How to Become an Authorized User in Canada to Build Credit

When it comes to building credit in Canada, most people immediately think of getting their own credit card or loan. But there’s another pathway that’s often faster, cheaper, and lower-risk — particularly for newcomers to Canada, young adults just starting out, or anyone emerging from a period of financial difficulty: becoming an authorized user on someone else’s credit card account.
The concept is straightforward. A primary cardholder adds you to their account. The account’s payment history — and in many cases, the credit limit and utilization ratio — gets reported to the credit bureaus in your name. You inherit some of the positive credit history without ever having to take on primary legal liability for the debt.
But “straightforward” doesn’t mean “simple.” The Canadian authorized user system has important nuances: not all issuers report authorized users to both bureaus, different issuers handle reporting differently, there are meaningful risks for the primary cardholder, and the age requirements vary. This guide explains everything so you can make this strategy work correctly — and avoid the mistakes that can derail it.
• An authorized user is added to an existing credit card account and receives a card in their name, but the primary cardholder is legally responsible for all charges.
• Not all Canadian credit card issuers report authorized user activity to Equifax and/or TransUnion — this is the most critical factor to verify before proceeding.
• Major issuers that typically report authorized users include TD, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC, and American Express Canada.
• The primary cardholder’s account history, credit limit, and utilization ratio are all reflected on the authorized user’s credit file.
• The strategy works best when the primary account is old, has a high limit, and has a perfect payment history.
• Risks to the primary cardholder are real and must be managed through trust, communication, and often physical card restrictions.
How Authorized User Status Works in Canada
When a primary cardholder adds someone as an authorized user, the issuer creates an additional card linked to the same account. The authorized user can use this card to make purchases up to the account’s credit limit. However, the critical point is this: the primary cardholder is the only person legally obligated to pay the bill. The authorized user has no legal repayment obligation, regardless of how much they’ve spent.
From a credit-building perspective, what matters is how the issuer handles reporting. When an issuer reports authorized user activity to Equifax and/or TransUnion, the account appears on the authorized user’s credit file as if it were their own account. The reporting typically includes:
- Account type (revolving credit)
- Credit limit
- Current balance
- Payment history (whether payments have been made on time)
- Date the account was opened (which affects average age of accounts)
- Account status (current, delinquent, etc.)
The “Piggybacking” Effect
This reporting mechanism is what makes authorized user status so powerful. If your parent, partner, or trusted friend has a credit card they’ve held for 10 years, has never missed a payment, and has a $10,000 limit with a $500 balance — all of that positive history can appear on your credit file the moment they add you as an authorized user. You don’t need to have used the card yourself; the account history transfers.
This is sometimes called “piggybacking” on someone’s credit, and it’s entirely legitimate. Credit scoring agencies like FICO and VantageScore account for authorized user accounts in their models, and Canadian lenders accept credit files that include authorized user accounts as part of an applicant’s credit history.
Which Canadian Issuers Report Authorized Users to the Bureaus?
This is the single most important question before pursuing the authorized user strategy, and unfortunately the answer isn’t perfectly consistent — issuers may change their policies, and reporting can vary at the account level. That said, here is the current landscape based on available information:
| Issuer | Reports to Equifax? | Reports to TransUnion? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| TD Canada Trust | Yes | Yes | Reports both primary and authorized users |
| RBC Royal Bank | Yes | Yes | Standard reporting; both bureaus |
| Scotiabank | Yes | Yes | Reports authorized users to both bureaus |
| BMO Bank of Montreal | Yes | Yes | Authorized users reported; confirm with issuer |
| CIBC | Yes | Yes | Both bureaus; standard practice |
| American Express Canada | Yes | Yes | Reports authorized card members; verify current policy |
| Capital One Canada | Yes | Yes | Typically reports authorized users |
| National Bank | Yes | Yes | Standard bureau reporting |
| Desjardins | Yes | Varies | Confirm reporting practices directly with Desjardins |
| PC Financial / President’s Choice | Yes | Yes | Reports to both bureaus |
| Canadian Tire Financial | Verify | Verify | Confirm authorized user reporting directly |
Always Verify Directly With the Issuer
Issuer reporting policies can change without public notice. Before the primary cardholder adds you as an authorized user, call the number on the back of the card and ask specifically: “Do you report authorized users to Equifax and TransUnion?” Ask them to confirm the account number will appear on the authorized user’s credit file as well as the primary holder’s. Get a clear “yes” before proceeding.
