Understanding the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA) in Canada

Debt can become unmanageable for anyone. Job loss, medical emergencies, relationship breakdowns, business failures — the paths into serious financial difficulty are many, and they can happen to careful, responsible people. When debt reaches a point where normal repayment is impossible, the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA) provides Canadians with a legal framework to address their situation, protect themselves from aggressive creditors, and ultimately start over.
Yet the BIA is one of the most misunderstood pieces of legislation in Canada. Many Canadians with bad credit or overwhelming debt don’t understand what protections it offers, what it actually requires of them, or what the realistic consequences are. This comprehensive guide demystifies the BIA, explains all of its key mechanisms, and helps you understand whether any of its provisions might apply to your situation.
Canadian Context: Canada’s Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act was originally enacted in 1919 and has been significantly amended multiple times, most recently in 2009. It applies in all provinces and territories except Quebec for certain aspects (Quebec has its own Orderly Payment of Debts provisions). The BIA is administered by the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy (OSB), a federal government agency.
The BIA provides three main relief options for insolvent Canadians: personal bankruptcy, consumer proposals, and orderly payment of debts. Each has different eligibility criteria, costs, and long-term consequences. Understanding all three — before you’re in crisis — gives you the power to choose the best path.
What Is the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act?
The Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (RSC, 1985, c. B-3) is a federal statute that governs the legal process by which individuals and businesses who cannot pay their debts may resolve those obligations. The Act creates a comprehensive system that:
- Defines who is “insolvent” under Canadian law
- Establishes the rights of debtors and creditors in insolvency proceedings
- Creates the framework for personal bankruptcy and consumer proposals
- Governs the role of licensed insolvency trustees (LITs)
- Specifies what property can be seized and what is exempt
- Determines what debts can be discharged and which survive bankruptcy
- Establishes the duties and obligations of bankrupt persons
The BIA represents a social bargain: debtors surrender non-exempt assets and comply with certain obligations in exchange for relief from debts they cannot pay. Creditors receive a fair, orderly distribution of whatever assets exist, instead of a chaotic race to collect.
Key Definitions Under the BIA
Who Is “Insolvent” Under the BIA?
Under the BIA, a person is insolvent if they meet any of these conditions:
- They are unable to meet their obligations as they generally become due
- They have ceased paying their current obligations in the ordinary course of business
- The aggregate of their property is not sufficient to cover all their obligations
For personal insolvency under the BIA, you must also owe at least $1,000 in total debt. This is a low threshold — almost anyone in serious financial difficulty qualifies.
What Is a Licensed Insolvency Trustee?
A Licensed Insolvency Trustee (LIT) is a federally licensed professional who is authorized to administer insolvency proceedings under the BIA. They are licensed by the OSB and subject to strict professional and ethical standards. LITs:
- Administer bankruptcy estates on behalf of both debtors and creditors
- Act as commissioners of consumer proposals
- Must provide you with a free initial consultation before any filing
- Are the only professionals legally authorized to file a bankruptcy or consumer proposal on your behalf
Beware of Debt Settlement Companies: Only Licensed Insolvency Trustees can legally file for bankruptcy or consumer proposals under the BIA. Many non-LIT debt settlement companies charge high fees for services that either duplicate what an LIT provides or don’t lead to legal protection. If you’re in serious debt, consult a Licensed Insolvency Trustee directly — initial consultations are free.
Personal Bankruptcy Under the BIA
Personal bankruptcy is the most well-known mechanism under the BIA. It provides complete relief from most unsecured debts in exchange for surrendering non-exempt assets and completing required duties.
How to File for Personal Bankruptcy
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Consult a Licensed Insolvency Trustee
Schedule a free initial consultation with an LIT. They are legally required to explain all options available to you, including options that don’t involve bankruptcy. The LIT will review your income, assets, debts, and expenses to assess eligibility and advise on the best path.
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Complete the Application Documents
If you decide to proceed with bankruptcy, you’ll sign an Assignment in Bankruptcy and a Statement of Affairs. The Statement of Affairs discloses all your assets, debts, income, and expenses. You must be fully truthful in these disclosures — making false statements in a bankruptcy is a criminal offence.
