Collection Agency Tactics in Canada: What’s Legal and What’s Not

The phone rings at 7:30 AM on a Saturday. It’s a collection agency — again. The caller demands immediate payment, threatens to call your employer, and warns that you’ll be arrested if you don’t pay today. Your heart races. Your palms sweat. You feel trapped, humiliated, and afraid.
But here’s what that collector doesn’t want you to know: almost everything they just did was illegal.
Collection agencies in Canada are regulated by provincial law, and every province has clear rules about what collectors can and cannot do. Unfortunately, many Canadians don’t know their rights, and some collection agencies exploit that ignorance. Aggressive tactics, misleading threats, and outright harassment persist because people are too afraid or too uninformed to push back.
This guide is your complete reference to collection agency regulations in Canada. We’ll cover what’s legal, what’s prohibited, how rules vary by province, how to record and document interactions, and exactly how to file complaints when collectors cross the line. Knowledge is power — and in the world of debt collection, it can also be peace of mind.
- Collection agencies are regulated by provincial law — each province has specific rules about contact hours, prohibited practices, and your rights
- Collectors CANNOT threaten arrest, contact your employer without permission, use abusive language, or misrepresent themselves as lawyers or government officials
- You have the legal right to request that all communication be in writing only
- Recording phone calls with collectors is legal in Canada under the one-party consent rule
- You can file formal complaints with your provincial consumer affairs office — and you should when rules are violated
- Collectors must validate the debt upon request and provide specific information about the original creditor and amount owed
How Debt Collection Works in Canada
Before diving into what’s legal and what’s not, it’s important to understand how the debt collection system works in Canada.
The Collection Process
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Creditor's Internal Collection
When you miss payments, the original creditor (your bank, credit card company, etc.) first tries to collect the debt internally. Their own collections department will contact you by phone, letter, and email. This phase typically lasts 90-180 days after the first missed payment.
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Charge-Off
After approximately 180 days of non-payment, the creditor “charges off” the debt — writing it off as a loss for accounting and tax purposes. The debt doesn’t disappear; it’s reclassified as a bad debt on the creditor’s books. Your credit report shows an R9 rating (bad debt/placed for collection).
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Assignment to Collection Agency
The creditor either assigns the debt to a collection agency (the agency collects on the creditor’s behalf for a commission, typically 25-50%) or sells the debt outright to a debt buyer (who purchases it for pennies on the dollar and then collects the full amount for their own profit).
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Collection Agency Contact
The collection agency begins contacting you through phone calls, letters, and potentially other means. This is the stage where most rights violations occur, as agents are under pressure to meet collection targets and may use aggressive tactics.
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Legal Action (If Applicable)
If collection efforts fail, the creditor or collection agency may decide to pursue legal action — filing a statement of claim in court to obtain a judgment against you. Not all debts progress to this stage; it depends on the amount owed and the cost-benefit analysis of litigation.
Your Fundamental Rights When Contacted by Collectors
Regardless of which province you live in, you have certain fundamental rights when dealing with collection agencies. These rights exist because the law recognizes the inherent power imbalance between collectors and debtors, and the potential for abuse.
Right to Know Who’s Calling
Every collection agent who contacts you must identify themselves. They must provide:
- Their name
- The name of the collection agency they work for
- The name of the original creditor who assigned the debt
- A phone number where they can be reached
If a Collector Won’t Identify Themselves, Hang Up
A legitimate collection agency will always identify itself. If a caller refuses to provide their name, company name, or the original creditor’s information, you are under no obligation to continue the conversation. Hang up and document the call. This may be a scam — fraudulent collection calls targeting Canadians are on the rise.
Right to Debt Validation
You have the right to request validation of the debt — proof that the debt is legitimate and that the collection agency has the authority to collect it. Upon request, the agency must provide:
- The name of the original creditor
- The original account number
- The amount of the original debt
- An explanation of how the current balance was calculated (including interest and fees)
- Documentation proving the agency has the right to collect (assignment or purchase agreement)
Right to Communicate in Writing
In every Canadian province, you can request that all communication from a collection agency be in writing. Once you make this request (ideally in writing yourself, sent by registered mail), the agency must stop phone calls and communicate only through letters or email. This is one of the most powerful tools available to you.
