They live 20 to a room.Which makes me wonder, how do international students get housing when they don't have jobs or a credit history?
They live 20 to a room.Which makes me wonder, how do international students get housing when they don't have jobs or a credit history?
Which makes me wonder, how do international students get housing when they don't have jobs or a credit history?
My wife has access to university housing assistance. Most international student before even coming to canada look for options for housing via that early on. Some of them live in hall of residence in university, some of them are placed in nearby private rental based housing options -- which are basically what @navinball said. Some landlords explictly advertise their suites for students and do not require much of checking. They DO expect you to be enrolled in a university. Some of them are very sketchy in the sense they do not even sign rental agreements with international students and take rent in cash.Which makes me wonder, how do international students get housing when they don't have jobs or a credit history?
Ofcourse you would be the one to know.They live 20 to a room.
I only allow 6 per room in my house for safety and keep up with the city's fire hazard code.Ofcourse you would be the one to know.
Hostel rooms work too. But, if you book for long term (at least 30 days) in Airbnb, you get a pretty good discount price.Instead of a AirBnb, try booking a hostel through booking.com. You only have to pay when you check-in, and you can cancel like 3 days before arriving. You may want to book one in advance because the best ones get booked 15 days ahead.
You can book multiple hostels (in 2 weeks duration) so that if you find a room (let's be honest here, you ain't renting a entire basement or house), you can just cancel your booking and save all the money.
OkI only allow 6 per room in my house for safety and keep up with the city's fire hazard code.
1. Good to know. I haven’t given anyone so far.Just to add few things :
2. Now another issue you may face is no land lord reference from past. To be honest, I never brought it up or mentioned first time renter and no one bothered.
3. Look for rental buildings or rental companies (we also call them slumlords lovingly) and they have a fixed format without emotional landlords.
You obviously couldn't care less about understanding what is the credit score and what you need it for. Credit score does not define your mortgage amount; the certain threshold defines whether you get a mortgage and the score determines your interest rate. Now, how much mortgage you get depends on your household income.I couldn't care less about the credit score of your friends,
Hmm... So, as a newcomer you have a credit score already. It's not 0 as you start somewhere. If you want to know where you start, get a credit card at any bank and ask them to give you a credit score. You are eligible for 1 free a year. If they refuse, then get one from equifax.To the people who moved to Canada recently, is it worth it to try and find housing before moving? Or am I basically forced to move and get an Airbnb while I try to find housing? Also, if I don't secure a job before moving, how do I navigate not having a credit dscore or payslips in the country?
@RSub @GandiBaat and anyone else who has an idea.
Agree with you. Survivorship bias: everyone talks about those who got rich while ignoring those who failed. The probability to fail is much higher than the probability of getting rich.The argument "If you work hard you will be rich / successful etc." is fair and unfair at the same time. Very few people become successful without working hard; however people do not become successful just because they work hard. There are plenty of people in US and Canada who work two jobs, work really hard but won't be super successful or rich.
People like to give themselves a lot of credit when they make it and then will take every opportunity to tell everyone who will listen how they became big because they "worked hard". They are not wrong but they do ignore that chance and luck do play a role. I know people would be offended if you told them that you are successful because of so many things falling in to place which were not in their control .. "being at right place at right time". Their argument would be on the lines of "Harder I work.. Luckier I get"
I would urge people to read two books (if not already)
Agree with you completely on people ignoring one major factor of when a person immigrated. There is a HUGE difference between coming to Canada in 2012 vs 2022.
- Fooled By Randomness - Nicholas Taleb
- Outliers - Malcolm Gladwell
Does it mean people coming after 2022 won't be rich or successful in Canada? Absolutely not. There will be people who would do that. BUT, it will be much harder and not just a function of "working hard".
Although, this is a never ending debate and don't think people from either side will be able to change minds.
Mushy, let me tell you about what I did, and I landed in Toronto late December, one of the colder months. I wanted to keep it super thrifty but not painfully cheap like getting a bed in a hostel/house with @navinball like LLs.To the people who moved to Canada recently, is it worth it to try and find housing before moving? Or am I basically forced to move and get an Airbnb while I try to find housing? Also, if I don't secure a job before moving, how do I navigate not having a credit dscore or payslips in the country?
@RSub @GandiBaat and anyone else who has an idea.