Preparing for Queen’s: Essential Pre‑Arrival Steps for International Grad Students

Students with backpacks walk in front of Ontario Hall at Queen's university surrounded by trees with early autumn leaves.

Image description: The image shows a bright fall day on a university campus. A group of students, most carrying backpacks, walk along a wide paved pathway that cuts through a central quad.  The trees display a mix of green and autumn colours, and long shadows stretch across the ground. The overall atmosphere is lively and welcoming, with students moving between classes in a spacious, open campus setting.

As an international student heading to ֱ this fall, this guide is a starting point to help you prepare. I’ll walk you through the key steps using my own experience, so you know what to expect and where to find support. 

  • Accepting the Offer 

Clicking “accept” on your offer can feel like stepping off a cliff in the best possible way. Once you confirm, a series of practical tasks begins: setting up your student accounts, contacting your department coordinator, and figuring out what “starting in the fall” really looks like in terms of timelines, paperwork, and preparation. 

  • Navigating the Visa Process 

The visa process is often your first big test of patience and organization. It requires documents you may never have heard of and deadlines that can feel overwhelming. Start early-earlier than you think you need to. Gather your offer letter, financial documents, and all supporting paperwork before you even start thinking about what to pack. If you need help or have specific questions, you can reach out to an International Student Advisor at Queen’s at: isa@queensu.ca.  

  • Preparing for Queen’s University 

Preparing for Queen’s goes far beyond choosing courses. It is academic, practical, and emotional all at once. I spent time exploring the university website for course outlines, campus maps, student services, and orientation details. I also contacted my department coordinator early, which I highly recommend. Those initial emails establish a relationship and signal that you are engaged, organized, and ready to learn. 

One tool that helped me enormously was the ‑Arrival Guide. It walks you through essentials such as required documents at the border, how to open a bank account, and how health insurance works. Bookmark it and work through the sections before you book your flight then you’ll arrive feeling much more prepared. 

  • The Housing Hunt 

If visas test your patience, housing will test your flexibility and problem‑solving. Finding a place to live from thousands of kilometres away, in a new city and on a student budget, is genuinely challenging. Thankfully, Queen’s Community Housing is a strong starting point. Queen’s manages its own student rental properties, which can be especially helpful for new and international students. If you are a graduate student, look into An Clachan and John Orr Tower-apartment-style complexes on West Campus reserved for graduate students, professionals, and students with families. 

Because these units are in high demand, they are allocated through an annual lottery that usually opens in late May. If you don’t get a university‑managed unit, Queen’s also runs an Accommodations Listing Service where local landlords post rentals aimed at students. On top of that, an Off‑Campus Living Advisor can review your lease and explain terms before you sign, which is invaluable if you’re unfamiliar with Canadian rental laws. 

  • Registering with SGSPA and the GTAS Program 

Connecting early with the School of Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs (SGSPA) is an important but often overlooked step. As you explore their website, pay close attention to the Graduate Transition and Academic Success (GTAS) Program

GTAS is a three‑week intensive program designed specifically for incoming international graduate students and takes place before the start of classes. It acts as a structured introduction to the Canadian academic environment, helping you strengthen key skills such as academic reading, writing, and time management. Equally important, it supports your “social settlement”-learning about Canadian and Kingston culture, classroom expectations, and campus life. Through interactive workshops and small‑group activities, you’ll meet other students, faculty, and staff, so your first week of classes feels less like a cold start and more like joining a community. 

What I Wish I’d Known 

The journey from offer letter to first day of class is long, paperwork‑heavy, and emotionally intense. But every form you fill, every email you send, and every application you submit is proof of something important: you earned this opportunity. If you’re about to begin your own journey as an international student at Queen’s, know this: it does get easier, it does get richer, and in time, it truly starts to feel like yours.