Credit Unions vs. Banks in Canada: Which Is Better for Bad Credit?

If you have bad credit in Canada and you’ve been turned down by a major bank, you may be wondering whether a credit union is worth trying. The short answer is: yes, often very much so. But the longer answer involves understanding some important structural differences between these two types of institutions — and knowing which one is right for your specific situation.
This comprehensive guide covers everything Canadian consumers with bad credit need to know about credit unions versus banks: how they differ structurally, how each makes lending decisions, which one is likely to approve you, how deposit insurance works, what interest rates to expect, and which major credit unions operate in each province.
- Credit unions are member-owned cooperatives; banks are shareholder-owned corporations. This fundamental difference affects how each institution makes decisions.
- Credit unions often have more flexible lending criteria and are more likely to consider your full financial picture rather than just your credit score.
- Banks offer more standardized products and services, broader national networks, and typically more advanced digital banking.
- Deposit insurance differs: banks are covered by CDIC (federal), while credit unions are covered by provincial deposit insurance schemes — with some important differences in coverage.
- For bad credit Canadians, credit unions are frequently the better first choice for loans, though banks offer more competitive options once your credit improves.
- You must become a member to access credit union products — membership typically requires a small deposit and meeting certain eligibility criteria.
The Fundamental Structural Difference
To understand why credit unions often treat bad-credit consumers differently from banks, you need to start with the basic structural distinction between the two types of institutions.
Banks: Shareholder-Owned Corporations
Canada’s major banks — RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC, and National Bank — are publicly traded corporations with millions of shareholders around the world. Their primary legal obligation is to maximize shareholder value. This means optimizing profits, managing risk carefully, and operating at scale with standardized processes.
For lending decisions, this translates to:
- Heavy reliance on credit scoring algorithms
- Strict minimum credit score thresholds for most products
- Standardized underwriting criteria applied uniformly across the country
- Less discretion for individual branch managers or loan officers
- Risk models optimized for portfolio performance, not individual circumstances
Credit Unions: Member-Owned Cooperatives
Credit unions are not-for-profit financial cooperatives owned by their members — the people who bank with them. Every account holder is a member and part-owner. Profits are returned to members through lower fees, better interest rates, dividends on shares, and improved services.
This cooperative structure means:
- Decisions are made locally, often by people who know the community
- Lending criteria can be more flexible and holistic
- Loan officers may have more discretion to consider circumstances beyond the credit score
- The institution’s success is measured partly in how well it serves its members, not just shareholders
- There is a genuine mandate to serve people who may be underserved by the traditional banking system
Credit Score: How Each Institution Views Bad Credit
This is the heart of the matter for most consumers reading this article. Here is how banks and credit unions typically approach lending decisions for applicants with damaged credit:
How Banks Handle Bad Credit Applications
Canada’s big banks rely heavily on automated credit decisioning. When you apply for a loan or credit card, your application typically goes through an algorithm that evaluates:
- Your Equifax or TransUnion credit score
- Your debt-to-income ratio
- Your income and employment history (as reported)
- The specific product you’re applying for
Most major banks have minimum credit score requirements. While the specific thresholds vary by product and bank, applicants with scores below 620-650 often face automatic declines for standard products. Some banks have introduced second-chance or alternative credit products for bad-credit consumers, but these are generally limited and expensive.
The bottom line: if your credit score is significantly below 650, the probability of approval at a major bank for an unsecured loan or standard credit card is low.
How Credit Unions Handle Bad Credit Applications
Credit unions, particularly smaller and regional ones, are more likely to take a holistic approach to lending decisions. This can include:
- Character-based lending: A loan officer who has a relationship with you may advocate for your application even if your score is low
- Income stability over credit history: If your income is stable and you have a clear ability to repay, some credit unions weight this heavily
- Explanation of past issues: A one-time financial setback (job loss, medical crisis) may be viewed more sympathetically than a pattern of irresponsible behaviour
- Length of membership: Long-standing members in good standing may receive preferential consideration
- Secured products as a stepping stone: Many credit unions offer secured loans and secured credit cards designed specifically for credit rebuilding
Book an Appointment Before Applying
At a credit union, you can often meet with a loan officer in person before formally applying. Use this opportunity to explain your credit history, what caused the problems, and what you’ve done to improve your situation. This kind of context can genuinely influence a credit union’s decision in a way that’s impossible with a bank’s automated system.
