How Much Debt Is Too Much in Canada? Warning Signs and Solutions

Canada’s Debt Crisis: Are You Part of It?
Canadians owe more money than ever before. Household debt has reached historic levels, with the average Canadian owing $1.79 for every dollar of disposable income. Mortgages, credit cards, car loans, lines of credit, student loans — debt has become so normalized in Canadian culture that many people don’t realize they’ve crossed the line from manageable debt into dangerous territory until a crisis forces them to face reality.
But how much debt is actually too much? The answer isn’t a single number — it depends on your income, your expenses, your assets, and your financial goals. What’s manageable for someone earning $150,000 a year with no kids might be catastrophic for a family of four living on $60,000. The key is understanding the ratios, recognizing the warning signs, and knowing when and where to get help.
In this comprehensive guide, we’ll examine Canadian household debt statistics, break down the debt-to-income ratios that lenders use, identify the warning signs that you have too much debt, help you determine when it’s time to seek professional help, and walk you through every solution pathway available to Canadians carrying too much debt.
- The average Canadian household owes $1.79 for every $1.00 of disposable income
- Your total debt service (TDS) ratio should stay below 40% of gross income
- Credit card debt above $10,000 at high interest is a critical warning sign
- If you can only make minimum payments, you’re likely already in too much debt
- Multiple solution pathways exist — from self-directed payoff to consumer proposals
- Seeking help early gives you more options and better outcomes
Canadian Household Debt: The Numbers Are Staggering
Before we dive into personal assessment, let’s look at the broader picture of Canadian household debt. Understanding where you stand relative to other Canadians provides important context.
Key Canadian Debt Statistics
| Metric | Amount | Trend |
|---|---|---|
| Total household debt | $2.9 trillion | Increasing |
| Average non-mortgage debt per consumer | $21,188 | Increasing |
| Average mortgage balance | $345,000 | Increasing |
| Average credit card balance (among those carrying a balance) | $4,119 | Increasing |
| Household debt-to-income ratio | 179.3% | Near historic highs |
| Consumer insolvencies (annual) | ~137,000 | Increasing |
| Canadians living paycheque to paycheque | 53% | Stable |
These numbers tell a sobering story. Canadian household debt has been growing faster than incomes for decades, and the situation has been exacerbated by rising housing costs, persistent inflation, and elevated interest rates. The Bank of Canada’s rate hikes since 2022 have hit particularly hard, increasing the cost of variable-rate mortgages, lines of credit, and other floating-rate debt products.
Debt by Province
Debt levels vary significantly across Canada, largely driven by housing costs. Here’s how average non-mortgage debt breaks down by province:
| Province | Average Non-Mortgage Debt | Average Mortgage Debt |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | $22,450 | $380,000 |
| British Columbia | $23,800 | $420,000 |
| Alberta | $26,500 | $310,000 |
| Quebec | $17,200 | $225,000 |
| Manitoba | $18,300 | $230,000 |
| Saskatchewan | $22,100 | $245,000 |
| Nova Scotia | $19,600 | $215,000 |
| New Brunswick | $18,100 | $175,000 |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | $20,400 | $205,000 |
| Prince Edward Island | $16,900 | $195,000 |
Alberta’s High Non-Mortgage Debt
Alberta consistently leads the country in non-mortgage consumer debt. This is partly driven by the boom-and-bust nature of the oil economy — during boom times, Albertans take on significant debt (vehicles, recreational equipment, lifestyle spending) that becomes difficult to manage during downturns. The pattern repeats with each economic cycle, and many Albertans find themselves trapped in debt accumulated during the good times.
Understanding Debt-to-Income Ratios
The most objective way to determine whether you have too much debt is through debt-to-income ratios. These are the same ratios that banks and lenders use when evaluating your creditworthiness, and they provide a clear, mathematical answer to the question of how much debt is too much.