Equifax vs. TransUnion: Reporting Differences That Matter
Canada has two major credit bureaus — Equifax Canada and TransUnion Canada — and they do not always receive identical information. This matters for authorized users in specific ways:
What Equifax and TransUnion May Report Differently
Even when an issuer reports to both bureaus, the data elements reported for authorized users can differ:
- Account open date: Some issuers report the original account opening date to one bureau and the authorized user’s “added date” to the other. This significantly affects the average age of accounts calculation.
- Credit limit: Most issuers report the full credit limit to both bureaus for authorized users, but practices vary.
- Balance: The account balance appears on both files and affects credit utilization on both reports.
- Designation: TransUnion typically marks the account as “Authorized User” in the account type field. Equifax may show it differently. This distinction matters for lenders doing manual underwriting.
When I’m qualifying clients who have authorized user accounts on their credit files, I always pull both Equifax and TransUnion to see how the account is reporting. Sometimes an account shows a 10-year history on one bureau and only 2 years on the other because one bureau is reporting the original open date and the other is reporting when the person was added. This can affect mortgage qualification significantly — lenders often want to see genuine, long-standing credit history.
How Mortgage Lenders View Authorized User Accounts
This is an important nuance that many online sources gloss over. While authorized user accounts are entirely legitimate credit-building tools, some mortgage lenders — particularly those using manual underwriting or stricter qualification guidelines — may discount or not fully consider authorized user accounts when assessing creditworthiness for a mortgage.
Their reasoning: an authorized user has no legal obligation to repay the debt, so the payment history doesn’t directly demonstrate the applicant’s own financial discipline. For this reason, the authorized user strategy should ideally be used as a bridge to your own independently-held credit accounts, not as a substitute for them.
Age Requirements for Authorized Users in Canada
Unlike the United States where authorized user rules are more standardized, Canadian issuers vary considerably in their age requirements:
| Issuer | Minimum Age for Authorized User | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| TD Canada Trust | 13 years old | Minors can be added; card issued in their name |
| RBC Royal Bank | 13 years old | Parent/guardian must be primary cardholder |
| Scotiabank | 13 years old | Standard minimum age |
| BMO | No minimum (varies by card) | Confirm with issuer for specific products |
| CIBC | 13 years old | Minors reportable; confirm current policy |
| American Express Canada | 13 years old | Authorized card member program |
| Capital One Canada | No stated minimum | Verify current policy directly |
Building Credit for Your Children — A Canadian Opportunity
The fact that some Canadian issuers allow authorized users as young as 13 creates a significant opportunity for parents. By adding a teenager to a long-standing credit card account with a perfect payment history, parents can give their child a 10+ year head start on their credit file. When that child turns 18 and applies for their own credit, they may already have a strong credit profile — potentially even qualifying for premium products with cash back or travel rewards right out of the gate.
The key: the child should not physically have the card (or should only use it for tiny purchases) to eliminate spending risk, and the primary cardholder must maintain perfect payment habits throughout.
Choosing the Right Account to Be Added To
Not all credit card accounts are equal when it comes to the authorized user strategy. The ideal account has several characteristics:
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Long Account History
The older the account, the more credit history you inherit. An account opened in 2010 gives you 15+ years of history. An account opened in 2022 gives you only 3 years. Prioritize longevity above almost everything else.
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Perfect Payment Record
Every late or missed payment on the account will also appear on your credit file. One 60-day late payment can devastate the strategy. Only be added to accounts with 100% on-time payment history.