I regularly refer clients with bad credit to credit unions first. The difference in how they’re treated is often night and day. At a big bank, my client gets an automated decline letter. At a credit union, they get a phone call from a real person who asks questions and actually listens. Even when the credit union can’t approve the original request, they often have a path forward — a secured product, a smaller amount, a co-applicant suggestion — that the bank would never offer.
Membership Requirements: How to Join a Credit Union
Unlike banks, which anyone can open an account with (subject to basic identity verification), credit unions require membership. The good news is that membership is usually easy to obtain and inexpensive.
Typical membership requirements include:
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Residency or connection | Live, work, or worship in the credit union’s community, or belong to an affiliated group (profession, employer, organization) |
| Membership share purchase | Typically $5 to $25 one-time purchase of a membership share |
| Basic account opening | Valid government ID, SIN (optional in some cases), initial deposit |
| Credit check | Usually NOT required for basic membership — though may be required for loan or credit products |
The membership structure means that simply joining a credit union and opening a savings account is accessible to virtually everyone — including people with bad credit. Establishing a banking relationship first, before applying for credit, strengthens your position as a member.
Credit Union Field of Membership in Canada
Many Canadian credit unions have very broad membership criteria — often just living in the same province. Others are tied to specific industries (teachers, healthcare workers), employers, or cultural communities. VanCity in BC is open to anyone who lives or works in Metro Vancouver. Desjardins in Quebec is open to virtually all Quebec residents. Check your local credit union’s specific eligibility criteria.
Deposit Insurance: CDIC vs. Provincial Schemes
One of the most important practical differences between banks and credit unions is how your deposits are protected if the institution fails.
Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC) — Banks
The CDIC is a federal Crown corporation that protects deposits at member banks, trust companies, and loan companies. Key features:
- Covers up to $100,000 per depositor per insured category
- Multiple categories are insured separately (deposits in your own name, joint deposits, RRSPs, TFSAs, RRIFs, etc.) — you can have significantly more than $100,000 protected in total
- All major Canadian banks are CDIC members
- Covers chequing accounts, savings accounts, GICs (up to 5 years), and deposits in foreign currencies (up to $100,000 CAD equivalent)
- Does NOT cover stocks, bonds, mutual funds, or ETFs
Provincial Deposit Insurance — Credit Unions
Credit unions are NOT members of CDIC. Instead, they are covered by provincial deposit insurance plans. Coverage varies significantly by province:
| Province | Insurer | Coverage Amount | Notable Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) | Unlimited | All eligible deposits fully protected — no cap |
| British Columbia | Credit Union Deposit Insurance Corporation (CUDIC) | Unlimited | All eligible deposits fully protected |
| Alberta | Credit Union Deposit Guarantee Corporation (CUDGC) | Unlimited | All eligible deposits fully guaranteed |
| Quebec (Desjardins) | Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) | Unlimited | Desjardins is also federally regulated; deposits fully protected |
| Manitoba | Deposit Guarantee Corporation of Manitoba (DGCM) | Unlimited | All eligible deposits fully protected |
| Saskatchewan | Credit Union Deposit Guarantee Corporation (CUDGC) | Unlimited | All eligible deposits fully guaranteed |
| Nova Scotia | Credit Union Deposit Insurance Corporation (CUDIC) | $250,000 per category | Multiple categories can increase total coverage |
| New Brunswick | New Brunswick Credit Union Deposit Insurance Corporation | $250,000 per category | Multiple categories increase total coverage |
Western Provinces Often Have Better Deposit Protection
Several western provinces — including BC, Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan — offer unlimited deposit insurance at credit unions. This actually makes credit unions in these provinces arguably safer for large deposits than banks, which are capped at $100,000 per CDIC category. Ontario and Quebec also offer unlimited protection. Check your province’s specific rules before making large deposits anywhere.
Credit unions across Canada hold over $400 billion in assets and serve more than 10 million members. They are a fundamental part of Canada’s financial system and operate under rigorous regulatory oversight at the provincial level.
Interest Rates: Banks vs. Credit Unions
The interest rate comparison between banks and credit unions is nuanced. The answer depends on what type of product you’re looking at, your credit profile, and which specific institution you’re comparing.
