R-Ratings on Your Canadian Credit Report: What R1 Through R9 Mean

Introduction: The Hidden Rating System Most Canadians Never Learn About
When most Canadians think about their credit, they think about one number — their credit score. That three-digit figure between 300 and 900 dominates the conversation around creditworthiness, and for good reason: it is the number most lenders use for quick decisions. But buried inside your credit report is another rating system that many consumers never learn about, yet lenders rely on heavily when making manual underwriting decisions. It is called the R-rating system.
Every credit account on your Canadian credit report — from your credit cards to your car loan to your line of credit — is assigned an R-rating that ranges from R0 to R9. Each rating communicates a specific message to lenders about how you have managed that account. An R1 tells lenders you are a model borrower. An R9 tells them the account has been written off as a bad debt or placed for collection. And there are seven ratings in between, each with its own story to tell.
Understanding R-ratings is not just an academic exercise. These ratings directly influence whether you are approved or denied for credit, what interest rates you are offered, and how lenders perceive your reliability as a borrower. If you are trying to rebuild credit after a financial setback, knowing your R-ratings — and knowing how to improve them — is essential knowledge that can accelerate your recovery.
In this comprehensive guide, we will explain every R-rating from R0 through R9, reveal what triggers each rating, explain how long negative ratings remain on your credit report, show you how to check your own R-ratings, and provide actionable strategies for improving them. Whether you are a credit-building beginner or someone recovering from serious credit damage, this guide will give you the knowledge you need.
- R-ratings range from R0 (too new to rate) to R9 (bad debt or placed for collection), with R1 being the best possible rating for an active account.
- The “R” stands for “revolving credit” — a similar “I” rating system exists for installment loans, and an “O” rating exists for open credit.
- Each account on your credit report has its own independent R-rating — one bad rating does not automatically affect your other accounts.
- Negative R-ratings (R2 through R9) can remain on your Canadian credit report for six to seven years from the date of last activity.
- Improving an R-rating requires consistent on-time payments over time — there is no shortcut to overwrite a negative rating.
What Does the “R” in R-Rating Stand For?
The “R” stands for revolving credit. Revolving credit accounts are those where you have a credit limit, can borrow up to that limit, repay some or all of the balance, and borrow again. The most common revolving credit accounts include:
- Credit cards (Visa, Mastercard, American Express, store cards)
- Lines of credit (personal lines of credit, home equity lines of credit)
- Retail store charge accounts
- Some overdraft protection facilities
Canada’s credit bureaus — Equifax and TransUnion — also use two other rating systems for different types of credit:
| Rating Prefix | Credit Type | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| R (Revolving) | Revolving credit with a credit limit you can reuse | Credit cards, lines of credit |
| I (Installment) | Fixed loan amounts repaid in set installments | Car loans, personal loans, student loans |
| O (Open) | Open credit accounts that must be paid in full each period | Charge cards, some utility accounts, cellphone accounts |
The I-rating and O-rating systems follow the same 0-to-9 scale as R-ratings. An I1 on a car loan means the same thing as an R1 on a credit card — the account is paid as agreed. For the purposes of this article, we will focus on R-ratings since revolving credit accounts are the most common type on Canadian credit reports, but everything we explain applies equally to I-ratings and O-ratings.
Every R-Rating Explained: R0 Through R9
Let us break down each R-rating in detail, explaining what it means, what triggers it, and how lenders interpret it.
R0 — Too New to Rate / Approved but Not Used
An R0 rating means one of two things: either the account is too new to have a payment history, or the account has been approved but never used. If you just opened a credit card last week, it may show as R0 until you make your first payment (or miss it). Similarly, if you were approved for a line of credit but have never drawn on it, it may carry an R0 rating.
How lenders interpret R0: Neutral. An R0 rating tells lenders nothing about your reliability because there is no payment history to evaluate. It is neither positive nor negative.
How long it lasts: Until your first payment is due and reported (typically one to two billing cycles after you start using the account).