Gross Debt Service (GDS) Ratio
The GDS ratio measures your housing costs as a percentage of your gross (pre-tax) income. It includes:
- Mortgage payments (principal and interest) OR rent
- Property taxes
- Heating costs
- 50% of condominium fees (if applicable)
The Benchmark: Most Canadian lenders require a GDS ratio below 35%. Some will go up to 39% for borrowers with strong credit scores and other compensating factors.
Total Debt Service (TDS) Ratio
The TDS ratio includes everything in the GDS ratio PLUS all other debt payments:
- Credit card minimum payments
- Car loan payments
- Line of credit payments
- Student loan payments
- Personal loan payments
- Child support or alimony
- Any other recurring debt obligations
The Benchmark: Most lenders require a TDS ratio below 42%. Some CMHC-insured mortgages allow up to 44% in certain circumstances.
Calculating Your Own Ratios
Let’s walk through a practical example to help you calculate your own debt-to-income ratios:
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Calculate Your Gross Monthly Income
Add up all sources of pre-tax monthly income: employment income, self-employment income, investment income, rental income, government benefits, pension income. For example: $6,000/month gross income.
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Calculate Your GDS
Add up your monthly housing costs. Mortgage: $1,800. Property taxes: $300/month. Heating: $150/month. Condo fees: $400/month (50% = $200). Total: $2,450. GDS = $2,450 / $6,000 = 40.8%. This exceeds the 35% benchmark — your housing costs are too high relative to your income.
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Calculate Your TDS
Add your other debt payments to your housing costs. Credit card minimums: $200. Car loan: $450. Student loan: $250. Line of credit: $150. Total all debt: $2,450 + $1,050 = $3,500. TDS = $3,500 / $6,000 = 58.3%. This dramatically exceeds the 42% benchmark — you have far too much debt.
| TDS Ratio | Status | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Below 30% | Comfortable | Your debt is well-managed and sustainable |
| 30% – 36% | Manageable | You can handle your debt but have limited flexibility |
| 36% – 42% | Stretched | You’re at the upper limit of what’s sustainable |
| 42% – 50% | Strained | You have too much debt and need to take action |
| Above 50% | Critical | Seek professional help immediately |
The debt-to-income ratio is the most important number in personal finance that most people never calculate. I’ve had clients walk into my office convinced they were fine because they were making all their payments, only to discover their TDS ratio was over 55%. Making payments doesn’t mean you’re managing — it might just mean you haven’t hit the breaking point yet. Calculate your ratio today, and if it’s over 42%, start making changes immediately.
The 15 Warning Signs You Have Too Much Debt
Beyond the mathematical ratios, there are practical, everyday warning signs that indicate your debt has become unmanageable. If you recognize five or more of these signs in your own life, it’s time to take serious action.
Financial Warning Signs
- You can only make minimum payments. If you’re paying just the minimum on your credit cards and lines of credit every month, you’re essentially treading water — the debt isn’t going down in any meaningful way, and most of your payment is going to interest.
- You’re using credit to pay for basic necessities. If you’re putting groceries, gas, or utility bills on credit because you don’t have enough cash to cover them, your debt has exceeded your income’s ability to support it.
- You’re using one credit product to pay another. Taking a cash advance on one credit card to make the minimum payment on another, or using your line of credit to pay your credit card — this is the financial equivalent of a death spiral.
- You’ve been denied new credit. If lenders are turning you down for new credit products, they’re telling you that your debt levels are too high for your income. Listen to them.
- You don’t know how much you owe. If you’re avoiding adding up your total debt because you’re afraid of the number, this is itself a warning sign. Financial avoidance is a symptom of financial distress.
Lifestyle Warning Signs
- You’re losing sleep over money. Financial stress that disrupts your sleep is a clear sign that your debt has moved from manageable to overwhelming.
- You’re hiding spending or debt from your partner. Financial secrecy in a relationship is often driven by shame about debt levels. If you can’t be honest about your finances, the situation has become serious.