Right to Dispute the Debt
If you believe the debt is not yours, the amount is incorrect, or the limitation period has expired, you have the right to dispute it. The collection agency should cease collection activity until the dispute is resolved. In practice, this right is stronger in some provinces than others, but documenting your dispute in writing creates a record that protects you.
You owe the debt — but you don’t owe the collector your dignity. Knowing your rights transforms the dynamic from intimidation to negotiation.
Prohibited Practices: What Collectors Cannot Legally Do
This is the section every Canadian dealing with collection agencies needs to know. While specific prohibitions vary by province, the following practices are generally illegal across Canada:
1. Threatening Arrest or Criminal Prosecution
Owing money is a civil matter in Canada, not a criminal one. You cannot be arrested for failing to pay a credit card bill, a personal loan, a line of credit, or any other consumer debt. Any collector who threatens you with arrest or criminal charges is lying and breaking the law.
The only exception is if the debt arose from fraud (such as knowingly writing bad cheques or obtaining credit through fraud). But even then, the criminal process is handled by police and prosecutors — not collection agents.
Arrest Threats Are Always Illegal
No collection agent in Canada has the authority to arrest you, issue an arrest warrant, or have you arrested. Period. If any collector makes this threat, it is an illegal practice, and you should file a complaint immediately. Document the date, time, the agent’s name, and what was said. This is one of the most clear-cut violations in collection law.
2. Using Threatening, Abusive, or Intimidating Language
Collection agents are prohibited from using language or conduct designed to harass, intimidate, or threaten you. This includes:
- Yelling, screaming, or using profanity
- Making personal insults or degrading comments
- Threatening violence (even vaguely)
- Using a tone designed to frighten or intimidate
- Implying negative consequences that the agency has no power to impose
3. Contacting You at Unreasonable Hours
Every province restricts the hours during which collection agencies can contact you. While the specific hours vary, the general principle is the same: no contact at times that would constitute harassment.
| Province | Permitted Contact Hours (Phone) | Sunday/Holiday Restrictions |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | 7:00 AM – 9:00 PM (local time) | Sundays and statutory holidays: prohibited |
| British Columbia | 7:00 AM – 9:00 PM (local time) | Sundays and statutory holidays: prohibited |
| Alberta | 7:00 AM – 10:00 PM (local time) | Sundays and statutory holidays: prohibited |
| Quebec | 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM (local time) | Sundays: prohibited |
| Saskatchewan | 7:00 AM – 9:00 PM (local time) | Sundays and statutory holidays: prohibited |
| Manitoba | 7:30 AM – 9:00 PM (Mon-Sat) | Sundays and holidays: 1:00 PM – 5:00 PM only |
| Nova Scotia | 8:00 AM – 9:00 PM (local time) | Sundays and holidays: prohibited |
| New Brunswick | 8:00 AM – 9:00 PM (local time) | Sundays and holidays: contact restricted |
| PEI | 8:00 AM – 9:00 PM (local time) | Sundays and holidays: prohibited |
| Newfoundland & Labrador | 8:00 AM – 9:00 PM (local time) | Sundays and holidays: prohibited |
4. Contacting Your Employer
Collection agencies have very limited rights to contact your employer. In most provinces, they may only contact your employer to:
- Verify your employment (confirm that you work there)
- Obtain your contact information (if they cannot reach you)
They are NOT permitted to:
- Discuss the details of your debt with your employer
- Ask your employer to pressure you to pay
- Threaten to contact your employer as a collection tactic
- Contact your employer repeatedly after initial verification
Employer contact is one of the most common violations I see in complaints to our office. Collectors know that the threat of employer contact creates fear — nobody wants their boss to know about their debts. But the law is clear: collectors can verify employment and get your contact information. That’s it. They cannot disclose the debt, cannot discuss the amount, and cannot use your employer as a pressure tool. If this happens to you, file a complaint.
5. Contacting Family, Friends, or Neighbours
Similar to employer contact, collection agencies can contact third parties only for limited purposes:
- To obtain your current address or phone number
- They must identify themselves and state they’re trying to reach you
- They must NOT disclose that you owe a debt
- They generally may only contact a third party once
Contacting family members, friends, or neighbours to embarrass you, to ask them to pay your debt, or to pressure you through social shame is illegal in every Canadian province.