R1 — Paid as Agreed (On Time)
R1 is the gold standard. It means you pay at least the minimum required payment within 30 days of the due date — every time. An R1 rating tells lenders you are reliable, responsible, and low-risk.
How lenders interpret R1: Very favourably. R1 is what every lender wants to see. An R1 rating on all your accounts is a strong signal that you are a trustworthy borrower.
How to maintain R1: Simply pay at least the minimum payment on every account by the due date, every month. You do not need to pay the full balance — just the minimum (though paying more saves you interest).
R1 is the only rating that tells a lender everything is fine. The moment an account slips to R2, a flag goes up. Many consumers do not realize that even a single 30-day late payment can change their rating from R1 to R2, and that change can take months of perfect behaviour to reverse. The best strategy is to set up automatic minimum payments on every account so you never accidentally miss a due date.
R2 — One Payment Late (31–60 Days Past Due)
An R2 rating means you have been late by 31 to 60 days on at least one payment. This is the first level of delinquency and the first sign to lenders that you may be struggling to manage your obligations.
How lenders interpret R2: With caution. A single R2 on an otherwise clean report may be overlooked by some lenders, especially if it occurred long ago. However, multiple R2 ratings or a recent R2 will raise concerns.
How to recover: Bring the account current immediately and maintain on-time payments going forward. The R2 rating should update to R1 after the creditor reports several consecutive months of on-time payments, though the late payment itself will remain in your payment history for six to seven years.
R3 — Two Payments Late (61–90 Days Past Due)
An R3 rating means you have been late by 61 to 90 days. At this stage, your creditor has likely contacted you multiple times about the overdue payment, and the late payment has been reported to the credit bureau.
How lenders interpret R3: Negatively. An R3 rating suggests more than a simple oversight — it indicates a pattern of missed payments or a period of financial difficulty. Lenders considering your application will want an explanation.
How to recover: Bring the account current as quickly as possible. The longer you wait, the worse the rating gets. After bringing the account current, consistent on-time payments will gradually improve the account’s rating.
R4 — Three Payments Late (91–120 Days Past Due)
An R4 rating means you are 91 to 120 days past due. By this point, your creditor may have already taken significant actions: reducing your credit limit, suspending your charging privileges, or turning your account over to an internal collections department.
How lenders interpret R4: Very negatively. R4 is deep delinquency territory. Most mainstream lenders will view an R4 rating as a serious red flag, particularly if it is recent.
R5 — Account More Than 120 Days Past Due
An R5 rating means the account is more than 120 days past due but has not yet been placed for collection or written off. The creditor is still attempting to collect the debt directly from you.
How lenders interpret R5: Extremely negatively. An R5 rating indicates severe delinquency. At this stage, the account may be on the verge of being sent to a collection agency.
The Critical R5 Threshold
Once an account reaches R5 status (more than 120 days past due), many creditors will begin the process of charging off the debt and selling it to a collection agency. If this happens, the rating may jump from R5 directly to R9. If you have an account approaching R5 status, contact your creditor immediately to discuss hardship programs, payment plans, or other options to prevent the account from being charged off. Acting before the charge-off can save your credit report from the most damaging rating possible.
R6 — Not Used in Standard Reporting
R6 is a rating that is not commonly used in standard credit reporting in Canada. In some older documentation, R6 was reserved for specific situations, but in current practice, you are unlikely to see an R6 on your credit report.
R7 — Debt Management Plan / Consumer Proposal / Orderly Payment of Debts
An R7 rating indicates that the account is being repaid under a structured arrangement. This can include:
- A consumer proposal filed under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act
- A debt management plan (DMP) arranged through a credit counselling agency
- An orderly payment of debts (OPD) program (available in some provinces)
- A consolidation order
How lenders interpret R7: Negatively, but with some nuance. An R7 tells lenders that you experienced financial difficulty serious enough to require a formal repayment arrangement. However, it also shows that you chose to repay your debts rather than declare bankruptcy (R9). Some lenders view an R7 more favourably than an R9 for this reason.