- You’ve stopped opening bills or checking your bank balance. Avoidance behaviour is one of the most common psychological responses to overwhelming debt. If you’re afraid to look at your financial reality, it’s time to face it.
- You’ve had to borrow from friends or family. While occasional help from loved ones is normal, if you’re regularly relying on friends or family to make ends meet, your debt is beyond what your income can handle.
- You’ve considered payday loans or other high-interest alternatives. If traditional credit options are exhausted and you’re considering payday loans (which can charge annualized interest rates of 400% or more), you’re in a debt crisis.
Payday Loans Are Never the Answer
Payday loans in Canada can charge the equivalent of 400-500% annualized interest. Taking a payday loan to manage existing debt is like pouring gasoline on a fire. If you’re at the point of considering payday loans, you need to speak with a non-profit credit counsellor or Licensed Insolvency Trustee immediately. These professionals can help you find solutions that don’t involve predatory lending.
Escalation Warning Signs
- You’re receiving collection calls. If creditors have started calling about overdue payments, you’ve already missed the early warning signs. Collection activity means your accounts are seriously delinquent.
- You’re dipping into retirement savings to pay debt. Withdrawing from your RRSP to pay consumer debt is almost always a bad trade — you’ll pay tax on the withdrawal AND lose the compounding growth that money would have provided over decades.
- Your credit score has dropped significantly. A credit score that’s fallen by 50 or more points in the past year likely indicates increasing debt levels, missed payments, or high utilization.
- You’ve maxed out one or more credit cards. Having one or more credit cards at or near their limits is a strong indicator that you’re relying on credit beyond your means.
- You feel a sense of hopelessness about your financial situation. If you feel like you’ll never get out of debt, like the numbers are too big, or like there’s no point in trying — this is the most important warning sign of all. Hopelessness is a sign that you need help, and help is available.
The most dangerous debt isn’t necessarily the largest — it’s the debt that’s growing faster than you can pay it down. If your total debt is increasing month over month despite making payments, you’re on a trajectory that can only end one way without intervention.
How Much Debt Is Actually “Normal” in Canada?
While we don’t want to normalize excessive debt, it’s helpful to understand what typical debt looks like at different life stages and income levels. This can help you assess whether your situation is within range or significantly outside it.
Debt by Age Group
| Age Group | Average Total Debt | Common Debt Types | Key Risk Factor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 18-25 | $15,000 – $25,000 | Student loans, first credit card | Low income relative to debt |
| 26-35 | $50,000 – $150,000 | Student loans, car loan, first mortgage | Lifestyle inflation as income grows |
| 36-45 | $200,000 – $500,000 | Mortgage, car loans, credit cards, LOC | Peak debt years with family expenses |
| 46-55 | $150,000 – $400,000 | Mortgage (declining), credit cards, LOC | Debt should be declining but often isn’t |
| 56-65 | $75,000 – $200,000 | Remaining mortgage, LOC, credit cards | Approaching retirement with debt |
| 65+ | $20,000 – $100,000 | Credit cards, LOC, remaining mortgage | Fixed income with persistent debt |
When “Normal” Is Still Too Much
Just because your debt level is “average” doesn’t mean it’s healthy. The average Canadian has too much debt — that’s the whole point. The question isn’t whether you’re normal; it’s whether your debt is sustainable given your specific income, expenses, and financial goals.
A better framework is this: Your debt is too much if any of the following are true:
- Your TDS ratio exceeds 42%
- Your non-mortgage debt exceeds 20% of your annual gross income
- You couldn’t handle a $500 unexpected expense without going into more debt
- It would take you more than 3 years to pay off all non-mortgage debt at your current rate
- Your debt is increasing month over month
The 20% Non-Mortgage Debt Rule
A useful rule of thumb: your total non-mortgage debt (credit cards, car loans, lines of credit, student loans, personal loans) should not exceed 20% of your annual gross income. If you earn $70,000, your non-mortgage debt should be below $14,000. If it’s above that threshold, you need a focused debt reduction plan. If it’s double that threshold or more, consider professional help.