6. Misrepresenting Themselves or the Debt
Collection agents cannot:
- Claim to be lawyers, police officers, or government officials
- Use a fake name or company name
- Claim the debt is larger than it actually is
- Add unauthorized fees, interest, or charges to the debt
- Claim they will sue when they have no intention or authority to do so
- Send documents designed to look like court papers or legal notices when they’re not
- Imply legal consequences that don’t exist
Fake Court Documents Are a Serious Violation
Some collection agencies send letters formatted to look like legal notices or court documents, complete with legal-sounding language and impressive letterheads. If you receive something that looks like a court document, verify it independently. Actual court documents are filed with the court and have a court file number. If the document doesn’t have a court file number or wasn’t served according to provincial rules, it may be a fake — and sending fake legal documents is a serious violation of collection laws.
7. Excessive Contact
While the definition of “excessive” varies by province, the general principle is that collectors cannot bombard you with calls. Ontario’s Collection and Debt Settlement Services Act limits contact to three times in a seven-day period unless the debtor consents to more frequent contact. Other provinces have similar restrictions:
| Province | Contact Frequency Limitation |
|---|---|
| Ontario | Maximum 3 contacts per 7-day period |
| British Columbia | No specific number, but “harassment” is prohibited |
| Alberta | No specific number, but “undue harassment” is prohibited |
| Quebec | Repeated calls designed to harass are prohibited |
| Manitoba | No specific number, but excessive contact is prohibited |
| Saskatchewan | Excessive contact frequency is prohibited |
| Nova Scotia | Unreasonable contact frequency is prohibited |
8. Other Prohibited Practices
Additional practices that are illegal in most or all Canadian provinces:
- Contacting you if you’re represented by a lawyer: If you’ve told the agency you have a lawyer and provided the lawyer’s contact information, they must contact the lawyer, not you
- Continuing to collect a disputed debt without investigation: If you’ve formally disputed the debt, the agency should pause collection until the dispute is resolved
- Collecting amounts not legally owed: If the debt is statute-barred (past the limitation period), the collector may still contact you, but they cannot misrepresent that you’re legally obligated to pay
- Using multiple agencies simultaneously: A creditor generally should not have multiple collection agencies pursuing the same debtor for the same debt at the same time
- Charging collection costs not authorized by the original agreement: The collector can only collect what the original creditor is legally entitled to — they can’t add their own fees unless the original contract specifically allows it
Real Examples of Harassment
Understanding what harassment looks like in practice helps you recognize it when it happens to you. Here are real-world examples based on common complaints filed with provincial regulators:
Example 1: The Employment Threat
“If you don’t make a payment today, I’m going to call your employer and let them know about your outstanding debts. I’m sure they’d be interested to know about your financial situation.”
Violation: Threatening to contact an employer to disclose debt information. The collector can verify employment but cannot discuss your debt with your employer or threaten to do so.
Example 2: The Legal Threat
“This is your final notice. If we don’t receive payment within 24 hours, we’re filing a lawsuit and you’ll have a judgment on your record. Your wages will be garnished and your bank accounts will be frozen.”
Violation: While a creditor can sue, the collector is likely making threats they have no intention or authority to follow through on. They’re also misrepresenting the timeline — lawsuits take weeks or months, not 24 hours.
Example 3: The Family Shame
The collector calls your adult child and says: “Your parent owes $12,000 and refuses to pay. Can you help us get this resolved? We’d hate for this to end up in court.”
Violation: Disclosing debt details to a family member and attempting to use family pressure as a collection tactic. The collector may only contact third parties to obtain your contact information and cannot discuss the debt.
Example 4: The Repeated Caller
A collection agency calls your home phone 6 times in a single day, calls your cell phone 4 times, and leaves multiple voicemails — all for the same debt.
Violation: Excessive contact. Even in provinces without specific call limits, 10 calls in a single day constitutes harassment by any reasonable standard.
Example 5: The Fake Officer
“This is Agent Williams with the Federal Collections Bureau of Canada. Your tax file has been flagged, and you face criminal prosecution unless this matter is resolved today.”
Violation: Misrepresenting as a government official, threatening criminal prosecution for civil debt, using a fake official-sounding organization name. This may actually be a scam rather than a real collection agency.