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Low Credit Utilization
If the account regularly carries a balance close to its limit (high utilization), that high utilization will appear on your file and actually hurt your score. Look for accounts with consistently low balances relative to the limit — ideally under 30%, preferably under 10%.
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High Credit Limit
A higher credit limit on the account reduces your effective utilization ratio (assuming the balance stays low). A $15,000 limit with a $1,000 balance is 6.7% utilization — excellent. A $1,000 limit with a $700 balance is 70% utilization — harmful.
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Issuer That Reports to Both Bureaus
As discussed, confirm the issuer reports authorized users to both Equifax and TransUnion. Dual reporting maximizes the benefit.
The authorized user strategy is fundamentally about relationship capital — the financial trust you have built with the people in your life. That makes it deeply personal and requires careful, honest conversations about money, expectations, and what happens if something goes wrong.
Who Can Add You as an Authorized User?
In Canada, any primary cardholder can add an authorized user to their account — there is no legal requirement that the authorized user be a family member or spouse. However, in practice:
- Spouses and common-law partners are the most common scenario. Mutual financial interest makes the arrangement low-risk for the primary holder.
- Parents and adult children — a very common arrangement, particularly for young adults building their first credit file.
- Close family members (siblings, grandparents, etc.) where there’s a high level of trust and financial stability in the relationship.
- Friends — possible but carries more relationship risk; a financial dispute can damage both the friendship and the credit file simultaneously.
There is also a commercial “credit piggybacking” industry in some markets where strangers pay to be added as authorized users on high-quality accounts. This practice is more prevalent in the US than Canada and carries significant risks — including potential terms-of-service violations with the issuer and potential fraud implications. Stick to genuine personal relationships.
Risks and Responsibilities for the Primary Cardholder
The primary cardholder takes on real risk by adding an authorized user. This is the most important section for anyone who’s being asked to add someone to their account.
The Primary Cardholder Is 100% Legally Liable
If an authorized user runs up $5,000 in charges and then stops speaking to the primary cardholder, the primary cardholder owes every cent of it. The credit card company has no obligation to pursue the authorized user — the entire debt belongs to the account holder. This is a legal reality that must be fully understood before agreeing to add anyone as an authorized user.
Specific Risks to Consider
- Unauthorized spending: The authorized user has a physical card and can make purchases up to the full credit limit. Even if you have a verbal agreement limiting spending, you have no legal recourse against the authorized user through the issuer.
- Impact on the primary holder’s utilization: If the authorized user runs up the balance, the primary holder’s utilization ratio increases, potentially hurting their own credit score.
- Damage to the relationship: Financial arrangements between people who know each other can create tension, resentment, or outright conflict. Have a detailed, documented conversation before proceeding.
- Difficulty removing the authorized user: Removing an authorized user is actually straightforward — just call the issuer. But if the removal happens during a conflict, it can be emotionally difficult.
Risk Mitigation Strategies for Primary Cardholders
| Risk | Mitigation Strategy |
|---|---|
| Unauthorized large purchases | Request a card with a lower sub-limit (some issuers allow this); or add the user but don’t give them the physical card |
| High utilization impact | Set a clear spending limit agreement; monitor the account and remove the user immediately if violated |
| Late payment impact on primary holder | Maintain full control of the account; set up auto-pay for the full balance; authorized user should not control payments |
| Relationship damage | Create a written agreement covering spending limits, payment obligations, and exit conditions |
| Identity theft via the authorized user card | Add without issuing a physical card (many issuers allow this); monitor statements regularly |
Add Without a Physical Card
Many Canadian issuers allow you to add an authorized user to the account for reporting purposes without issuing them a physical card. This is a powerful option when the goal is purely credit building. Ask your issuer: “Can I add an authorized user to my account for credit reporting purposes without sending them a card?” If the answer is yes, this eliminates all spending risk while still delivering the credit-building benefit.
