March 20

How to Get Approved for a Credit Card With Bad Credit in Canada

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Credit Cards

How to Get Approved for a Credit Card With Bad Credit in Canada

Mar 20, 202620 min read
Key Takeaways
  • Pre-qualification tools let you check your approval odds without a hard inquiry — always use these first.
  • Your approval odds improve significantly when you reduce existing debt, correct credit report errors, and apply to the right type of card for your credit range.
  • Capital One, Home Trust, and credit unions are among the most lenient lenders for Canadians with bad credit.
  • If denied, you have the right to know why — and a written reconsideration request to the bank’s credit department sometimes reverses the decision.
  • A secured credit card is the guaranteed fallback: if you can provide a deposit, approval is virtually certain.

Getting approved for a credit card with bad credit in Canada feels like a catch-22: you need credit to build credit, but bad credit means lenders won’t give you credit in the first place. It is a frustrating cycle — but it is not unbreakable.

This guide walks you through every step of the process: from understanding why you were rejected, to finding lenders who are more likely to approve you, to using pre-qualification tools that protect your credit score, to what to do when you get a denial. By the end, you will have a clear, actionable plan for getting a credit card in your wallet — and starting the credit rebuild.

Person reviewing credit card application on laptop
Applying strategically — using pre-qualification and targeting the right lenders — dramatically improves your approval odds.

Understanding Why You Were Rejected (Or Might Be)

Before you can improve your approval odds, you need to understand exactly why lenders are turning you down. When a lender denies your credit card application, they are required by law to tell you the reason — or to tell you how to find out. This is your starting point.

The Most Common Reasons for Credit Card Denial in Canada

Reason for Denial What It Means Can You Fix It?
Low credit score Score below the lender’s minimum threshold (often 600–650+) Yes, over time
No credit history Too little data for the bureau to generate a score Yes, by opening a secured card
High credit utilization You are using more than 30% of your available credit Yes, by paying down balances
Too many recent applications Multiple hard inquiries signal desperation to lenders Yes, by waiting 6–12 months
Collections or delinquencies Unpaid debts sent to collections remain on file for 6 years Partially — pay them off, but they remain listed
Bankruptcy Remains on credit file for 6–7 years (first bankruptcy) Yes, secured cards work even post-bankruptcy
Insufficient income Income too low for minimum income requirements Yes, choose cards with lower income requirements
Employment status Self-employed, contract, or no employment Partially — some lenders are more flexible
Good to Know

Get Your Free Credit Reports

You are entitled to a free copy of your credit report from both Equifax Canada and TransUnion Canada. Request these before applying for any credit card. Look for errors, outdated information, or accounts that are not yours — these can be dragging down your score unfairly. Dispute errors directly with the credit bureau; corrections typically take 30–45 days but can meaningfully improve your score.

What Credit Score Do You Need for a Credit Card in Canada?

Canadian credit scores range from 300 to 900. Here is a general breakdown of what different score ranges mean for your credit card options:

Credit Score Range Category Available Credit Card Options
750–900 Excellent All premium cards; best rates and rewards
700–749 Good Most standard cards; some premium cards
650–699 Fair Most standard cards; Capital One, some mid-tier cards
600–649 Poor Subprime unsecured cards; most secured cards
550–599 Bad Secured cards; some guaranteed approval cards
300–549 Very Bad / No Credit Secured cards with deposit; KOHO Credit Building
Approximate minimum score for most unsecured credit cards in Canada
Of Canadians have a credit score below 680, according to industry estimates

Pre-Qualification Tools: Check Approval Odds Without Hurting Your Score

The single most important strategy for credit card applicants with bad credit is this: never apply without pre-qualifying first. Every formal credit card application triggers a hard inquiry on your credit file. Hard inquiries temporarily lower your score by 5–10 points and remain on your report for 3 years (though their impact fades after about 12 months).

If you apply for four cards and get rejected for all four, you have not just wasted time — you have actively damaged your credit score in the process, making future approvals even harder.

Pro Tip

Hard vs. Soft Inquiries

A soft inquiry (also called a soft pull) does not affect your credit score at all. Pre-qualification checks, your own credit checks, and some background checks are soft inquiries. A hard inquiry (hard pull) does affect your score — this happens when you formally apply for credit. Always ask whether a pre-qualification uses a hard or soft pull before proceeding.