How long it lasts: A consumer proposal notation typically remains on your credit report for three years after you complete all payments, or six years from the date it was filed — whichever comes first. A debt management plan notation is typically removed three years after completion.
R8 — Repossession
An R8 rating is specifically assigned when the creditor has repossessed the security or collateral associated with the account. This most commonly occurs with:
- Vehicle repossession on an auto loan
- Seizure of goods purchased on a secured retail credit account
- Repossession of equipment financed through a secured credit agreement
How lenders interpret R8: Very negatively. Repossession means the borrower defaulted so severely that the creditor had to seize the underlying asset. This is one of the most damaging ratings a consumer can receive.
How long it lasts: Six to seven years from the date of repossession, depending on your province.
R9 — Bad Debt / Placed for Collection / Bankruptcy
R9 is the worst possible rating and indicates one of the following:
- The debt has been written off as a bad debt (the creditor has given up trying to collect)
- The account has been placed with a collection agency
- The account was included in a bankruptcy filing
How lenders interpret R9: Extremely negatively. R9 is the most severe rating in the Canadian credit system. It tells lenders that the borrower completely failed to repay the debt as agreed. Multiple R9 ratings will make it extremely difficult to obtain mainstream credit.
How long it lasts: Generally six years from the date of last activity on the account, though bankruptcy notations follow different rules depending on the province and whether it is a first or subsequent bankruptcy.
Complete R-Rating Reference Table
Here is a comprehensive reference table summarizing all R-ratings:
| R-Rating | Meaning | Payment Status | Lender Perception | Duration on Report |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R0 | Too new to rate / Not used | No payment due yet | Neutral | Until first payment reported |
| R1 | Paid as agreed | Paid within 30 days | Excellent | Ongoing while account is active and current |
| R2 | Late payment | 31–60 days past due | Mildly negative | 6–7 years from occurrence |
| R3 | Late payment | 61–90 days past due | Negative | 6–7 years from occurrence |
| R4 | Late payment | 91–120 days past due | Very negative | 6–7 years from occurrence |
| R5 | Late payment | More than 120 days past due | Extremely negative | 6–7 years from occurrence |
| R6 | Not commonly used | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| R7 | Consumer proposal / DMP / OPD | Paid through arrangement | Negative (but better than R9) | 3 years after completion |
| R8 | Repossession | Collateral seized by creditor | Very negative | 6–7 years from event |
| R9 | Bad debt / Collection / Bankruptcy | Written off or in collection | Most negative possible | 6–7 years from last activity |
How to Check Your R-Ratings
Checking your R-ratings requires looking at your full credit report — not just your credit score. Here is how to find them:
-
Obtain Your Full Credit Report
Request your credit report from Equifax Canada and TransUnion Canada. You can get free reports through Borrowell (Equifax) or Credit Karma Canada (TransUnion), or request them directly from the bureaus by mail at no cost.
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Navigate to the Trade Accounts Section
In your credit report, look for the section labelled “Trade Accounts,” “Credit Account Information,” or “Account Details.” This section lists every credit account that has been reported to the bureau.
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Find the Rating Column
Each account entry will include a rating field. Look for notations like “R1,” “I1,” “R9,” etc. The letter indicates the type of credit (R for revolving, I for installment, O for open), and the number indicates your payment status on that account.
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Review Each Account's Rating
Go through every account and note its rating. Pay particular attention to any ratings higher than R1 (or I1/O1), as these indicate late payments or other negative statuses. Make note of any R7, R8, or R9 ratings, as these are the most damaging.
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Check for Errors
If any R-rating seems incorrect — for example, an account shows R3 but you have never missed a payment — this may be a reporting error that you can dispute with the credit bureau. Incorrect R-ratings are more common than you might think, and disputing them is your legal right.
How R-Ratings Affect Your Credit Score
Your R-ratings and your credit score are related but not identical. Your credit score is a single number that summarizes your entire credit profile. Your R-ratings are account-level indicators that feed into that overall score calculation. Here is how they interact:
R1 ratings support a higher score: Having all accounts rated R1 contributes to a strong payment history, which accounts for approximately 35% of your credit score — the single largest factor.