-
LIT Files with the OSB
Your LIT registers the bankruptcy with the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy. From this moment, the automatic stay of proceedings takes effect — most creditors must immediately cease collection actions, wage garnishments, and legal proceedings against you.
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Complete Your Duties During Bankruptcy
While bankrupt, you must:
- Surrender non-exempt assets to the LIT
- Submit monthly income and expense statements
- Attend two mandatory credit counselling sessions
- Pay surplus income if required (see below)
- Notify the LIT of any significant change in income or assets
- Attend any creditor meetings or examinations
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Receive Your Discharge
A discharge releases you from most of the debts included in your bankruptcy. For a first-time bankrupt with no surplus income, discharge is automatic after 9 months. For those with surplus income, it extends to 21 months. Second-time bankruptcies take 24–36 months.
The Automatic Stay of Proceedings
One of the most powerful protections in the BIA is the automatic stay of proceedings that takes effect the moment a bankruptcy or consumer proposal is filed. Under the stay:
- All unsecured creditors must immediately stop collection calls and letters
- Wage garnishments must stop (with some exceptions for family support orders)
- Civil lawsuits by unsecured creditors are frozen
- Bank account seizures by unsecured creditors stop
- Utility disconnections related to debt are stayed
This provides immediate breathing room to assess options and proceed through the insolvency process without ongoing harassment.
“The automatic stay of proceedings is designed to provide the debtor with a breathing spell from the pressure of creditors and to allow for an orderly distribution of the debtor’s assets to creditors.”
Exempt Assets: What You Keep
Bankruptcy does not strip you of everything. Provincial and territorial exemptions protect certain assets from seizure. While exemptions vary by province, most jurisdictions protect:
| Asset Type | Typical Exemption (varies by province) |
|---|---|
| Home equity | $0 (Ontario) to $40,000 (BC) — equity above exemption may be seized |
| Personal vehicle | $6,600 (Ontario) to $5,000 (BC) in equity |
| Household furnishings | $13,150 (Ontario) to $4,000 (BC) |
| Tools of trade | $11,300 (Ontario) to $10,000 (BC) |
| RRSP contributions | All contributions except those made in the 12 months before bankruptcy |
| Pension income | Fully exempt in all provinces |
| Life insurance (certain types) | Generally exempt if beneficiary is a family member |
RRSP Protection: One of the most significant but underappreciated features of bankruptcy is the protection of RRSP savings (except contributions made in the 12 months before filing). This means even people with significant retirement savings can proceed with bankruptcy and protect most of their retirement funds. This protection also applies to RRIFs, DPSPs, and many employer pension plans.
Surplus Income: What It Is and How It Works
If your income during bankruptcy exceeds a threshold set by the OSB (the “surplus income threshold”), you must pay 50% of the excess to your bankruptcy estate. This is called surplus income. The thresholds are updated annually and vary by family size.
For 2025, the surplus income threshold for a single person is approximately $2,800/month net income. For a family of four, it’s approximately $4,500/month. If your net income exceeds these thresholds, you pay 50% of the excess each month until discharge.
Surplus income also affects the length of your bankruptcy: if surplus income applies, first-time bankruptcies extend from 9 months to 21 months.
Debts That Survive Bankruptcy (Non-Dischargeable Debts)
Not all debts are eliminated by bankruptcy. The BIA specifically lists debts that survive discharge:
| Non-Dischargeable Debt Type | Details |
|---|---|
| Spousal and child support | Family support arrears survive — you cannot discharge support obligations through bankruptcy |
| Student loans (less than 7 years old) | Government student loans are not dischargeable if you’ve been out of school for less than 7 years |
| Fines and court-ordered restitution | Criminal fines, traffic tickets, and restitution orders survive bankruptcy |
| Fraud-related debts | Debts arising from fraud, embezzlement, or intentional wrongdoing are not dischargeable |
| Debts from obtaining credit by false pretenses | Credit obtained through material misrepresentation (e.g., false income on application) may survive |
| Claims for personal injury caused by willful acts | Damages from assault or intentional harm survive bankruptcy |
| Director/officer liabilities | Certain corporate liabilities of directors may survive personal bankruptcy |
Student loan dischargability is frequently misunderstood. The 7-year rule means if you completed your last period of full-time or part-time studies 7 years ago or more, student loans ARE dischargeable in bankruptcy like any other unsecured debt. If it’s been 5 years and you face hardship, you can apply to the court for early discharge of student loans — but this requires a court application and meeting specific criteria.