Pre-Qualification Tools Available to Canadians

Tool / Platform Type of Check What It Shows
Capital One Pre-Qualification Soft pull Likelihood of approval for Capital One cards
Borrowell Soft pull Card recommendations based on your Equifax score
Credit Karma Canada Soft pull Approval odds for multiple cards using TransUnion data
Ratehub.ca Soft pull (for participating lenders) Matched credit card offers for your profile
NerdWallet Canada Soft pull Personalized card recommendations
CR
Credit Resources Team — Expert Note

I always tell clients: before you apply for anything, spend 20 minutes on Borrowell or Credit Karma Canada first. These tools let you see your credit score for free and show you which cards you are likely to be approved for — without any impact to your score. It takes all the guesswork out of the process.

How to Improve Your Approval Odds Before Applying

Even small improvements to your credit profile can make the difference between approval and rejection. Here are the most impactful steps you can take:

  1. Check and Correct Your Credit Reports

    Pull both your Equifax and TransUnion reports (free at annualcreditreport.com equivalent Canadian portals or by mail). Look for errors: incorrect balances, accounts that are not yours, payments incorrectly marked as late, or outdated collections. Dispute any errors in writing — bureau disputes are free and can improve your score within 30–60 days.

  2. Pay Down Existing Balances

    Credit utilization — how much of your available credit you are using — is one of the most heavily weighted factors in your credit score. If you have a credit card with a $1,000 limit and a $800 balance, your utilization is 80%. Getting it below 30% (ideally below 10%) can significantly boost your score. Focus on paying down high-utilization cards first.

  3. Stop Applying for New Credit (Temporarily)

    Each hard inquiry from a new application stays on your file. If you have made several applications recently, give your file a 6-month rest before applying again. This lets inquiries age and signals to lenders that you are not in financial distress.

  4. Ensure All Current Accounts Are Paid On Time

    Payment history is the single largest factor in your credit score (roughly 35%). Even if you have past delinquencies, establishing a consistent on-time payment pattern going forward begins to improve your score. Set up automatic minimum payments so you never miss a due date.

  5. Pay Off or Settle Collections

    Unpaid collections are serious negative marks. While paying them does not remove them from your report immediately, it changes their status from “unpaid” to “paid” — which most lenders view more favourably. Some lenders refuse to approve any applicant with unpaid collections.

  6. Increase Your Income Documentation

    Some lenders deny applicants not because of credit score, but because of insufficient income. If you have additional income sources — freelance work, rental income, government benefits — document and declare them on your application. This can push you over a lender’s minimum income threshold.

I spent three months paying down my utilization from 75% to 22% before applying for a card. My score went up 47 points in that time and I got approved on the first try.

— Natalie R., Toronto

Which Banks Are Most Lenient for Bad Credit in Canada?

Not all Canadian banks use the same criteria. Major banks (Big Six: RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC, National Bank) generally have stricter approval requirements. Smaller lenders, credit unions, and specialty issuers tend to be more flexible.

Canadian bank buildings in a city skyline
Canada's major banks have stricter credit card approval standards than specialty lenders and credit unions.

Most Accessible Lenders for Bad Credit Canadians

Lender Card Minimum Score (Approx.) Annual Fee Notes
Capital One Guaranteed Mastercard No minimum stated $59/year Designed for bad/no credit; guaranteed if criteria met
Home Trust Secured Visa No credit check $0 or $59/year Secured; deposit = credit limit; no credit check
Refresh Financial Secured Visa No credit check $12.95/month Reports to both bureaus; no credit check required
Canadian Tire Bank Triangle Mastercard ~580 $0 Retail card; easier approval; Canadian Tire rewards
PC Financial PC Mastercard ~580 $0 Grocery/retail rewards; accessible approval
Credit Unions Varies by institution Case-by-case Varies Holistic assessment; relationship banking helps
KOHO (Credit Building) Prepaid + Credit Builder No credit check $0–$19/month Not a credit card; but reports to Equifax
Canadian Note

Credit Unions: Canada’s Hidden Gem for Bad Credit Borrowers

Credit unions in Canada — institutions like Desjardins (Quebec), Meridian (Ontario), Vancity (BC), and hundreds of smaller local cooperatives — are member-owned and not-for-profit. They assess applications more holistically than banks, taking into account your overall financial situation and your relationship with the institution. If you have been a member of a credit union for several years and have a chequing account there, your chances of approval for a credit card are significantly higher than at a big bank — even with bad credit.