The Real Cost of Too Much Debt
Beyond the stress and anxiety, carrying too much debt has measurable financial consequences that most Canadians underestimate:
Interest Costs
The most obvious cost of debt is interest. Let’s look at how much interest typical Canadian debt loads cost over time:
| Debt Type | Balance | Interest Rate | Minimum Payment | Time to Pay Off | Total Interest Paid |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Credit card | $10,000 | 19.99% | $200/month | 9+ years | $12,400+ |
| Department store card | $3,000 | 28.8% | $60/month | 12+ years | $5,600+ |
| Line of credit | $15,000 | 9.5% | $150/month | 13+ years | $8,200+ |
| Car loan | $25,000 | 6.9% | $490/month | 5 years | $4,400 |
Opportunity Cost
Every dollar that goes to debt payments is a dollar that isn’t being saved or invested. Consider this: if you’re paying $500/month in credit card interest and fees, that’s $6,000 per year. Invested at a 7% average annual return over 20 years, that $6,000/year would grow to approximately $262,000. That’s the true cost of carrying too much debt — not just what you pay in interest, but what you lose in potential wealth.
Quality of Life Cost
Research consistently shows that financial stress from debt is associated with higher rates of anxiety, depression, relationship conflict, and even physical health problems. A 2024 study by the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada found that Canadians with high debt-to-income ratios were three times more likely to report poor mental health than those with manageable debt levels.
The psychological burden of too much debt is often more damaging than the financial burden. I see clients who can technically make their payments but are living in a constant state of anxiety, unable to enjoy anything because the weight of debt colours every experience. The freedom that comes from getting debt under control isn’t just financial — it’s emotional, relational, and even physical.
When to Seek Help: The Decision Framework
Knowing when to seek professional help for debt is crucial. Too many Canadians wait until they’re in crisis — when they have the fewest options and the worst outcomes. Here’s a framework for deciding when self-directed debt payoff is appropriate and when professional help is needed.
Level 1: Self-Directed Payoff (TDS Below 42%)
If your TDS ratio is below 42% and you can cover all your expenses without using credit, you can likely manage your debt on your own with a focused payoff strategy. Use either the avalanche method (pay highest interest first) or the snowball method (pay smallest balance first) to systematically eliminate your debts.
Level 2: Credit Counselling (TDS 42-50%)
If your TDS is between 42% and 50% and you’re struggling to make progress on your debt, a non-profit credit counselling agency can help. They offer free consultations and can set up a Debt Management Program (DMP) that consolidates your payments and may reduce or eliminate interest charges.
Level 3: Debt Consolidation (TDS 42-55%, Good Credit)
If you still have decent credit (660+), you may qualify for a debt consolidation loan at a lower interest rate than your current debts. This can reduce your monthly payments and simplify your debt into a single payment. However, consolidation only works if you don’t continue accumulating new debt.
Level 4: Consumer Proposal (TDS Above 50%, or Unable to Pay Full Debts)
If you owe more than you can realistically pay in full, a consumer proposal — filed through a Licensed Insolvency Trustee — allows you to settle your debts for a reduced amount, typically 30-50% of what you owe. Payments are spread over up to 5 years, and creditors cannot take legal action against you during the proposal.
Level 5: Bankruptcy (Last Resort)
Bankruptcy should only be considered when other options have been exhausted. It provides legal protection from creditors and eliminates most unsecured debts, but it comes with significant consequences for your credit report and may affect certain assets and future financial opportunities.
Solution Pathway 1: The Self-Directed Debt Payoff
If your debt is manageable but needs attention, a self-directed approach can work. Here are the two most popular methods:
The Avalanche Method (Mathematically Optimal)
With the avalanche method, you make minimum payments on all debts except the one with the highest interest rate. You put every extra dollar toward that highest-interest debt until it’s paid off, then move to the next highest, and so on.