Consumer Proposals: The Alternative to Bankruptcy
A consumer proposal is a formal, legally binding offer you make to your unsecured creditors through a Licensed Insolvency Trustee to pay back a portion of what you owe over time. It has become the more popular insolvency option in Canada, comprising about 66% of all insolvency filings.
How a Consumer Proposal Works
A consumer proposal allows you to:
- Offer creditors a percentage of what you owe (commonly 20–50 cents on the dollar)
- Make payments over up to 5 years
- Keep all your assets, including home equity and vehicles
- Avoid the stigma and some of the credit impact of bankruptcy
- Pay a single monthly amount you can actually afford
Eligibility for a Consumer Proposal
To file a consumer proposal, you must:
- Be an individual (corporations use the “Division I Proposal” or Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act)
- Have total unsecured debts of $250,000 or less (excluding your mortgage)
- Be insolvent (unable to pay debts as they fall due)
If your unsecured debts exceed $250,000, you need a Division I Proposal instead, which has different rules and higher costs.
The Consumer Proposal Voting Process
Once your LIT files the proposal with the OSB:
- A 45-day voting period begins for creditors
- Creditors representing the majority in dollar value of proven claims must accept the proposal (simple majority by dollar value, not by number of creditors)
- If accepted, the proposal becomes binding on ALL unsecured creditors, including those who voted against it
- If rejected, you can revise and refile, or proceed to bankruptcy
In practice, over 95% of consumer proposals are accepted, because creditors typically receive more than they would in a bankruptcy.
Strategy for Consumer Proposal Amounts: The key negotiating principle in a consumer proposal is that you must offer creditors more than they would receive if you filed for bankruptcy instead. Your LIT will calculate what creditors would receive in a bankruptcy (based on your assets and surplus income potential) and help you structure an offer that exceeds that amount while remaining affordable for you.
Consumer Proposal vs. Bankruptcy: A Comparison
| Feature | Consumer Proposal | Bankruptcy |
|---|---|---|
| Asset protection | Keep all assets | Non-exempt assets surrendered |
| Debt repayment | Pay a negotiated portion | Assets distributed; remainder discharged |
| Duration | Up to 60 months | 9–36 months |
| Credit report impact | R7 rating; stays 3 years after completion | R9 rating; stays 6–7 years after discharge |
| Surplus income | Not applicable | 50% of income above threshold paid monthly |
| Maximum debt limit | $250,000 unsecured (excl. mortgage) | No limit |
| Professional fees | Included in proposal payments | Set by government tariff |
| Required duties | Make payments, attend 2 counselling sessions | More extensive ongoing duties |
| Public record | Yes (OSB insolvency registry) | Yes (OSB insolvency registry) |
The Credit Impact of BIA Proceedings
Both bankruptcy and consumer proposals affect your credit report, but understanding the specifics helps you plan your recovery timeline accurately.
Bankruptcy’s Impact on Your Credit Report
- Bankruptcy appears on your credit report as an “R9” (worst possible) rating on all included accounts
- For a first bankruptcy, the notation stays on your Equifax report for 6 years after discharge; for TransUnion, 6–7 years after discharge
- For a second bankruptcy, the notation stays on your credit report for 14 years after discharge
- Your bankruptcy is also recorded in the OSB’s publicly searchable database
Consumer Proposal’s Impact on Your Credit Report
- A consumer proposal appears as an “R7” rating on included accounts
- The notation stays on your credit report for 3 years after completion of all payments
- If you complete payments early, the 3-year clock starts immediately
- First-time proposals have a shorter reporting period than second bankruptcies
Credit Recovery Timeline: Many Canadians are surprised to find they can begin rebuilding credit during a consumer proposal. While in a proposal, you can apply for secured credit cards or credit-builder loans that don’t require a credit check. Within 2–3 years of completing a proposal, many people achieve credit scores in the 650–720 range with disciplined use of new credit.
Orderly Payment of Debts (OPD)
The BIA also provides for a third option called Orderly Payment of Debts (OPD), available in Alberta and Prince Edward Island. OPD allows you to consolidate your debts and repay them in full over up to three years, with court protection from creditors during the repayment period.