The Capital One Guaranteed Mastercard: What “Guaranteed” Really Means

Capital One’s Guaranteed Mastercard is one of the few unsecured credit cards in Canada that advertises itself as guaranteed for applicants who meet basic criteria. Here is what those criteria typically are:

  • Canadian resident
  • Age of majority in your province
  • No active bankruptcies or proposals
  • Not already a Capital One cardholder
  • Minimum income (typically $12,000/year)

The card comes with a $59 annual fee and a low starting credit limit (often $300–$500), but it is reported to both credit bureaus and can serve as a genuine credit-building tool for people who cannot qualify for better cards yet.

Application Tips That Improve Your Chances

Beyond your credit profile, how you fill out an application matters. Here are actionable tips for the application itself:

Declare All Income

Many applicants forget to include all their income sources. The application asks for “gross annual income” — that includes your job, any part-time work, rental income, child support received, spousal support, CPP/OAS, EI (though this is typically not counted by all lenders), and investment income. The higher your declared income relative to your debt obligations, the better your debt-to-income ratio appears.

Apply for the Right Card for Your Score Range

Applying for a premium travel rewards card when your score is 550 is a near-guaranteed rejection — and a wasted hard inquiry. Use the pre-qualification tools discussed earlier to identify cards that are realistically within range for your current score. Applying for a card you have a strong chance of getting is not settling; it is strategy.

Be Accurate on the Application

Credit card applications are legal documents. Falsifying information — income, employment status, address — constitutes fraud and can result in criminal charges. More practically, lenders verify information. If your stated income is far above what your tax records show, the discrepancy will catch up with you.

Apply When Your Profile Is at Its Best

Time your application for when your credit utilization is lowest — typically right after you have paid your monthly bills and balances, not right before. Your credit report reflects your balance on a specific reporting date each month, which is when your lender sends the data to the bureaus. If you know when that date is (usually near your statement closing date), pay before that date to show a lower balance.

Pro Tip

The Statement Date Strategy

Your credit card issuer reports your balance to the bureaus on your statement closing date — not your payment due date. If your due date is the 15th and your closing date is the 5th, the balance reported is whatever you owed on the 5th. Pay before the 5th to minimize your reported utilization, even if your actual payment due date is later.

Find the Right Credit Card for Your Situation

Join 10,000+ Canadians who started their credit journey with Credit Resources.

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What To Do If Your Application Is Denied

Denial is not the end of the road. It is information — and you can use that information strategically.

  1. Get the Reason in Writing

    Federal law requires lenders to tell you why you were denied (or to tell you how to obtain the reason). Contact the lender and ask for the specific reasons in writing. Common reasons include: insufficient credit history, too many recent inquiries, high utilization, delinquent accounts, or income below minimum.

  2. Do Not Apply Again Immediately

    Your first instinct after a denial might be to try another card right away. Resist this. Each new application adds another hard inquiry. Instead, take the denial reason and address it before your next application.

  3. Consider a Reconsideration Request

    Many Canadians do not know that you can call the bank’s credit department and ask for a manual reconsideration of your application. This works best when there is a specific, explainable reason for a negative mark on your file — for example, a medical emergency that caused you to miss payments, a divorce, or a job loss. Write a brief, professional letter explaining the circumstance and what has changed. Some banks will reverse a denial after a human review.

  4. Address the Specific Denial Reason

    If denied for high utilization, pay down balances. If denied for too many inquiries, wait six months. If denied for a collection, contact the collection agency and negotiate a settlement. Then reapply in 6–12 months.

  5. Fall Back to a Secured Card

    If you cannot get approved for any unsecured card right now, a secured credit card is your next move. Secured cards report to the credit bureaus just like regular credit cards — the only difference is you put down a deposit. Use it responsibly for 12–18 months and you will likely qualify for an unsecured card at that point.

The Reconsideration Request: How to Write One

A reconsideration request is a letter or phone call asking the bank to review your denied application again. It is not a guarantee, but for borderline applications, it works more often than people expect.