R2 and R3 ratings cause moderate score drops: A single 30-day late payment (R2) can drop your credit score by 50 to 100 points, depending on your overall profile. A 60-day late payment (R3) can cause an even larger drop.
R7 ratings cause significant score damage: A consumer proposal or debt management plan designation (R7) will substantially lower your credit score, typically putting it in the 400 to 550 range while the notation is active.
R9 ratings cause severe score damage: Bad debts, collections, and bankruptcies (R9) cause the most severe credit score damage, often pushing scores below 500.
It is important to understand that the recency of negative R-ratings matters enormously. An R9 from five years ago hurts your score far less than an R2 from last month. Credit scoring models give more weight to recent behaviour, so even if you have historical negative ratings, consistent R1 performance on current accounts will gradually improve your score.
How Long Do Negative R-Ratings Last?
The retention period for negative credit information on your Canadian credit report varies by province and by the type of negative event. Here are the general guidelines:
| Negative Event | Typical Retention Period | Provincial Variations |
|---|---|---|
| Late payments (R2–R5) | 6 years from the date of the missed payment | Some provinces allow 7 years |
| Consumer proposal (R7) | 3 years after completion or 6 years from filing (whichever is first) | Varies slightly by province |
| Debt management plan (R7) | 2–3 years after completion | Varies by bureau and province |
| Repossession (R8) | 6 years from the date of repossession | Some provinces allow 7 years |
| Collection account (R9) | 6 years from the date of last activity | Varies: 6 years in most provinces, 7 in some |
| First bankruptcy (R9) | 6–7 years after discharge | Ranges from 6 to 7 years depending on province |
| Second bankruptcy (R9) | 14 years after discharge | Consistent across provinces |
The Date of Last Activity Matters
For collection accounts, the retention clock is based on the “date of last activity” — which is typically the date of your last payment or the date the account first became delinquent. Making a payment on an old collection account can, in some cases, restart this clock, keeping the negative item on your report longer. Before making any payment on an old collection, consult with a licensed credit counsellor or insolvency trustee to understand the implications for your specific situation.
How Lenders Use R-Ratings in Decision-Making
While credit scores provide a quick, automated screening tool, many lenders — especially mortgage lenders, business loan officers, and credit union underwriters — also review your actual R-ratings during the manual underwriting process. Here is how they typically use them:
Mortgage Lenders
Mortgage lenders are among the most thorough reviewers of R-ratings. They typically look for:
- All accounts rated R1 for the past 12 to 24 months
- No R9 ratings in the past two to three years (some require longer)
- No current R7 ratings (consumer proposals must typically be completed and discharged)
- Explanations for any historical R2 or R3 ratings
A single R2 from three years ago is unlikely to derail a mortgage application if everything else is clean. But a recent R3 or worse will raise serious concerns, even if your credit score is in an acceptable range.
Credit Card Issuers
Credit card issuers tend to rely more heavily on automated credit score thresholds, but they also review R-ratings — especially for premium card applications. Most major issuers want to see R1 on all existing revolving credit accounts before approving a new card.
Auto Loan Lenders
Auto loan lenders check R-ratings closely because of the R8 (repossession) risk. A previous R8 on an auto loan is a strong predictor of future default, and many auto lenders will decline applications from consumers with a previous R8 within the past three to five years.
Your credit score gets you through the automated screening. Your R-ratings tell the story that a human underwriter reads when they open your credit report. Both matter, but for complex lending decisions like mortgages, R-ratings often carry more weight than the score alone.
Strategies for Improving Your R-Ratings
If you have negative R-ratings on your credit report, here are evidence-based strategies for improving them:
Strategy 1: Bring All Accounts Current
The single most impactful action you can take is to bring every delinquent account current. If you have an account rated R3 (61–90 days past due), making the overdue payments immediately will stop the rating from getting worse. Over time, as you make consecutive on-time payments, the creditor will update the account’s current rating to R1 — though the historical late payment will remain in the payment history section.