For Savings and Deposits
Credit unions often (though not always) offer better deposit rates than major banks. Because they are not-for-profit cooperatives, they can pass more of the earnings back to members through:
- Higher savings account rates
- Better GIC rates
- Year-end patronage dividends (effectively additional interest or rebates)
For Loans (Good Credit)
For consumers with good credit, the rates are generally competitive between banks and credit unions. Major banks have enormous scale and funding advantages, so their rates for prime borrowers are very competitive. Credit unions may offer slightly better rates to their members, but the difference for prime borrowers is typically modest.
For Loans (Bad Credit)
This is where the difference can be significant. For bad-credit borrowers:
| Product Type | Major Bank (Bad Credit) | Credit Union (Bad Credit) |
|---|---|---|
| Unsecured personal loan | Often declined or very high rate (20%+) | More likely approved; rates typically 12-20% |
| Secured personal loan | Available but rates vary widely | Generally available; rates competitive |
| Credit card (bad credit) | Limited options; secured or high-fee products | Often has secured credit card programs |
| Mortgage (bad credit) | Almost always declined below 620 score | Some credit unions consider; may require larger down payment |
| HELOC (bad credit) | Declined below score threshold | May consider with sufficient equity |
| Credit-builder loan | Not typically offered | Widely available; specifically for rebuilding |
Fees: A Critical Comparison
Banking fees are a significant ongoing cost for Canadian consumers, particularly those who maintain lower account balances. Here’s how banks and credit unions compare:
Monthly Account Fees
Canada’s major banks are known for significant monthly fees on chequing accounts — typically $4-$30/month depending on the tier. Credit unions often offer:
- Lower monthly fees, sometimes $0-$10/month
- Fee waivers for maintaining a minimum balance
- All-inclusive packages with unlimited transactions at lower price points
NSF (Non-Sufficient Funds) Fees
NSF fees are charged when a transaction is declined for insufficient funds. Major banks typically charge $45-$50 per NSF incident. Some credit unions charge less and may offer lower-cost overdraft protection alternatives.
ATM Fees
Major banks have large ATM networks but charge fees for using other banks’ machines (typically $1.50-$5 per transaction). Credit unions often participate in shared ATM networks (like THE EXCHANGE Network) that allow fee-free access to thousands of machines across Canada.
Accessibility and Branch Network
This is one area where major banks generally have a significant advantage. Canada’s big six banks have thousands of branches and ATMs across every province and territory. They also lead in digital banking technology, with robust mobile apps, online banking platforms, and international services.
Credit unions are typically more locally focused:
- Most credit unions operate within a specific province or region
- Branch networks are smaller and concentrated in their service areas
- Digital banking capabilities vary — some large credit unions have excellent apps, others lag behind
- International banking services (foreign currency, wire transfers, international cards) are often more limited
The Shared Network Advantage
While individual credit unions may have few branches, most belong to provincial and national cooperative networks. In BC, most credit unions are part of Central 1. Across Canada, the THE EXCHANGE Network connects ATMs for fee-free access. Interac e-Transfer works seamlessly at credit unions just as it does at banks. For everyday banking within your province, the accessibility gap is much smaller than it used to be.