If something feels wrong during a collection call, it probably is. Trust your instincts and document everything. You have more rights than you think.
How to Record Collection Calls in Canada
Recording your calls with collection agencies creates valuable evidence if you need to file a complaint or defend yourself in court. Here’s what you need to know about recording calls in Canada:
The Legal Framework
Canada’s Criminal Code, section 184, establishes the “one-party consent” rule for recording private communications. This means that as long as one party to the conversation consents to the recording, it’s legal. Since you are a party to the conversation, your consent is sufficient — you do not need the collector’s permission to record.
One-Party Consent Is Federal Law
The one-party consent rule is part of the federal Criminal Code, which applies uniformly across all provinces and territories. There is no province in Canada where recording your own phone conversations is illegal. This is federal law that supersedes any provincial variation. You are always entitled to record a phone call that you are a party to.
Practical Tips for Recording
- Use a recording app: Most smartphones have built-in recording capabilities or free apps available for recording calls (such as ACR for Android or TapeACall for iOS)
- Inform the collector: While not legally required, many experts recommend stating at the beginning of the call: “I’m recording this call for my records.” This often has the added benefit of encouraging the collector to be more professional
- Note the details: At the start of the recording, verbally state the date, time, and the number that called you. Ask the collector for their name, employee ID, and the company they represent
- Save recordings securely: Back up recordings to a cloud service or computer. Don’t rely solely on your phone’s storage
- Keep a call log: In addition to recordings, maintain a written log of every call — date, time, duration, caller’s name, and a summary of what was discussed
When Recordings Are Most Valuable
Recordings are particularly valuable when:
- A collector makes threats (arrest, legal action, employer contact)
- A collector uses abusive or intimidating language
- A verbal agreement is reached (such as a settlement amount)
- A collector provides information that contradicts what was later put in writing
- You need to prove that a collector called outside permitted hours
- You need evidence for a formal complaint or legal proceeding
How to File Complaints About Collection Agencies
When a collection agency violates the rules, filing a complaint is not just your right — it’s your responsibility. Complaints trigger investigations that can result in fines, licence suspensions, and enforcement actions that protect other consumers.
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Document the Violation
Before filing a complaint, gather your evidence. This includes: recordings of calls, copies of letters or emails, your call log with dates, times, and summaries, names and employee IDs of agents involved, and any witnesses (if the call was on speakerphone, for example).
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Identify the Right Regulatory Body
Collection agencies are regulated at the provincial level. File your complaint with the appropriate body in your province (see table below). If you’re unsure, your provincial consumer affairs office can direct you.
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Submit Your Complaint
Most provinces accept complaints online, by mail, or by phone. Provide as much detail as possible: the collection agency’s name and licence number (if known), the specific violations, the dates and times they occurred, and all supporting evidence. Be specific and factual — emotional statements are less effective than clear descriptions of what happened.
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Follow Up
After filing, follow up to ensure your complaint is being processed. Ask for a reference number and the name of the investigator assigned to your file. Regulatory bodies are often understaffed and overworked, so polite persistence can help keep your complaint moving.
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Consider Additional Action
Depending on the severity of the violation, you may also want to: consult with a lawyer about civil remedies, contact the original creditor to complain about the agency they hired, report the agency to the Better Business Bureau, and share your experience with consumer advocacy organizations.
Provincial Complaint Bodies
| Province | Regulatory Body | How to File |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Ministry of Public and Business Service Delivery (Consumer Protection Ontario) | Online, phone, or mail |
| British Columbia | Consumer Protection BC | Online or by phone |
| Alberta | Service Alberta — Consumer Investigations Unit | Online or by phone |
| Quebec | Office de la protection du consommateur (OPC) | Online or by phone |
| Manitoba | Manitoba Consumer Protection Office | Online or by phone |
| Saskatchewan | Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority (FCAA) | Online or by phone |
| Nova Scotia | Service Nova Scotia — Consumer Protection Division | Online or by phone |
| New Brunswick | Financial and Consumer Services Commission | Online or by phone |
| PEI | Consumer, Corporate and Insurance Division | Phone or mail |
| Newfoundland & Labrador | Service NL — Consumer Affairs Division | Phone or mail |
Complaints Create Change
Many people don’t bother filing complaints because they assume nothing will happen. But regulatory bodies track complaints, and agencies with repeated violations face serious consequences: fines, licence conditions, suspension, and even licence revocation. Your complaint may be the one that triggers an investigation. Even if the immediate outcome seems small, you’re contributing to a system that protects all consumers.