What Happens When You’re Removed as an Authorized User
This is an important question that surprises many people. When a primary cardholder removes you as an authorized user, one of two things happens depending on the bureau:
- The account disappears from your credit file entirely. With some issuers and some bureaus, the account history is removed when authorized user status ends. If this account was a significant positive contributor to your score, you could see a substantial drop.
- The account remains on your file as a closed/inactive account. With other issuers and bureaus, the positive history remains, though the account shows as closed.
This uncertainty is one reason why the authorized user strategy should be a stepping stone, not a permanent solution. While you’re benefiting from authorized user status, actively build your own independent credit accounts so that if the authorized user account disappears from your file, you have your own history to fall back on.
How to Become an Authorized User: The Process
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Identify the Right Person and Account
Using the criteria above (old account, perfect payment history, low utilization, high limit, dual bureau reporting), identify the ideal account and have an honest conversation with the primary cardholder about your request and the risks involved.
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Verify Bureau Reporting Before Proceeding
The primary cardholder should call their issuer and confirm: (a) they report authorized users to both Equifax and TransUnion, and (b) what information is reported (full history vs. only future activity). Document the response.
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The Primary Cardholder Makes the Request
The primary cardholder calls the number on the back of their card (or logs into online banking) and requests to add an authorized user. They’ll need your full legal name, date of birth, and sometimes your SIN or address. They can also request whether or not a physical card should be issued to you.
-
Confirm the Account Appears on Your Credit File
Within 30–60 days, pull your credit reports from both Equifax and TransUnion and confirm the account appears. Check that it shows the correct open date, credit limit, and payment history. If it doesn’t appear within 60 days, the primary cardholder should follow up with the issuer.
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Monitor Ongoing Reporting
Periodically check your credit reports (free reports available annually from both bureaus) to confirm the account continues to report correctly and no negative information has been added.
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Build Your Own Credit Simultaneously
Use the authorized user status as a platform, not a crutch. While benefiting from it, actively build your own independent credit accounts — a secured credit card, a credit builder loan — so you’re not entirely dependent on someone else’s account.
The Authorized User Strategy for Newcomers to Canada
Newcomers to Canada face a particularly acute credit challenge: they often have strong credit histories in their home countries, but Canadian lenders can only see Canadian credit files. Most major international credit bureaus don’t share data with Equifax Canada or TransUnion Canada (with limited exceptions).
For newcomers with a Canadian spouse, partner, or family member who has a well-established Canadian credit file, the authorized user strategy can provide an immediate head start. Rather than spending 12–24 months building credit from scratch, a newcomer who is added to a 10-year-old Canadian account may see an initial score in the 650–700 range appear within 60 days of being added.
Newcomer Banking Programs
Most major Canadian banks offer dedicated newcomer banking packages, some of which include pathways to credit building. These are worth exploring alongside the authorized user strategy:
- RBC Newcomer Advantage — specifically designed for immigrants and newcomers
- TD New to Canada Banking Package — includes credit card options for newcomers
- Scotiabank StartRight Program — credit cards and banking for recent immigrants
- BMO NewStart Program — banking products tailored to newcomers
- CIBC Newcomer Banking — includes some credit products without Canadian credit history requirement
These programs can complement the authorized user strategy — rather than relying solely on one approach, newcomers can use both a bank’s newcomer credit card and authorized user status on a family member’s account to build a more robust credit file faster.
Common Authorized User Mistakes to Avoid
Being Added to a Poor-Quality Account
This is the most consequential mistake. If the primary cardholder’s account has missed payments, perpetually high utilization, or other negative marks, all of that negative information will appear on your credit file too. Before agreeing to be added, ask the primary cardholder to pull their own credit report and show you the relevant account details. A true friend or family member will understand this request.
Not Building Your Own Credit Simultaneously
Authorized user status is a starting point. If you rely on it exclusively for years and the relationship ends or the account is closed, you could find yourself with no independent credit history — back to square one. Treat it as a foundation-builder, not a permanent strategy.
Assuming the Account Will Always Help
If the primary cardholder’s financial situation changes — job loss, divorce, health crisis — their once-pristine account could develop late payments or high balances. This would hurt your credit file through no fault of your own. Monitor your credit reports regularly so you catch problems early and can ask to be removed if necessary.