Unlike bankruptcy and consumer proposals, OPD requires you to repay all principal (though not necessarily all interest). It’s best suited for people who can afford to repay their debts in full but need time and protection to do so.
Preferential Payments and Fraudulent Conveyances
The BIA contains important provisions designed to prevent debtors from giving unfair advantages to certain creditors or hiding assets before filing. Understanding these rules protects you from inadvertent violations.
Preferential Payments
A preferential payment is a payment made to a specific creditor within a prescribed period before bankruptcy that gives that creditor more than they would receive in the bankruptcy. The BIA gives LITs the power to reverse such payments:
- 3 months before bankruptcy for arm’s length parties
- 12 months before bankruptcy for related parties (family members, related companies)
Common examples: paying off a family member’s personal loan in full just before filing, or paying one credit card to zero while others go unpaid.
Reviewable Transactions and Fraudulent Preferences
The BIA allows LITs to review and potentially reverse transactions made at undervalue or to defraud creditors. This includes:
- Selling or transferring assets for less than fair market value in the period before bankruptcy
- Transferring property to a spouse or family member to shield it from creditors
- Creating artificial liens on property to reduce apparent equity
Protect Yourself: Do not attempt to hide assets, transfer property to family members, or make strategic payments to favoured creditors in anticipation of bankruptcy. These actions can be reversed by the LIT and may constitute bankruptcy offences, which are criminal. If you’re considering insolvency, consult an LIT before taking any action with your assets or creditors.
Bankruptcy Offences Under the BIA
The BIA includes criminal provisions for misconduct by bankrupt persons. Bankruptcy offences include:
- Failing to disclose all assets and liabilities truthfully
- Concealing, destroying, or fraudulently disposing of property
- Making false statements to creditors or the trustee
- Fraudulently obtaining credit after filing
- Failing to perform required duties
Bankruptcy offences can result in fines and imprisonment. The LIT is required to report suspected offences to the OSB.
Discharges: Absolute, Conditional, and Opposed
A discharge is the legal release from bankruptcy and from the debts included in it. Not all discharges are automatic or unconditional.
Absolute Discharge
An absolute discharge completely releases the bankrupt from all provable claims (subject to non-dischargeable debts). For first-time bankrupts with no surplus income, this occurs automatically after 9 months.
Conditional Discharge
A court may grant a discharge subject to conditions — most commonly, requiring additional payments to creditors before the discharge takes full effect. This occurs when the court believes the bankrupt has not fully met their obligations.
Suspended Discharge
A discharge can be suspended to a future date, giving the bankrupt time to remedy a deficiency (such as completing missed counselling sessions) before discharge takes effect.
Refused Discharge
In extreme cases — typically involving fraud, non-cooperation, or repeated bankruptcies — a court can refuse to discharge a bankrupt person entirely. This is rare but leaves the bankrupt with unresolved debt and ongoing trustee oversight.
Opposed Discharges
Creditors or the LIT can oppose a discharge, triggering a court hearing. The court examines the bankrupt’s conduct and may impose conditions. The most common grounds for opposition are:
- Failure to pay all required surplus income
- Non-compliance with duties
- Dishonesty or misconduct during the bankruptcy
- Excessive gambling, reckless spending, or unjustifiable losses
Special Situations Under the BIA
Joint Bankruptcies
Spouses or common-law partners who are jointly insolvent can file jointly under the BIA, sharing the costs of one proceeding. However, their assets, liabilities, and surplus income are assessed individually. Joint filing is only available for couples; business partners must file separately.
Second Bankruptcies
If you have been bankrupt before, the rules change significantly:
- Minimum bankruptcy period extends to 24 months (36 months with surplus income)
- Credit bureau reporting extends to 14 years after discharge
- The court scrutinizes second bankruptcies more carefully
- LITs often counsel against second bankruptcy in favour of a consumer proposal where possible
Student Loan Discharge
As noted above, government student loans are not dischargeable if you’ve been a student in the 7 years before filing. After 7 years out of school, student loans are dischargeable like any other unsecured debt. The “hardship application” (section 178(1.1) of the BIA) allows a court to discharge student loans after 5 years if you can demonstrate you acted in good faith and will face continuing financial hardship if the loans are not discharged.