Major Credit Unions in Canada by Province
Here is a guide to the largest and most notable credit unions in each province — valuable information if you’re considering applying for a loan or account:
British Columbia
| Credit Union | Assets (approx.) | Membership Area | Known For |
|---|---|---|---|
| VanCity Credit Union | $29B+ | Metro Vancouver | Ethical banking, social impact, wide product range |
| Coast Capital Savings | $24B+ | Lower Mainland, Vancouver Island | No-fee banking account, accessible services |
| First West Credit Union | $12B+ | BC-wide | Operates under Envision, Valley First, Enderby brands |
| Prospera Credit Union | $9B+ | Lower Mainland, Fraser Valley | Personal and business banking focus |
Alberta
| Credit Union | Assets (approx.) | Membership Area | Known For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Servus Credit Union | $17B+ | Alberta-wide | Largest Alberta credit union; broad product range |
| ATB Financial | $56B+ | Alberta-wide | Crown corporation (technically not a CU) but CU-like in approach |
| Connect First Credit Union | $10B+ | Alberta-wide | Formed from merger; strong rural presence |
| First Calgary Financial | $4B+ | Calgary region | Strong community focus, Calgary area |
Ontario
| Credit Union | Assets (approx.) | Membership Area | Known For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meridian Credit Union | $30B+ | Ontario-wide | Largest Ontario CU; digital banking, lending flexibility |
| Libro Credit Union | $4B+ | Southwestern Ontario | Strong community investment, personalized service |
| DUCA Financial Services | $6B+ | Ontario-wide | Known for flexible mortgage lending, digital services |
| FirstOntario Credit Union | $3B+ | Hamilton-Halton region | Strong local presence, member focused |
| HEPCOE Credit Union | $1B+ | Ontario (healthcare/education sector) | Sector-specific; good rates for members |
Quebec
| Credit Union | Assets (approx.) | Membership Area | Known For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mouvement Desjardins | $400B+ | Quebec (and national through Caisse network) | Largest financial cooperative in North America; fully integrated services |
| Individual Caisses Populaires | Varies | Local communities across Quebec | Local cooperative branches of Desjardins network |
Manitoba
| Credit Union | Assets (approx.) | Membership Area | Known For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assiniboine Credit Union | $7B+ | Manitoba-wide | Social responsibility focus, broad service range |
| Cambrian Credit Union | $3B+ | Manitoba-wide | Competitive rates, good customer service |
| Access Credit Union | $4B+ | Rural Manitoba | Strong rural community focus |
Saskatchewan
| Credit Union | Assets (approx.) | Membership Area | Known For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Innovation Credit Union | $5B+ | Saskatchewan-wide | Largest Saskatchewan CU; broad rural network |
| Affinity Credit Union | $5B+ | Saskatchewan-wide | Merged from multiple local CUs; community focus |
| Conexus Credit Union | $8B+ | Saskatchewan-wide | Largest by assets; digital banking leadership |
Quebec’s Desjardins: A Unique Institution
The Mouvement Desjardins is unlike any other financial institution in Canada. With over $400 billion in assets, it is the largest financial cooperative in North America and the sixth largest financial institution in Canada overall. For Quebec consumers — including those with bad credit — Desjardins through its local Caisses Populaires network often represents the most accessible and community-responsive financial option available.
Loan Products Comparison: What’s Actually Available
Let’s compare the specific credit products most relevant to bad-credit Canadians:
Personal Loans
| Factor | Major Bank | Credit Union |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum credit score (typical) | 660-700+ | 580-650 (varies by institution) |
| Bad credit approval rate | Low | Moderate to good |
| Application process | Often online/automated | May involve in-person interview |
| Holistic assessment | Limited — score-heavy | Yes — considers full picture |
| Credit-builder loans | Not typically offered | Widely available |
| Interest rate (bad credit) | High (if approved) or declined | Generally lower than alternative lenders |
Secured Credit Cards
Both banks and credit unions offer secured credit cards — cards requiring a cash deposit that becomes your credit limit. These are the most common credit rebuilding tool in Canada. Differences include:
- Banks: Several major banks offer secured cards (BMO Air Miles Secured, Scotiabank Scotia Momentum Secured, etc.) with benefits and rewards programs
- Credit unions: Also offer secured cards, often with lower fees and more personalized service around the credit-building process
Mortgages for Bad Credit
This is one of the most significant differences for bad-credit consumers:
- Major banks: For insured mortgages, banks must follow CMHC, Genworth, or Canada Guaranty underwriting guidelines which include minimum credit score requirements (typically 600-640 minimum). Bank risk policies often set higher internal minimums.
- Credit unions: Some credit unions have more flexibility, particularly with conventional (uninsured) mortgages with 20%+ down payments. They may consider applications with scores in the 550-580 range in certain circumstances, particularly for long-standing members with strong income.
For my clients with damaged credit, credit unions are often the last stop before we have to look at B-lenders with significantly higher rates. A credit union like VanCity or Meridian might approve a mortgage at 6-7% for someone with a 580 score and 20% down, while a bank would decline outright and a B-lender might charge 9-11%. That rate difference on a $400,000 mortgage translates to thousands of dollars per year.
When a Bank Is the Better Choice
Despite the advantages credit unions offer for bad-credit consumers, there are situations where a bank is the better option:
- Your credit has recovered: Once your score is above 680-700, banks offer highly competitive rates and a wide range of products. The flexibility advantage of credit unions becomes less relevant.