Not Checking Whether the Account Actually Appears on Your File
It happens: a primary cardholder adds you, the issuer confirms it, but the account never shows up on your credit file. This can happen due to system errors, incorrect information provided at enrollment, or bureau reporting delays. Always verify within 60 days.
How to Pull Your Free Credit Reports in Canada
Every Canadian is entitled to a free credit report from both bureaus. You can access them at:
- Equifax Canada: equifax.ca — free online report available; score available via subscription
- TransUnion Canada: transunion.ca — free credit report by mail or online
- Free credit monitoring: Borrowell (Equifax-based), Credit Karma (TransUnion-based) — free, real-time score monitoring without impacting your credit
The Difference Between an Authorized User and a Joint Account Holder
These terms are sometimes confused, but they’re fundamentally different:
| Feature | Authorized User | Joint Account Holder |
|---|---|---|
| Legal liability for debt | None — primary holder is 100% responsible | Both holders are equally and individually liable for 100% of the debt |
| Credit reporting | Appears on authorized user’s file (when issuer reports) | Appears on both holders’ files; both are primary obligors |
| Application process | Simple add-on at any time; no credit check on the authorized user | Both applicants must qualify; credit check on both |
| Removal process | Primary holder calls to remove; no consent from authorized user needed | Cannot remove one party; account must be closed or restructured |
| Risk to primary/co-holder | All financial risk stays with primary holder | Both bear full risk for each other’s charges |
Joint account holders are significantly more consequential for everyone involved. Most financial advisors recommend against opening joint credit accounts with anyone except a long-term committed partner, and even then, with caution. The authorized user arrangement is almost always preferable for credit-building purposes because it limits legal exposure.
How Long Does It Take to See Results?
The timeline for seeing credit improvement from authorized user status is typically faster than building credit from scratch because you’re potentially inheriting years of positive history in a single reporting cycle:
- 30–60 days: Account appears on your credit file (assuming the issuer has processed the authorized user addition and completed its next monthly reporting cycle).
- First reporting cycle: If the account is old, has a high limit, and low utilization, your score may jump significantly immediately upon first reporting. 50–100+ point increases are possible for credit-invisible individuals.
- Ongoing: Each month the account remains open and in good standing, your credit file grows stronger. The account’s age increases every month, the payment history extends, and (assuming low utilization) it continues to contribute positively.
The most dramatic results I’ve seen are newcomers to Canada who have a Canadian spouse or parent with a 15-year-old Big Six bank card with a $20,000 limit. They go from no credit file to a 700+ score within 60 days of being added. It genuinely looks like magic. But I always remind them — that’s not their credit score, it’s borrowed credit. They need to take the next six months to establish their own independently-held accounts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will being an authorized user hurt the primary cardholder’s credit score?
Simply adding an authorized user does not hurt the primary cardholder’s credit score — there is no hard inquiry involved. However, if the authorized user increases the account’s balance (raising utilization), this could temporarily affect the primary holder’s score. The primary cardholder maintains full control and can remove the authorized user at any time by calling the issuer.
Can I be added as an authorized user if I have a bankruptcy on my record?
Yes. The primary cardholder’s issuer does not perform a credit check on the authorized user — your credit history is irrelevant to whether you can be added. Being added as an authorized user to a good account is, in fact, one of the recommended strategies for rebuilding credit after a bankruptcy discharge.
Does the authorized user need to give their SIN to be added?
Some issuers require a Social Insurance Number to add an authorized user; others only require name and date of birth. Providing your SIN helps the issuer correctly link the account to your credit file (rather than creating a duplicate or mis-linked file), but it’s not always mandatory. If you’re concerned about privacy, ask the issuer specifically whether the SIN is required.
What if the primary cardholder misses a payment while I’m an authorized user?
