oath at a ceremony and receive a citizenship certificate. With this, you can apply for a Canadian passport.

Read the citizenship guide β†’

Once you become a Canadian citizen, you can apply for a Canadian passport. It is one of the most powerful travel documents in the world (visa-free access to over 180 countries). The application is processed by Service Canada (federal), not ServiceOntario. A 10-year adult passport costs $163.50.

Read the passport guide β†’

Documents to Get Right Away

Social Insurance Number (SIN)Free, in person, same day at Service CanadaFree
OHIP health cardFree, in person at ServiceOntario, 4-6 weeks deliveryFree
Ontario Photo Card or driver's licenceFor ID purposes (driver's licence requires DriveTest exchange)$35 to $90
Bank accountFree with most newcomer banking packagesFree
Birth certificates for children born in OntarioUse the 5-in-1 Newborn BundleFrom $25

Money-Saving Tips for Newcomers

File taxes even with zero income. The GST/HST credit alone gives you $500+ per year and the Canada Child Benefit can be hundreds per child per month.
Use newcomer banking packages. No-fee chequing for the first year, free wire transfers, and no minimum deposit at all five major banks.
Take free language classes. LINC (English) and CLIC (French) classes are free for permanent residents. Often include free childcare during class hours.
Use the public library. Free internet, free books in many languages, free citizenship test prep, free homework help for kids, free language conversation circles.
Call 211 before paying for any service. A free version usually exists for newcomers (legal advice, settlement counselling, immigration help).
Compare car insurance from multiple providers. First-year newcomer rates vary by hundreds of dollars between insurers. Use Ratehub.ca or LowestRates.ca for quotes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I work in Ontario before I get my SIN? +
You can begin working as soon as you apply for a SIN. You must apply within 3 days of starting work, and your employer cannot pay you until you provide the SIN. Apply at any Service Canada Centre with your immigration document; you receive your SIN on the spot.
Why is there a 3-month OHIP waiting period? +
The 3-month waiting period was introduced to ensure OHIP is used by genuine residents rather than people coming briefly for medical care. Some groups are exempt: refugees, certain skilled work permit holders, foreign domestic workers, returning Canadians who held OHIP recently, and others. Check with ServiceOntario when you apply.
What if I do not speak English or French well? +
Free LINC (English) and CLIC (French) language classes are available to permanent residents at all proficiency levels. Settlement agencies offer multilingual services in dozens of languages. Most government forms can be completed with help from a settlement worker. Translators are available for medical appointments and government services on request.
Should I bring my international driver's licence? +
An International Driving Permit (IDP) is helpful if you plan to drive in Ontario for less than 60 days as a visitor. If you are becoming an Ontario resident, you should bring your original driver's licence from your home country. The IDP itself is not exchanged. Make sure to get any required authentication letters from your home country before you leave, as they can take weeks to obtain.
Do my children need their own health cards? +
Yes. Every Ontario resident, including children, needs their own OHIP card. Apply for the entire family at the same time when you visit ServiceOntario. Each person needs their own three identity documents.

Need Help?

Call 211 for free multilingual settlement support.

Dial 211