Income Tax Debt and CRA
CRA tax debts are unsecured debts that are included in and dischargeable through bankruptcy or consumer proposal. However:
- CRA can be a significant creditor in many insolvencies
- CRA has special rights to offset tax refunds even during a stay
- CRA directors’ liability for unremitted source deductions or HST/GST may not be fully discharged
- Tax debts incurred after the filing date are not included
Many clients come to us not knowing that CRA tax debts are fully dischargeable. The CRA is actually one of the more cooperative creditors in consumer proposal negotiations — they often vote to accept reasonable proposals because receiving something is better than waiting for collection. If CRA debt is a major part of your total debt load, a consumer proposal specifically addressing their claim can be highly effective.
The OSB’s Role in Administering the BIA
The Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy (OSB) is the federal government body responsible for overseeing the administration of the BIA. Its key functions include:
- Licensing and regulating LITs
- Maintaining the publicly searchable insolvency database
- Setting surplus income thresholds annually
- Investigating complaints about LIT conduct
- Issuing directives that clarify how the BIA is to be applied
- Publishing statistics and reports on insolvency trends in Canada
The OSB maintains a searchable online database of all insolvency proceedings in Canada. This public record is one of the transparency mechanisms of the BIA — creditors and the public can verify whether someone has filed for insolvency.
Searching the OSB Database: You can search the OSB’s Bankruptcy and Insolvency Records at ic.gc.ca/app/scr/bsf-osb/ins/login.html. This is the official, authoritative source for Canadian insolvency records. Credit bureaus also access this database when reporting insolvency on credit files.
Alternatives to BIA Proceedings
Filing under the BIA is a significant step with lasting consequences. Before proceeding, consider these alternatives:
Informal Debt Settlement
Some creditors will negotiate directly with you or a representative to settle debts for less than the full amount. This doesn’t have the legal protection or binding effect of a BIA filing, and creditors can still pursue you for the remainder unless the agreement explicitly includes a full release. Lump-sum settlements are most common; ongoing payment plans require a formal agreement.
Debt Consolidation Loan
A consolidation loan replaces multiple high-interest debts with a single lower-interest loan. This requires qualifying for new credit — which is challenging with bad credit but not impossible through credit unions, some online lenders, or secured loan options. This preserves your credit standing but requires you to be able to service the consolidated debt.
Debt Management Plan (DMP)
A DMP is administered by a non-profit credit counselling agency. You make a single monthly payment to the agency, which distributes it to creditors according to a negotiated plan. Creditors typically agree to waive or reduce interest. DMPs don’t appear on your credit report as insolvency, but they do reduce your credit rating during the repayment period.
Informal Creditor Agreement
In some cases, especially if you have a single major creditor, an informal payment arrangement negotiated directly can resolve the situation without formal insolvency proceedings.
The Decision Framework: As a rough guide: if you can repay your unsecured debts within 3–5 years with moderate lifestyle changes, explore DMPs or consolidation. If you can’t afford to repay most of your debt but have assets you want to protect (like home equity), a consumer proposal is typically best. If you have minimal assets and cannot afford even a reduced repayment, bankruptcy may be the most practical solution.
Frequently Asked Questions About the BIA
Will I lose my home if I file for bankruptcy in Canada?
Not necessarily. If your home equity is below your province’s exemption limit, your home is protected. If equity exceeds the exemption, the LIT may require you to either pay the excess equity into the bankruptcy estate or sell the home. In a consumer proposal, you keep your home regardless of equity, as long as you continue to make mortgage payments.
Will my employer find out about my bankruptcy?
Your employer is generally not notified of your bankruptcy. The OSB database is public, but employers don’t routinely check it. The exception is if you have a wage garnishment that the LIT needs to stop — the LIT must notify your employer to end the garnishment. Some professional licensing bodies require disclosure of insolvency; check your specific profession’s rules.
Can I keep a credit card when I file for bankruptcy?
No. You must surrender all credit cards to your LIT, including any you’ve fully paid off, at the time of filing. You may not apply for or use credit cards during the bankruptcy period. After discharge, you can begin applying for secured credit cards to rebuild your credit.
What happens to my co-signer if I file for bankruptcy?