Here is what to include in an effective reconsideration request:

  • Reference your application: Include the date you applied, your name, and any application reference number.
  • Acknowledge the denial: Don’t be confrontational — acknowledge the decision and express that you would like to provide additional context.
  • Address the specific reason: If the denial cited high utilization, mention that you have since paid down the balance (include a balance figure if you can). If it cited late payments, explain the circumstances (job loss, medical emergency) and what changed.
  • Highlight positive factors: Length of time as a customer at the bank, stable income, recent improvement in credit profile.
  • Be concise: One page or less. Credit analysts read many of these. Clear and professional wins.
CR
Credit Resources Team — Expert Note

Reconsideration requests that work are the ones that add new information — not just pleas for sympathy. If you have paid down a balance since the application, or if your denial was triggered by an error on your credit file, those are the cases where reconsideration genuinely changes the outcome. If nothing has changed, wait and reapply later.

Secured Credit Cards as the Guaranteed Path Forward

If all unsecured options fail, a secured credit card is your guaranteed path to a credit card — and to credit building.

Good to Know

How Secured Cards Work

You deposit a sum of money with the card issuer — typically $200 to $10,000 — which becomes your credit limit. You use the card like a regular credit card: make purchases, receive a monthly statement, and pay the balance. The issuer reports your payment history to Equifax and TransUnion. After 12–18 months of responsible use, most issuers either upgrade you to an unsecured card and return your deposit, or you have enough credit history to qualify elsewhere.

Top Secured Credit Cards in Canada

Card Min. Deposit Annual Fee Interest Rate Reports to Both Bureaus?
Home Trust Secured Visa $500 $0 (no fee version) or $59 19.99% / 14.9% (low-rate version) Yes
Refresh Financial Secured Visa $200 $12.95/month ($155.40/year) 17.99% Yes
Capital One Guaranteed MC $75 (security deposit) $59/year 19.8% Yes
Plastk Secured Visa $300 $48/year + $6/month 17.99% Yes
ATB Financial Secured MC (Alberta) $500 $0 Prime + variable Yes
Person holding a secured credit card in hand
Secured credit cards are the most reliable path to rebuilding credit in Canada — and virtually anyone can qualify.

How to Use a Secured Card Effectively

  • Keep utilization under 30%: If your limit is $500, keep your balance under $150. Ideally under $50 (10%).
  • Pay the full balance monthly: This avoids interest charges entirely and maximizes your credit score impact (demonstrates you can manage credit without carrying debt).
  • Use the card regularly: An inactive card helps less than an active one. Put one recurring charge (like a streaming subscription) on the card each month.
  • Do not cancel the card: Length of credit history matters. Keep the account open even if you eventually qualify for better cards — simply reduce usage rather than closing it.
  • Set a calendar reminder to review in 12 months: After a year of on-time payments, request an upgrade to an unsecured card or shop for better options.

The Role of Authorized User Agreements

One underutilized strategy for building credit quickly in Canada is being added as an authorized user on a family member’s or partner’s credit card account. When someone with good credit adds you as an authorized user, their positive payment history and low utilization on that card can be added to your credit file — giving your score a boost without you needing to apply for anything.

Warning

Authorized User Risk

This strategy works both ways. If the primary cardholder misses payments or maxes out the card, that negative information can also affect your credit file. Only become an authorized user on accounts held by financially responsible people you trust completely.

Building Credit Without a Credit Card

Credit cards are the most common credit-building tool, but they are not the only one. If you cannot get a credit card right now, these alternatives can also build your credit history:

  • Credit-builder loans: Products like Refresh Financial’s Credit Builder program or Spring Financial allow you to “borrow” money that is actually held in a savings account while you make payments. The payments are reported to the bureaus. At the end of the term, you receive the savings. It builds credit and savings simultaneously.
  • Reporting rent payments: Services like FrontLobby allow landlords (or tenants, in some cases) to report on-time rent payments to Equifax, which can build your credit history.
  • RRSP loans: Some credit unions offer small secured RRSP loans that are reported to the bureaus and serve a dual purpose of building credit and retirement savings.

How Long Does It Take to Rebuild Credit?

This is the question everyone asks — and the honest answer is: it depends on where you are starting and how consistent you are.

Starting Situation Approximate Timeline to 650+ Score Key Actions
No credit history 6–12 months Open secured card; use it monthly; pay in full
Bad credit (580–620) 12–24 months Reduce utilization; dispute errors; consistent payments
Post-bankruptcy (discharged) 2–3 years for meaningful recovery Secured card immediately post-discharge; patience
Collections/delinquencies 1–3 years after resolution Pay/settle collections; new positive accounts

I was rejected everywhere for two years. Then I got a secured card, set up automatic payments for Netflix on it, and paid the full statement every month. Fourteen months later, I had a 661 score and qualified for a real credit card. Slow and steady actually works.