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List All Debts by Interest Rate
Create a list of every debt you have, ordered from highest interest rate to lowest. Include the balance, minimum payment, and interest rate for each. Your credit card at 19.99% goes at the top; your car loan at 4.9% goes near the bottom.
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Determine Your Monthly Debt Budget
Calculate how much total money you can put toward debt payments each month. This includes all minimum payments plus any additional amount you can scrape together through cutting expenses or increasing income.
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Pay Minimums on Everything Except the Top Debt
Make minimum payments on all debts except the one at the top of your list (highest interest rate). Put every remaining dollar from your debt budget toward that top debt.
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Roll the Payment When a Debt Is Paid Off
When the top debt is eliminated, take the entire amount you were paying on it and add it to the minimum payment on the next debt. This creates a growing “snowball” of payment that accelerates your payoff.
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Repeat Until Debt-Free
Continue the process through each debt on your list. As each debt is eliminated, the payment grows larger and each subsequent debt is paid off faster. The final debts — typically lower-interest ones — will be eliminated quickly with the large payment amount.
The Snowball Method (Psychologically Optimal)
The snowball method works the same way, but instead of ordering debts by interest rate, you order them by balance — smallest to largest. You pay off the smallest balance first, then the next smallest, and so on. While this costs slightly more in interest than the avalanche method, research shows it’s more effective for many people because the quick wins (paying off small debts early) provide psychological momentum.
| Factor | Avalanche Method | Snowball Method |
|---|---|---|
| Order of payoff | Highest interest rate first | Smallest balance first |
| Total interest paid | Less (mathematically optimal) | More (but often marginal difference) |
| Psychological benefit | Lower | Higher (quick wins build momentum) |
| Best for | Disciplined, numbers-oriented people | People who need motivation and quick wins |
| Risk of giving up | Higher (first debt may take longest to pay off) | Lower (frequent sense of accomplishment) |
The Hybrid Approach
Many financial advisors recommend a hybrid approach: pay off any very small debts first (under $500) for quick psychological wins, then switch to the avalanche method for the remaining debts. This gives you the motivational benefit of early wins while minimizing total interest paid on your larger debts.
Solution Pathway 2: Credit Counselling and Debt Management Programs
Non-profit credit counselling agencies across Canada provide free consultations and can set up formal Debt Management Programs (DMPs) for consumers who need help managing their debt.
How a Debt Management Program Works
In a DMP, the credit counselling agency negotiates with your creditors to reduce or eliminate interest charges. You make a single monthly payment to the agency, which distributes the funds to your creditors according to the agreed-upon plan. DMPs typically last 3-5 years.
Benefits of a DMP
- Interest rates reduced to 0-6% (down from 19.99%+ on credit cards)
- Single monthly payment instead of multiple payments
- Collection calls stop once the program is established
- You pay back 100% of the principal you owe
- Less severe credit report impact than a consumer proposal or bankruptcy
Limitations of a DMP
- You must pay 100% of the principal — no debt reduction
- Creditors can choose not to participate
- Your credit cards are closed when you enter the program
- A notation appears on your credit report indicating you’re in a DMP
- Monthly payments may still be higher than you can afford if your total debt is very high
Finding a Reputable Credit Counselling Agency
Look for agencies accredited by Credit Counselling Canada — the national association for non-profit credit counselling organizations. Be cautious of for-profit debt settlement companies that charge high fees and may make promises they can’t keep. Legitimate non-profit agencies charge minimal or no fees for their services.
Avoid For-Profit Debt Settlement Companies
For-profit debt settlement companies operate differently from non-profit credit counsellors, and the results are often much worse. These companies typically charge fees of 15-25% of your enrolled debt, instruct you to stop paying creditors (damaging your credit), and then attempt to settle your debts for less. Many consumers who use these services end up worse off — with lower credit scores, more debt (from accumulated interest and fees), and potential legal action from creditors. Always start with a non-profit credit counsellor.
