A consumer proposal is a legally binding debt settlement process available exclusively to Canadians under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act. It allows you to negotiate with creditors to repay a portion of what you owe — often 20–50 cents on the dollar — over up to five years, while keeping your assets and avoiding bankruptcy.
Consumer proposals are one of the most powerful debt relief tools available to Canadians. In 2023, Canadians filed over 100,000 consumer proposals — more than double the number of bankruptcies.
To file a consumer proposal in Canada, you must:
If your debt exceeds $250,000, you may need a Division I proposal, which has different rules and is administered by the same LIT.
Consumer proposals cover unsecured debts:
Debts NOT included: secured debts (mortgage, car loan), child support, alimony, fines, student loans less than 7 years old, and debts from fraud.
LIT fees are regulated by the federal government and come from the payments you make under the proposal — you don't pay the LIT separately upfront. The typical structure is an initial filing fee plus a percentage of funds distributed to creditors.
Total LIT fees on a typical consumer proposal are $1,500–$3,000, built into the payment plan. There is no separate cost to you beyond the proposal payments themselves.
A consumer proposal appears on your credit report as an R7 rating — meaning you're repaying debts through a special arrangement. It remains on your credit report for three years after you complete the proposal (or six years from the filing date, whichever comes first).
This is less severe than bankruptcy (R9, which remains for 6–7 years). Most Canadians who complete a consumer proposal can qualify for a secured credit card during the proposal and rebuild credit actively once it's complete.
Only Licensed Insolvency Trustees can legally administer consumer proposals in Canada. Find them at the OSB website (canada.ca/en/insolvency) or through the Canadian Association of Insolvency and Restructuring Professionals (CAIRP.ca).
Initial consultations with LITs are typically free. Be wary of debt settlement companies that claim to negotiate with creditors — they are not licensed to administer proposals and often charge high fees for results that a LIT can achieve legally and at regulated cost.
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