Province-by-Province Deep Dive
While we’ve covered the general principles, each province has specific nuances worth understanding.
Ontario
Ontario’s Collection and Debt Settlement Services Act (CDSSA) and its associated regulations provide comprehensive protections:
- Collection agencies must be licensed with the Ministry
- Individual collectors must also be registered
- Contact limited to 3 times per 7-day period
- No contact on Sundays or statutory holidays
- Contact hours: 7 AM to 9 PM local time
- Written demand must be sent within 5 days of the first contact
- Maximum fines of $50,000 for an individual and $250,000 for a corporation
British Columbia
BC’s Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act and the Debt Collection Industry Regulation establish:
- Collectors must be licensed by Consumer Protection BC
- Contact hours: 7 AM to 9 PM, Monday to Saturday
- No contact on Sundays or statutory holidays
- Must provide written notice within 5 days of first communication
- Cannot communicate with your employer except to verify employment
- Consumer Protection BC can impose administrative penalties and suspend licences
Alberta
Alberta’s Fair Trading Act and Collection and Debt Repayment Practices Regulation provide:
- Collection agencies must be licensed under the Fair Trading Act
- Contact hours: 7 AM to 10 PM local time (note: later than most provinces)
- No contact on Sundays or statutory holidays
- Collectors must clearly identify themselves and their agency
- “Undue, excessive, or unreasonable pressure” is prohibited
- Service Alberta investigates complaints and can take enforcement action
Quebec
Quebec provides some of the strongest consumer protections in Canada:
- The Consumer Protection Act (Loi sur la protection du consommateur) governs collection practices
- Contact hours: 8 AM to 8 PM, Monday through Saturday
- No contact on Sundays
- Collection agencies must hold a permit from the OPC
- Particularly strict rules against harassment and intimidation
- The OPC actively investigates and prosecutes violators
Manitoba
Manitoba’s Consumer Protection Act and Collection Practices Regulation establish:
- Contact hours: 7:30 AM to 9 PM, Monday through Saturday
- Sunday and holiday contact limited to 1 PM to 5 PM
- Unique provision requiring collectors to respect requests to communicate only in writing
- Prohibition on contacting the debtor if they dispute the debt in writing
Atlantic Provinces
Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, PEI, and Newfoundland and Labrador all have collection agency regulations with similar themes:
- Licensing requirements for agencies and individual collectors
- Restrictions on contact hours (generally 8 AM to 9 PM)
- Prohibitions on harassment, threats, and misrepresentation
- Requirements for initial written notice
- Complaint mechanisms through provincial consumer affairs offices
What To Do When a Collector Calls
Having a plan for handling collection calls removes much of the anxiety and gives you control over the interaction.
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Stay Calm and Professional
Take a deep breath. Remember that you have rights, and the collector has rules they must follow. Being calm and professional — even when the collector is not — gives you the advantage and makes it easier to identify violations.
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Start Recording
Begin recording the call if possible. Verbally note the date and time. Even if you can’t record, have a notepad ready to take detailed notes.
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Get Their Information
Ask for and write down: the collector’s full name, their employee ID number, the collection agency’s name, the collection agency’s phone number, the original creditor’s name, and the account number. If they refuse to provide this information, note that refusal.
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Don't Admit to Anything
Don’t confirm the debt is yours, don’t acknowledge the amount, and don’t make any promises to pay. Simply listen and take notes. Say: “I need to verify this information and will respond in writing.”
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Request Validation in Writing
Tell the collector: “Please send me written validation of this debt, including the original creditor, the original amount, a breakdown of the current balance, and proof that your agency is authorized to collect this debt.” This buys you time and creates a paper trail.
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End the Call on Your Terms
You can end the call at any time. You are not required to stay on the phone. Say: “Thank you for calling. I’ll review the written validation when I receive it and respond in writing.” Then hang up. You are in control.