- You need national or international services: Frequent travel, international wire transfers, multi-currency accounts, and coast-to-coast branch access are better served by major banks.
- You prefer digital-first banking: Canada’s major banks have invested enormously in mobile and online banking platforms. If you prefer to manage everything digitally, a large bank may offer a superior experience.
- You need specialized products: Complex investment products, business banking at scale, and certain types of insurance are often better served by the big banks and their subsidiaries.
- You’re already a customer in good standing: If you have a long-standing relationship with a bank and have been a good customer, they may still work with you even on a difficult application.
When a Credit Union Is the Better Choice
Credit unions have the advantage in these situations:
- You have bad or thin credit: The most important situation. A credit union’s flexibility and community focus gives you the best chance of approval with a less-than-perfect score.
- You want a credit-builder loan: These are almost exclusively available at credit unions and some community lenders — not major banks.
- You value personal service and relationships: If you prefer dealing with a real person who knows your name and your situation, the credit union experience is generally far superior.
- You want unlimited deposit insurance: In BC, Ontario, Alberta, Quebec, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan, credit unions offer unlimited deposit protection — better than CDIC’s per-category cap.
- You live in a rural area: In many rural communities, the local credit union is the only financial institution, and they have strong community ties.
- You want lower fees: For basic banking with lower balances, credit unions often charge fewer and smaller fees.
The Step-by-Step Strategy for Bad Credit Canadians
-
Get Your Credit Reports and Score
Before approaching any institution, know exactly where you stand. Request free reports from Equifax and TransUnion Canada. Use Borrowell or Credit Karma Canada for free score monitoring. Understand what negative items are affecting your score and when they will fall off.
-
Research Credit Unions in Your Area
Identify credit unions that serve your geographic area or community. Look at their websites for information about membership eligibility, products offered, and any specific credit-rebuilding programs. Check reviews on Google and the Better Business Bureau.
-
Join the Credit Union and Open a Basic Account
Become a member by opening a basic savings account. This typically costs just $5-$25 for a membership share plus your initial deposit. Do NOT apply for credit yet. Establish your membership first.
-
Build a Relationship Over 3-6 Months
Use your account actively. Direct deposit your income if possible. Maintain a positive balance. Avoid NSFs. After 3-6 months of good account history, you’re in a much stronger position to approach the credit union for a loan or credit card.
-
Book an Appointment With a Loan Officer
Request a face-to-face meeting specifically to discuss your credit needs and history. Bring documentation: proof of income, your credit report, and a brief written explanation of what caused your credit issues and what you’ve done to address them. This personal context can make a real difference.
-
Start With a Secured Product
If the credit union can’t approve an unsecured product yet, ask about secured options: a secured credit card, a credit-builder loan (where your loan proceeds are held in a savings account while you make payments), or a secured personal loan against an existing deposit.
-
Use the Product Responsibly and Monitor Progress
Use any approved product responsibly — make all payments on time, keep utilization below 30% on credit cards, and monitor your credit score quarterly. With 12-24 months of positive payment history, your score should improve significantly, opening up better options at both credit unions and banks.
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GET STARTED NOWThe Regulatory Framework: How Each Is Supervised
Understanding who regulates banks and credit unions helps explain their different risk tolerances and decision-making structures:
| Factor | Banks | Credit Unions |
|---|---|---|
| Primary regulator | Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) — federal | Provincial financial regulatory authority |
| Consumer protection | Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC) | Provincial consumer protection offices |
| Capital requirements | Basel III framework via OSFI | Provincial equivalents (often similar standards) |
| Deposit insurance | CDIC (federal) | Provincial schemes (varies by province) |
| Complaints process | FCAC + Ombudsman for Banking Services and Investments (OBSI) | Provincial regulator + provincial ombudsman |
The dual regulatory structure means that both types of institutions are well-supervised, though by different levels of government. Both are required to maintain adequate capital reserves and follow prudent lending practices. Neither is inherently more stable or safer from a depositor perspective.
Alternative Lenders: When Neither Will Approve You
If both the major banks and your local credit unions decline your application, there are alternative lending options to consider — though they come with important caveats:
- Online alternative lenders (Fairstone, easyfinancial, Marble Financial): These lenders specifically serve bad-credit borrowers but charge significantly higher interest rates (19.99% to 46.96% APR). They can help in emergencies or as a stepping stone, but should not be long-term solutions.