— Angela M., Winnipeg

Frequently Asked Questions

Will checking my own credit score hurt my score?

No. Checking your own credit score — whether through Equifax, TransUnion, Borrowell, Credit Karma, or any other service — is a soft inquiry and has zero impact on your credit score. You can and should check your credit score regularly. The only checks that hurt your score are hard inquiries initiated by lenders when you formally apply for credit.

Can I get a credit card in Canada with a score below 500?

Yes — through secured credit cards. Products like the Home Trust Secured Visa and Refresh Financial Secured Visa do not require a credit check at all. You simply provide a deposit, and that deposit becomes your credit limit. Anyone with a deposit and no active bankruptcy can get approved for a secured card.

Does being denied for a credit card hurt my score?

The denial itself does not — but the hard inquiry from the application does, by about 5–10 points. The impact fades over 12 months and disappears entirely after 3 years. The lesson: apply selectively, use pre-qualification tools first, and do not apply to multiple cards at once.

Can I get a credit card during a consumer proposal in Canada?

It is difficult but possible. While you are in an active consumer proposal, most major lenders will deny you. Some secured card issuers — including Home Trust — will approve you even during an active proposal. A prepaid card (which does not require credit approval) also remains fully accessible. Once your proposal is completed, you will typically see your options improve significantly within 12–18 months.

What is the minimum income to get a credit card in Canada?

It depends on the card. Many entry-level and bad-credit cards have no minimum income requirement stated (Capital One Guaranteed, Home Trust Secured). Others require $12,000–$15,000 annually. Premium cards often require $60,000–$80,000+ in personal or household income. For bad credit Canadians, focus on cards with no stated income minimum or low thresholds.

Do store credit cards have lower approval requirements than bank cards?

Generally, yes. Store cards (Canadian Tire Triangle Mastercard, PC Financial Mastercard, Hudson’s Bay card) tend to approve applicants at lower credit scores than bank-issued cards. They typically come with lower credit limits and rewards restricted to that retailer’s ecosystem — but they are reported to the credit bureaus and build credit just like any other credit card.

How many credit cards should I have when rebuilding credit?

One or two is plenty during the rebuild phase. A single secured card used consistently and paid in full monthly is more effective than having four cards that you struggle to manage. Credit diversity (having both a card and an installment loan) can help your score marginally — but only after you have established consistent payment history. Do not add complexity until you have the basics locked down.

Your Action Plan: Getting Approved With Bad Credit in Canada

  1. Pull Your Credit Reports

    Get free reports from both Equifax and TransUnion. Review for errors, outdated accounts, and items you do not recognize. Dispute anything inaccurate in writing.

  2. Know Your Score

    Use Borrowell (Equifax score, free) or Credit Karma Canada (TransUnion score, free) to know exactly where you stand. This determines which cards are realistic targets.

  3. Reduce Utilization

    Pay down existing card balances to below 30% of their limits. This can increase your score by 20–50 points relatively quickly and costs you nothing but the payment.

  4. Pre-Qualify Before Applying

    Use Capital One’s pre-qualification tool, Borrowell’s card recommendations, or Credit Karma Canada to identify which specific cards are likely to approve you — before making any hard-inquiry application.

  5. Apply to One Card at a Time

    Submit one application to your best-matched card. Wait for the outcome before applying to another. If approved, excellent. If denied, seek reconsideration or address the reason before trying again in 6 months.

  6. Fall Back to Secured if Needed

    If no unsecured options are available to you right now, open a secured credit card. Make one small purchase monthly, pay the full statement balance every month, and reassess your unsecured options in 12–18 months.

Months of consistent secured card use typically needed to qualify for unsecured cards

Getting a credit card with bad credit in Canada is a process, not a single event. The strategies in this guide — pre-qualifying, targeting the right lenders, addressing denial reasons, using secured cards as the foundation — collectively represent the most reliable path to getting approved and starting your credit rebuild.

The most important thing you can do right now is take the first step: check your credit score for free and see where you actually stand. Everything else follows from there.

Ready to Find Your Path to Approval?

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CR
Credit Resources Editorial Team
Canadian Credit Education Experts
Our team of certified financial educators and credit specialists helps Canadians understand and improve their credit. All content is reviewed for accuracy and updated regularly.

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