Solution Pathway 3: Debt Consolidation
Debt consolidation involves taking out a single loan to pay off multiple debts. The goal is to get a lower interest rate and simplify your payments.
Types of Consolidation Available in Canada
| Consolidation Method | Typical Rate | Credit Score Required | Key Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal consolidation loan | 8-15% | 650+ | Must qualify based on income and credit |
| Line of credit consolidation | 7-12% | 680+ | Revolving credit can lead to re-borrowing |
| Balance transfer credit card | 0-3% promo (6-12 months) | 700+ | High rate kicks in after promo period |
| Home equity line of credit (HELOC) | 6-9% | 650+ | Your home is collateral — higher risk |
| Debt consolidation through credit union | 7-14% | 600+ | May require membership |
Debt consolidation is a powerful tool, but it only works if you change the behaviour that got you into debt in the first place. I’ve seen countless clients consolidate their credit card debt into a lower-rate loan, then run their credit cards back up to the limit within 18 months. If you consolidate, close or freeze the credit cards you’ve paid off — otherwise you’ll end up with the consolidation loan AND new credit card debt.
Solution Pathway 4: Consumer Proposals
A consumer proposal is a legally binding agreement between you and your creditors, filed through a Licensed Insolvency Trustee (LIT). It’s the most popular formal insolvency option in Canada, and for good reason — it allows you to settle your debts for significantly less than you owe while keeping your assets.
How Consumer Proposals Work
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Consultation With a Licensed Insolvency Trustee
Meet with an LIT for a free, confidential assessment. The LIT will review your income, expenses, debts, and assets to determine whether a consumer proposal is appropriate and what terms might be acceptable to your creditors.
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Proposal Development
The LIT develops a proposal that offers your creditors more than they would receive if you declared bankruptcy, but less than the full amount owed. Typical proposals offer creditors 30-50% of the total debt, paid over up to 60 months (5 years).
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Filing and Creditor Voting
Once you sign the proposal, it’s filed with the federal government. Creditors have 45 days to vote on the proposal. For the proposal to be accepted, a majority of creditors (by dollar value) must vote in favour. If no creditors actively reject the proposal within 45 days, it’s deemed accepted.
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Making Payments
You make regular payments to the LIT as outlined in the proposal. During the proposal period, creditors cannot take legal action against you, garnish your wages, or contact you for collection. Interest stops accruing on all debts included in the proposal.
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Completion and Discharge
Once all payments are made, you receive a Certificate of Full Performance. The remaining unpaid portion of your debts is legally eliminated. The consumer proposal notation stays on your credit report for 3 years after completion.
Consumer Proposal vs. Bankruptcy
| Factor | Consumer Proposal | Bankruptcy |
|---|---|---|
| Debt repayment | Typically 30-50% of total | May be as low as 0% for low income |
| Duration | Up to 5 years | 9-21 months (first bankruptcy) |
| Asset protection | Keep all assets | May lose some non-exempt assets |
| Credit report impact | R7 rating; removed 3 years after completion | R9 rating; removed 6-7 years after discharge |
| Income reporting | No surplus income requirement | Must report monthly income; surplus income extends bankruptcy |
| Flexibility | Can be amended if circumstances change | Limited flexibility once filed |
Solution Pathway 5: Bankruptcy (Last Resort)
Bankruptcy should be considered only when all other options have been exhausted or when your debt is so overwhelming that no other solution is viable. While bankruptcy provides a fresh start, it comes with significant consequences.