Strategy 2: Set Up Automatic Payments
Prevent future late payments by setting up automatic minimum payments on every account. You can always pay more than the minimum manually, but having the automatic minimum payment ensures you never accidentally miss a due date and trigger an R2 rating.
Strategy 3: Contact Creditors About Hardship Programs
If you are struggling to make payments, contact your creditors before you miss a payment. Many Canadian lenders offer hardship programs that can temporarily reduce your minimum payments, lower your interest rate, or defer payments for a period. These programs may prevent negative R-ratings from being reported. However, some hardship arrangements may result in a special notation on your credit report, so ask your creditor specifically how the arrangement will affect your credit reporting.
Strategy 4: Dispute Errors
If you believe an R-rating is incorrect, dispute it. Common errors include:
- Payments that were made on time but reported as late due to processing delays
- Accounts that do not belong to you (mixed files or identity theft)
- Accounts that should have been closed or paid off but still show a balance
- Collection accounts that have been paid but still show as R9
File your dispute with the credit bureau reporting the error (Equifax, TransUnion, or both). The bureau must investigate your dispute within 30 days and correct any verified errors.
Strategy 5: Negotiate with Collection Agencies
If you have an R9 rating due to a collection account, you may be able to negotiate with the collection agency. Some collection agencies will agree to update your account status or request that the credit bureau remove the collection from your report in exchange for full payment. Get any such agreement in writing before making a payment. Note that this is not guaranteed — collection agencies are not obligated to remove accurate negative information.
Strategy 6: Build New Positive History
While you cannot erase negative R-ratings before their retention period expires, you can dilute their impact by building new positive credit history. Options include:
- Obtaining a secured credit card and maintaining an R1 rating on it
- Becoming an authorized user on a family member’s well-managed credit card
- Taking out a credit-builder loan designed to establish positive payment history
- Using a rent-reporting service to add your rental payments to your credit report
The Power of Patience and Consistency
Improving negative R-ratings is not a quick fix — it requires consistent, on-time payment behaviour over months and years. But the credit scoring system is designed to reward rehabilitation. As negative ratings age, their impact on your credit score diminishes. As new positive R1 ratings accumulate, your overall credit profile strengthens. The most successful credit rebuilders are those who commit to a long-term strategy and resist the temptation to look for shortcuts that do not exist.
R-Ratings and Specific Financial Products
Different lenders have different R-rating requirements. Here is a general guide to what you will need:
| Financial Product | Typical R-Rating Requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| A-lender mortgage | R1 on all accounts for 24+ months | No recent R7, R8, or R9 |
| B-lender mortgage | R1 on most accounts for 12+ months | May accept explained R2/R3 from 2+ years ago |
| Private mortgage | Flexible — focuses more on equity | May accept active R7 or recent R9 with sufficient equity |
| Prime credit card | R1 on all revolving accounts | No current delinquencies |
| Secured credit card | No minimum requirement | Available even with R9 ratings |
| Auto loan (prime) | R1 on all accounts for 12+ months | No R8 history |
| Auto loan (subprime) | May accept R2/R3 | Higher interest rates apply |
| Personal line of credit | R1 on all accounts | Strong credit profile required |
| Credit-builder loan | No minimum requirement | Designed for consumers rebuilding credit |
Provincial Differences in Credit Report Retention
Canada’s credit reporting rules are governed by a combination of federal law (PIPEDA) and provincial consumer protection legislation. This means the rules around how long negative information stays on your credit report can vary by province. Here is a summary:
| Province | Late Payments (R2–R5) | Collections (R9) | First Bankruptcy (R9) | Consumer Proposal (R7) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 6 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
| British Columbia | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 6 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
| Alberta | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 6 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
| Quebec | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 6 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
| Manitoba | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 6 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
| Saskatchewan | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 6 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
| Nova Scotia | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 6–7 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
| New Brunswick | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 6–7 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
| PEI | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 7 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
| Newfoundland & Labrador | 6 years | 6 years from last activity | 7 years after discharge | 3 years after completion |
Common R-Rating Mistakes and Misconceptions
Mistake: Closing an Account to Remove a Bad R-Rating
Closing a credit account does not remove its R-rating or its history from your credit report. A closed account with an R9 rating will still appear on your report for six years from the date of last activity. Worse, closing the account may reduce your available credit and increase your overall utilization ratio, potentially lowering your credit score further.