The most important thing I tell my clients is this: you do not have to engage on the phone. You have the right to insist on written communication, and I recommend it. Written communication creates a paper trail, eliminates he-said-she-said disputes, gives you time to think and respond carefully, and reduces the emotional pressure that phone calls create. A simple letter saying ‘all future communication must be in writing’ is one of the most powerful moves you can make.
Cease and Desist: Limiting Contact
While Canada doesn’t have a formal “cease and desist” process for debt collection (unlike the US Fair Debt Collection Practices Act), you can effectively limit contact through several strategies:
Written Communication Request
Send a registered letter to the collection agency stating:
“I hereby request that all future communication regarding this account be conducted in writing only. Please do not contact me by telephone. Written correspondence should be directed to [your mailing address]. Thank you.”
In most provinces, the agency must honour this request. If they continue calling after receiving your letter, each call is a potential violation you can report.
Lawyer Referral
If you’ve retained a lawyer, notify the collection agency in writing and provide the lawyer’s contact information. The agency must then direct all communication to your lawyer. This is one of the most effective ways to stop all direct contact.
Formal Dispute
If you’re disputing the debt, sending a written dispute should pause collection activity. Include specific reasons for your dispute: the debt isn’t yours, the amount is wrong, the limitation period has expired, or you’ve already paid it.
Keep Copies of Everything
Every letter you send to a collection agency should be sent by registered mail, and you should keep a copy along with the mailing receipt. Every letter you receive from a collection agency should be kept in a file. Every phone call should be logged with date, time, caller name, and a summary of the conversation. This documentation is essential for complaints, disputes, and any legal proceedings.
Scam Collection Calls vs. Legitimate Collectors
Not every collection call is legitimate. Scam calls targeting Canadians have become increasingly sophisticated, and it’s important to distinguish between real collectors and fraudsters.
Red Flags of a Scam
| Legitimate Collector | Scam Caller |
|---|---|
| Identifies themselves and their agency | Vague about identity; uses official-sounding but fake names |
| Provides original creditor information | Cannot identify the original creditor |
| Sends written validation upon request | Refuses to send anything in writing |
| Accepts payment through normal channels | Demands payment by gift cards, wire transfer, or cryptocurrency |
| Has a verifiable business address and licence | Cannot provide a verifiable address or licence number |
| Will discuss payment options | Demands immediate payment “or else” |
| Doesn’t threaten arrest | Threatens arrest, deportation, or criminal charges |
Never Pay by Gift Card
No legitimate collection agency or creditor will ever ask you to pay using gift cards, iTunes cards, Bitcoin, or wire transfers. If anyone demands payment through these methods, it is a scam. Hang up immediately. Report the call to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre at 1-888-495-8501.
Your Rights During Specific Contact Situations
At Your Home
Collection agents rarely visit debtors at home, but it does happen. If a collector comes to your door:
- You are not required to open the door or speak with them
- They cannot enter your home without your permission
- They cannot seize property from your home (only a court-appointed bailiff can do this, and only with a court order)
- They must leave if you ask them to
- They cannot make a scene or create a disturbance designed to embarrass you in front of neighbours
At Your Workplace
A collector should not visit your workplace. If they do, the same rules apply as phone contact with employers — they can verify employment and obtain contact information, but they cannot discuss your debt with coworkers, make a scene, or pressure you in front of colleagues.
Through Social Media
As social media use has grown, some collectors have attempted to contact debtors through Facebook, Instagram, or other platforms. Most provincial regulations haven’t explicitly addressed social media contact, but the general principles apply: the collector cannot publicly disclose your debt (such as posting on your wall or sending messages visible to your friends), and harassment through any medium is prohibited.
Dealing With Aggressive Collectors: Scripts That Work
Having prepared responses helps you stay calm and in control. Here are scripts for common aggressive tactics:
When Threatened With Legal Action
“I understand you may have the right to pursue legal action. If you decide to do so, please have the documents served according to the rules of court, and I will respond through proper legal channels. In the meantime, please send all further communication in writing to my mailing address.”
When Pressured for Immediate Payment
“I’m not in a position to make any payment today. I need to review my financial situation and verify this debt before making any commitments. Please send me written validation of this debt, and I will respond in writing within 30 days.”