If someone co-signed a debt for you and you include that debt in your bankruptcy, the creditor will turn to your co-signer for full payment. Your bankruptcy protects only you — co-signers remain fully liable. This is an important consideration when deciding which option to pursue and how to handle specific debts.
Can I file for bankruptcy if I’m self-employed?
Yes. Self-employed individuals can file under the BIA. For the purposes of calculating surplus income, your business income after business expenses is used. Your LIT will assess whether your business can continue during the insolvency process and whether any business assets need to be dealt with.
Is a consumer proposal private?
No — consumer proposals are registered in the OSB’s public database, just like bankruptcies. However, they are not published in newspapers and most people in your life will not actively check the database. The OSB database is searchable but requires specific search criteria.
Can I travel outside Canada during a bankruptcy?
Yes, with restrictions. You must inform your LIT before international travel and may need to surrender your passport. Your LIT cannot prohibit travel without court authority, but courts can restrict travel in cases of suspected asset concealment or non-cooperation.
What if a creditor contacts me after I’ve filed for bankruptcy or a consumer proposal?
Contact your LIT immediately. Once a stay of proceedings is in effect, creditors who continue to contact you or take collection action are in violation of the BIA. Your LIT can take legal action to enforce the stay. Keep records of any contacts — dates, times, what was said.
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Life After Insolvency: Rebuilding Credit and Financial Health
The end of a bankruptcy or consumer proposal is not the end of your financial story — it’s the beginning of a new one. Here’s a structured approach to rebuilding:
Immediately After Discharge or Proposal Completion
- Obtain your credit reports from both Equifax and TransUnion
- Verify that all included debts are properly listed (R9 for bankruptcy, R7 for proposal)
- Dispute any inaccuracies in writing with evidence
- Establish a basic budget that prevents overspending
- Open or maintain a basic bank account
Months 1–12: Foundation Building
- Apply for a secured credit card with a $500–$1,000 security deposit
- Use the secured card for small purchases and pay in full every month
- Build an emergency fund of at least $1,000 to avoid falling back into debt
- Consider a credit-builder loan from a credit union
Months 12–36: Credit Expansion
- After 12 months of perfect payment history, apply for a low-limit unsecured card
- Never carry a balance above 30% of your credit limit
- Consider a car loan if you need a vehicle — these are often available to discharged bankrupts
- Continue building your emergency fund (target: 3 months of expenses)
Long-Term Financial Health
- Once the insolvency notation falls off your credit report, apply for better credit products
- Consider working with a credit union — they are often more forgiving of past insolvency than chartered banks
- Restart RRSP contributions as soon as you can afford them
- Consult a financial planner about your long-term goals
“Bankruptcy and consumer proposals are not failures — they are legal tools that allow Canadians to reset and rebuild. The Canadians who recover most successfully are those who treat their insolvency not as an ending but as the start of a new financial chapter.”
Key Resources for Canadians Dealing with Insolvency
- Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy: ic.gc.ca/eic/site/bsf-osb.nsf — find a licensed trustee, search records, consumer information
- Canadian Association of Insolvency and Restructuring Professionals (CAIRP): cairp.ca — find an LIT, educational resources
- Credit Counselling Society: nomoredebts.org — free credit counselling, debt management plans
- BDO Debt Solutions, MNP Ltd., A. Farber & Partners: Major national LIT firms
- Canada.ca Consumer Insolvency: canada.ca/en/office-superintendent-bankruptcy — official government information
- Financial Consumer Agency of Canada: fcac-acfc.gc.ca — broader financial consumer rights
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GET STARTED NOWConclusion
The Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act is Canada’s most powerful framework for addressing unmanageable debt — and one of the country’s most underappreciated consumer protection statutes. It provides a structured, legally enforceable path from financial crisis to financial recovery, with protections for debtors and fairness for creditors built into every stage.
Understanding the BIA means understanding your options before a crisis becomes a catastrophe. Whether you ultimately file a consumer proposal, proceed through bankruptcy, or use the knowledge of these options to negotiate more effectively with creditors, being informed is always an advantage.
If you’re struggling with debt, the single most valuable step you can take is to consult a Licensed Insolvency Trustee. The consultation is free, it’s confidential, and it will provide you with a clear picture of your options under the BIA and beyond. You don’t have to face overwhelming debt alone — Canada’s insolvency framework exists precisely to help you through it.
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