What Bankruptcy Means in Canada
- Most unsecured debts (credit cards, lines of credit, personal loans) are eliminated
- Some debts survive bankruptcy (student loans less than 7 years old, child support, court fines, fraud-related debts)
- You may lose certain non-exempt assets (rules vary by province)
- Your credit report shows an R9 rating for 6-7 years after discharge
- Surplus income may extend the bankruptcy period
- Certain professional licences may be affected
Exempt Assets in Bankruptcy Vary by Province
Every province has different rules about what assets you can keep in bankruptcy. Generally, you can keep basic household furnishings, clothing, tools of your trade (up to a limit), and a modest vehicle. Your primary residence may be protected to a certain value in some provinces. RRSP contributions (except those made in the 12 months before bankruptcy) are protected federally. Consult an LIT in your province for specific exemption details.
Creating Your Personal Debt Action Plan
Regardless of which solution pathway is right for you, start with a clear understanding of your situation and a concrete plan of action.
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Face the Numbers
Add up every debt you have — credit cards, lines of credit, car loans, student loans, money owed to family, everything. Write it all down. Calculate your total debt, your total monthly payments, and your TDS ratio. This is your starting point.
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Assess Your Income and Expenses
Create a detailed monthly budget. Track every dollar coming in and going out. Identify areas where you can cut expenses and redirect money toward debt. Even small changes — cutting subscriptions, reducing dining out, switching insurance providers — can add up significantly.
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Determine Your Debt Solution Level
Based on your TDS ratio and warning signs, determine which solution pathway is appropriate. If your TDS is below 42% and you can make more than minimum payments, start self-directed. If it’s higher or you’re struggling, consult a non-profit credit counsellor or LIT.
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Get Professional Guidance
Even if you plan to manage your debt on your own, consider a free consultation with a non-profit credit counsellor. They can review your situation objectively, identify options you might not have considered, and provide accountability. For more serious situations, consult a Licensed Insolvency Trustee.
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Implement and Monitor
Put your plan into action and track your progress monthly. Celebrate milestones — every paid-off debt is a victory. Adjust your plan as needed based on changing circumstances. The most important thing is to start and stay consistent.
Join 10,000+ Canadians who started their credit journey with Credit Resources.
GET STARTED NOWBuilding Financial Resilience After Debt
Getting out of debt is only half the battle. Building financial resilience prevents you from falling back into the same trap. Here are the key habits to develop once you’ve addressed your debt:
Emergency Fund
Build a cash reserve of 3-6 months of living expenses. Start with a small goal — even $1,000 provides a buffer against unexpected expenses that might otherwise go on credit. Use a high-interest savings account to earn some return while keeping the money accessible.
Automatic Savings
Set up automatic transfers to savings on payday, before you have a chance to spend the money. Even $50-100 per paycheque adds up over time. Treat savings as a non-negotiable expense, just like rent or groceries.
Income Diversification
Consider ways to increase your income beyond your primary job. Side gigs, freelance work, rental income, or investments can provide additional cash flow that accelerates debt payoff and builds savings simultaneously.
Financial Education
Invest time in learning about personal finance, budgeting, and investing. Free resources from the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada, non-profit credit counselling agencies, and reputable financial websites can help you develop the knowledge and skills to manage your money effectively for life.
Getting into debt is easy. Getting out of debt is hard. Staying out of debt requires a fundamental shift in how you think about money, spending, and financial security. But that shift is possible for everyone — and it starts with a single decision to take control.
Resources for Canadians in Debt
If you’re dealing with too much debt, you’re not alone, and there are many resources available to help:
| Resource | What They Offer | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Credit Counselling Canada | Free consultations, budgeting help, DMPs | Free or low cost |
| Licensed Insolvency Trustees | Consumer proposals, bankruptcy, free initial consultation | Free initial consultation; fees are regulated |
| Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC) | Educational resources, complaint handling, tools | Free |
| 211 (dial 2-1-1) | Connection to local social services including financial help | Free |
| Your bank’s financial hardship department | Payment deferrals, interest rate reductions, restructuring | Free |
| Provincial consumer protection offices | Complaint handling, debt-related regulation information | Free |
| Money Mentors (Alberta) | Orderly Payment of Debts program, counselling | Low cost |
Frequently Asked Questions
A healthy total debt service (TDS) ratio is below 36%, meaning your total monthly debt payments (including housing) consume less than 36% of your gross monthly income. The maximum most lenders will accept is 42%, though some will stretch to 44% for strong borrowers. If your TDS ratio exceeds 42%, you have too much debt and need to take action.