When Asked for Bank Account Information
“I’m not going to provide bank account information over the phone. If we reach an agreement, I will arrange payment by certified cheque or bank draft. Please put any payment arrangements in writing for my review.”
When They Call Outside Permitted Hours
“I’m noting that you’ve called at [time] on [day], which is outside the permitted contact hours under [your province’s] collection regulations. Please do not call again outside of permitted hours. I’m recording this call.”
Frequently Asked Questions
A collection agency can sue you on behalf of the original creditor, or if the agency purchased the debt, they can sue in their own name. However, the lawsuit must comply with provincial limitations — the creditor or agency must file a statement of claim within the applicable limitation period (2 years in most provinces from the last payment or acknowledgment). If the limitation period has expired, the collector can still contact you, but they cannot successfully sue you. Also, many collectors threaten lawsuits they have no intention of filing — the threat itself may be a violation if it’s made in bad faith.
Ignoring collection calls doesn’t make the debt go away, but it also doesn’t create any immediate legal consequences. The collector may escalate their efforts, send more letters, or eventually recommend legal action to the original creditor. The debt will continue to appear on your credit report. However, ignoring calls is sometimes a valid strategy, especially if the debt is near or past the limitation period. Just be aware that ignoring calls doesn’t protect you from a lawsuit if one is filed within the limitation period.
A collector can only charge interest and fees that are authorized by the original credit agreement or by law. They cannot unilaterally add collection fees, administration charges, or penalty interest that wasn’t part of your original agreement. If your balance seems higher than expected, request a detailed breakdown showing the original principal, interest calculated under the original agreement, and any fees. Challenge any charges that aren’t supported by the original contract.
Absolutely. Collection agencies are often willing to negotiate because they either purchased the debt at a steep discount or they’re working on commission. They’d rather collect something than nothing. You can negotiate: a lump-sum settlement for less than the full balance, a reduced payment plan, interest rate reduction, or removal of fees. Start with a low offer and negotiate upward. Always get any agreement in writing before making payment.
First, understand that a collection agency cannot seize your assets without a court order. To get a court order, they must first sue you, obtain a judgment, and then apply for a writ of seizure and sale. This is a lengthy legal process, not something that happens overnight. Second, many assets are exempt from seizure under provincial law — including a portion of your home equity, essential personal property, and necessary tools of trade. If you’ve been threatened with asset seizure, the threat may be empty or exaggerated. Consult with a lawyer or Licensed Insolvency Trustee to understand your specific protections.
No. In Canada, collection accounts remain on your credit report for approximately 6 years from the date of the last activity on the account (the date varies slightly between Equifax and TransUnion, and between provinces). After this period, the collection notation is automatically removed. Paying the collection does not restart the clock — once the 6-year period expires, the account drops off your credit report regardless of whether it’s been paid.
They should not. If a collector contacts you about a paid debt, inform them that the debt has been paid and provide proof if available (receipt, bank statement showing payment, letter of confirmation from the original creditor). If they continue to pursue a paid debt after being informed, this is a violation that should be reported to your provincial regulator. This situation sometimes arises when debts are sold multiple times, and the buyer doesn’t have accurate records.
A statute-barred debt is one where the limitation period has expired. The limitation period is the timeframe within which a creditor can sue you to collect a debt — typically 2 years in most provinces from the date of last payment or written acknowledgment. Once the limitation period expires, the creditor loses the legal right to sue. The debt still exists, and it can still appear on your credit report, but the creditor cannot obtain a court judgment against you. If sued for a statute-barred debt, you must raise the limitation defence in your response — the court won’t apply it automatically.
Taking Action: Your Next Steps
Knowledge of your rights is only valuable if you use it. Here’s what to do right now:
- If you’re currently being contacted by collectors: Start a documentation file. Begin recording calls. Note any violations. Request written communication only.
- If you’ve experienced harassment: File a complaint with your provincial regulator. Provide all documentation and evidence. Consider consulting a lawyer about your legal options.
- If you owe money but can’t pay: Consider your options — informal settlement negotiation, credit counselling, consumer proposal, or bankruptcy. A free consultation with a Licensed Insolvency Trustee can help you understand which option is best for your situation.
- If you’re not sure the debt is valid: Request debt validation in writing. Do not pay anything until the debt is verified. Check the limitation period in your province.
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