Mistake: Paying a Collection to Improve the R-Rating
Paying a collection account in full is generally the right thing to do, but it does not automatically change the R9 rating to R1. The account will be updated to show “paid” or “settled,” but the R9 designation and the collection notation will remain on your report for the remainder of the retention period. That said, a paid collection looks better than an unpaid one, and some scoring models give you credit for paying off collections.
Misconception: All R1 Ratings Mean a Perfect Credit Score
Having all accounts rated R1 is excellent, but it does not guarantee a perfect credit score. Your credit score also considers your credit utilization, the length of your credit history, your credit mix, and recent inquiries. You can have all R1 ratings and still have a mediocre score if, for example, your credit card balances are very high relative to your limits.
Misconception: R-Ratings Update Immediately
R-ratings are updated when your creditor reports to the credit bureau, which typically happens monthly. If you bring a delinquent account current today, the R-rating may not update for several weeks until the creditor submits their next report. Be patient and check your credit report again after the next reporting cycle.
Taking Control of Your R-Ratings
Understanding R-ratings gives you a significant advantage in managing your credit. While your credit score provides a snapshot summary, your R-ratings tell the detailed story of each individual account. Lenders read both the summary and the story, and so should you.
If your R-ratings need improvement, remember that the path forward is straightforward, even if it is not fast: bring all accounts current, make every payment on time, build new positive credit history, and let time work in your favour. The Canadian credit system is designed to reward rehabilitation, and consumers who commit to consistent positive behaviour will see their R-ratings — and their credit scores — improve over time.
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GET STARTED NOWFrequently Asked Questions
R1 is the best rating for an active credit account. It means you have paid at least the minimum required payment within 30 days of the due date for every billing cycle. R0 is neutral (too new to rate), so R1 is the highest positive rating. There is no rating above R1.
Yes. Each account on your credit report has its own independent R-rating. You could have an R1 on your credit card, an R3 on your line of credit, and an R9 on an old collection — all at the same time. Each account’s rating reflects only the payment history on that specific account.
Once you bring a delinquent account current, the R-rating on that account should update to R1 within one to two reporting cycles (typically one to two months), provided you continue making on-time payments. However, the historical late payment will remain in your payment history for six to seven years.
No. Paying a collection account does not change the R9 rating to R1. The account will be updated to show “paid” or “settled,” but the R9 designation and collection notation will remain on your report for the remainder of the retention period (typically six years from the date of last activity). However, a paid collection is viewed more favourably than an unpaid one by lenders and some credit scoring models.
An R-rating is an account-level indicator that shows the payment status of a single credit account (ranging from R0 to R9). Your credit score is an overall numerical summary (300 to 900 in Canada) that considers all your accounts, their R-ratings, your utilization, credit history length, credit mix, and recent inquiries. Think of R-ratings as individual grades on assignments, while your credit score is your overall course grade.
Yes. If you believe an R-rating on your credit report is inaccurate, you have the right to file a dispute with the credit bureau reporting it (Equifax, TransUnion, or both). Provide any supporting documentation such as payment receipts, bank statements, or correspondence with the creditor. The bureau must investigate within 30 days and correct any verified errors.
Mortgages typically receive I-ratings (installment ratings) rather than R-ratings, because mortgages are installment loans with fixed payment schedules rather than revolving credit. The I-rating system uses the same 0-to-9 scale, so an I1 on your mortgage means the same as an R1 on your credit card — paid as agreed.
Related Canadian Credit Guides
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