- Secured lenders: Loans secured against vehicles (auto equity loans) or property tend to have lower rates than unsecured alternative loans.
- Credit counselling agencies: Non-profit credit counsellors can help you create a debt management plan, which may be more appropriate than taking on new high-interest debt.
- Licensed Insolvency Trustees: If your debt load is the underlying problem, a consumer proposal or bankruptcy may be the most rational solution — addressing the root cause rather than adding more debt.
Payday Loans: Avoid at All Costs
Payday loans are available across Canada and are marketed aggressively to people with bad credit. They charge fees equivalent to annual interest rates of 300-500% or more. A single payday loan can trap you in a cycle of debt that is extremely difficult to escape. There is almost no financial situation where a payday loan is the right answer. Exhaust all other options — including credit union loans, secured credit cards, borrowing from family, or seeking credit counselling — before considering a payday loan.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do credit unions check your credit when you apply for membership?
Most credit unions do NOT perform a credit check simply to open a basic savings account and become a member. A credit check is typically only conducted when you apply for a loan, credit card, or other credit product. This means you can join a credit union and start building a relationship even with very bad credit.
Can I have accounts at both a bank and a credit union?
Absolutely. Many Canadians bank at both. A common strategy for bad-credit consumers is to maintain a basic account at a major bank for accessibility (ATMs, online bill payment) while working with a credit union for credit products and rebuilding.
Are credit union employees paid differently than bank employees?
Generally, bank employees at major institutions have more standardized compensation tied to sales metrics. Credit union employees are often more focused on member service. This can translate into different behaviours when dealing with your application — a credit union employee may be genuinely motivated to find a solution for you rather than hitting sales targets.
What is a credit-builder loan and do credit unions offer them?
A credit-builder loan is a specialized product where the lender holds the loan proceeds in a savings account while you make monthly payments. Once you’ve paid off the loan, the funds are released to you. The entire point is to create a record of on-time loan payments that gets reported to the credit bureaus. Most credit unions offer these; major banks typically do not.
How long does it take to improve your credit score after getting a credit union product?
Positive payment history typically begins showing impact within 3-6 months of consistent on-time payments. With a secured credit card and/or credit-builder loan, many consumers see 50-100 point improvements in their credit scores within 12-18 months of disciplined use. The starting point matters — the further down your score is, the slower the improvement initially, but the trajectory improves with time.
What happens to my money if a credit union fails?
Provincial deposit insurance protects your deposits. In BC, Ontario, Alberta, Quebec, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan, coverage is unlimited — all of your deposits are protected. In other provinces, coverage caps apply but are typically at least $250,000. Check your specific province’s deposit insurance scheme for exact details.
Can I join a credit union in a different province than where I live?
Most credit unions serve members within their province and have field of membership rules based on residency, employment, or community connection. Desjardins and Coast Capital Savings (now federally regulated) are exceptions with broader reach. Generally, you need to meet the membership eligibility criteria of the specific credit union.
The Bottom Line: Which Should You Choose?
For bad-credit Canadians, the answer is almost always: try a credit union first.
The structural differences between member-owned cooperatives and shareholder-owned banks translate directly into different outcomes for consumers with imperfect credit histories. Credit unions are genuinely designed — at a structural level — to serve their members’ financial wellbeing, not just to minimize lending risk. That difference shows up in approval rates, flexibility, personal service, and the availability of credit-building products.
This doesn’t mean banks have no role to play. As your credit improves, banks become more competitive and their scale and technology advantages become more relevant. Many Canadians end up banking at both — using a credit union for rebuilding and relationship-based services, and a bank for the breadth of services and ATM access.
The key steps for bad-credit consumers:
- Join a local credit union and open a basic account
- Build a banking relationship over several months
- Apply for a secured credit product or credit-builder loan
- Make every payment on time, without exception
- Monitor your credit score and watch it improve
- Reassess your banking needs as your credit recovers
Your bad credit history doesn’t define your financial future. With the right institutions and the right products, rebuilding is entirely possible — and often faster than most people expect.
Credit unions were founded on the principle that people helping people creates stronger communities. That cooperative spirit is most evident when we help members who have faced financial hardship get back on their feet — because when our members succeed, we all succeed together.
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