Any credit card debt that you can’t pay off in full each month is technically too much, because you’re paying interest (typically 19.99%+) on consumer purchases. As a practical benchmark, if your credit card debt exceeds $5,000 and you can only make minimum payments, you’re in dangerous territory. If it exceeds $10,000 under the same conditions, you should seek professional guidance.
A consumer proposal will significantly impact your credit — it’s reported as an R7 rating and stays on your report for 3 years after completion. However, if you’re considering a consumer proposal, your credit is likely already damaged from missed payments, collections, and high utilization. Many people find that their credit score actually begins recovering faster after completing a consumer proposal than it would have if they’d continued struggling with unmanageable debt.
Generally, no. RRSP withdrawals are taxed as income, so you’ll lose a significant portion to taxes immediately. You’ll also lose the long-term compounding growth of that money. The exception might be if the alternative is bankruptcy, in which case your RRSP is protected from creditors anyway. Consult a financial advisor or LIT before making this decision.
Start by tracking every dollar you spend for one month — most people are shocked by where their money actually goes. Then create a budget that prioritizes essentials, debt payments, and a small amount of savings. Even saving $25 per paycheque starts building a buffer. Look for ways to increase income (side work) and decrease expenses (switching providers, cutting unused subscriptions). Most importantly, stop using credit for everyday expenses.
Ignoring debt doesn’t make it go away — it makes it worse. Missed payments accumulate late fees and interest. Your credit score drops. Accounts go to collections. Collectors may sue you, potentially resulting in wage garnishment or bank account freezing. In Canada, most unsecured debts have a 2-6 year limitation period for legal action, but ignoring debt during that period causes maximum damage to your credit and financial health.
It can be, if: (1) you qualify for a lower interest rate than your current debts, (2) you use the loan to pay off all high-interest debt, and (3) you don’t accumulate new debt on the freed-up credit products. The biggest risk with consolidation is re-borrowing. About 38% of Canadians who consolidate end up accumulating new debt, leaving them worse off than before. If you consolidate, close or freeze the credit cards you’ve paid off.
Bankruptcy should be a last resort, considered only when: (1) your debts exceed what you could repay in 5 years even with a consumer proposal, (2) you’ve explored all other options with a Licensed Insolvency Trustee, (3) the financial and emotional cost of continuing to struggle with debt outweighs the consequences of bankruptcy. A free consultation with an LIT can help you determine whether bankruptcy is truly necessary or whether other options exist.
Taking the First Step
If you’ve read this far, you already know something needs to change. The question is whether you’ll take action today or continue down the same path. The statistics are clear — Canadian household debt is at crisis levels, and waiting only makes things worse.
The good news is that every debt solution starts the same way: with a single honest assessment of where you stand. Add up your debts. Calculate your TDS ratio. Acknowledge the warning signs. And then choose your path forward — whether that’s a self-directed payoff plan, a conversation with a credit counsellor, or a consultation with a Licensed Insolvency Trustee.
There is no shame in having too much debt. It happens to millions of Canadians, often due to circumstances beyond their control — job loss, illness, divorce, economic downturns. What matters is not how you got here, but what you do next. Every path out of debt starts with a single step. Take yours today.
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- Debt Glossary for Canadians: Understanding Financial Terminology
- Financial Coaching vs Credit Counselling in Canada: Which Service Do You Need?
- Voluntary Surrender vs Repossession in Canada: Which Is Better for Credit?
- Certified Financial Planner vs Credit Counsellor in Canada: Who to See
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