A missed or late payment on the account will appear on your credit file just as it appears on the primary holder’s. This is one of the real risks of the strategy. If this happens, contact the primary cardholder immediately, understand the situation, and consider whether the arrangement should continue. In some cases, you can request the bureaus to remove the account from your file (you can always ask to be removed as an authorized user, and the account should eventually drop off your file).
Can I negotiate to be removed as an authorized user and have it deleted from my credit file?
You can ask to be removed as an authorized user at any time — just ask the primary cardholder to call their issuer. Whether the account history is then removed from your credit file depends on the issuer’s reporting practices and the bureau’s policies. In some cases the account disappears; in others, it remains as a historical closed account. If the account has been positive, you generally want it to remain on your file.
Is there a limit to how many authorized users a primary cardholder can add?
This varies by issuer. Most Canadian issuers allow multiple authorized users (often 3–9), each with their own card. However, if a primary cardholder adds many authorized users who all spend heavily, the combined balance could create utilization issues. Most people in a credit-building arrangement are added as authorized users without receiving a physical card, minimizing this risk.
Does being an authorized user help build credit the same way for everyone?
No. The impact depends heavily on what else is on your credit file. If you’re credit-invisible, the effect is dramatic. If you have a thick credit file with multiple well-aged accounts of your own, adding one authorized user account will have minimal impact. The strategy is most powerful for people with thin or damaged credit files.
Building Beyond Authorized User Status
The endgame of the authorized user strategy is to build your own independent credit profile. Here’s a roadmap for using authorized user status as a launchpad:
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Get Added to a Quality Account
Follow the criteria above. Start benefiting from the reporting within 60 days.
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Apply for a Secured Credit Card in Your Own Name
Within 1–3 months of the authorized user account appearing on your file, apply for a secured card. Your initial score boost from the authorized user account should help you get approved and potentially at better terms.
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Use the Secured Card Responsibly
Make small monthly purchases (subscriptions, gas, groceries) and pay the full balance monthly. Keep utilization under 10%.
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After 6–12 Months, Apply for an Unsecured Card
With 6–12 months of perfect payment history on your secured card (plus the authorized user account), you may qualify for an entry-level unsecured card. This is a major milestone — it means lenders see you as a creditworthy borrower on your own merits.
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Gradually Reduce Dependence on the Authorized User Account
As your independent accounts age and accumulate positive history, the authorized user account becomes less critical. You can continue as an authorized user indefinitely (if the relationship remains in good standing) or ask to be removed once you have sufficient independent history.
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GET STARTED NOWThe Bottom Line: Authorized User Status Is a Powerful but Relationship-Dependent Tool
The authorized user strategy is one of the most powerful credit-building tools available to Canadians — when used correctly. It can help you inherit years of positive credit history, give your credit score an immediate boost, and open doors to financial products that would otherwise be out of reach.
But it requires trust, clear communication, and careful account selection. The risks to the primary cardholder are real, and a poorly chosen account can actually hurt rather than help your credit profile. Approach this strategy thoughtfully: identify the right account, verify bureau reporting, and use the boost you get as a foundation for building your own independent credit history.
• Being added as an authorized user to an old, well-managed credit card account can dramatically accelerate your Canadian credit building.
• Always verify that the issuer reports authorized users to both Equifax and TransUnion before proceeding.
• The ideal account is 10+ years old, has a perfect payment history, high credit limit, and low utilization.
• Major Canadian banks — TD, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC, Amex Canada — all typically report authorized users to both bureaus.
• The primary cardholder bears all legal liability; manage this risk through trust, written agreements, and optional physical card restriction.
• Use authorized user status as a launchpad for your own independent credit accounts, not as a permanent substitute.
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GET STARTED NOWRelated Canadian Credit Guides
- 12-Month Credit Rebuilding Plan for Canadians: Step-by-Step Calendar
- Authorized Users on Credit Cards in Canada: Complete Strategy Guide
- Credit Application Best Practices: Maximizing Approval Odds in Canada
- Credit Building With Subscription Services in Canada
- How to Build Credit With a Prepaid Phone Plan in Canada
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