Credit Counselling in Canada 2025 — Free, confidential help from non-profit agencies. No judgment. No upfront fees. Available in every province.
Credit Counselling in Canada 2025: Free Resources
Credit counselling is a free or low-cost service offered by non-profit agencies across Canada. A certified credit counsellor reviews your debts, income, and expenses, then helps you create a plan to get out of debt — whether that's through budgeting advice, a debt management plan, or a referral to a Licensed Insolvency Trustee for a consumer proposal or bankruptcy.
This is not the same as for-profit "debt settlement" companies, which charge high fees and may not deliver on their promises. Non-profit credit counselling is genuinely free in most cases.
What Does a Credit Counsellor Do?
- Review your income, debts, and monthly expenses
- Help you build a realistic budget
- Explain all your debt relief options
- Negotiate with creditors on your behalf (for a Debt Management Plan)
- Provide ongoing support throughout your repayment
- Offer financial literacy education
Debt Management Plans (DMPs)
The most common service offered by credit counselling agencies is a Debt Management Plan. Here's how it works:
- Your counsellor contacts your unsecured creditors
- Creditors agree to reduced or eliminated interest rates (often to 0%)
- You make one monthly payment to the agency
- The agency distributes funds to your creditors
- The DMP typically runs 2–5 years
No credit check is required to enter a DMP. Your credit cards included in the plan are closed. A DMP notation may appear on your credit report, but many Canadians find their scores improve during the plan because they're making consistent, on-time payments.
Free Credit Counselling Resources by Province
National
- Credit Canada: Canada's longest-running non-profit credit counselling organization. Free consultations, DMPs, and financial education. creditcanada.com
- Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC): Government resource with free budgeting tools, debt calculators, and province-by-province guides. canada.ca/financial-consumer-agency
British Columbia
- Credit Counselling Society (CCS): The largest non-profit credit counselling organization in Western Canada. Free consultations by phone or in-person. nomoredebts.org
Alberta
- Money Mentors (formerly AFCC): Alberta-based non-profit offering free counselling and Orderly Payment of Debts (OPD) plans — an Alberta-specific debt repayment option.
Ontario
- Credit Canada: Based in Toronto with national reach. Free phone and in-person consultations.
- Ontario Association of Credit Counselling Services (OACCS): Directory of member agencies across Ontario.
Quebec
- ACEF (Associations Coopératives d'Économie Familiale): Network of non-profit consumer organizations across Quebec offering free budget counselling and debt advice. acef.qc.ca
- Option Consommateurs: Quebec non-profit with debt counselling services.
How to Spot Credit Counselling Scams
Unfortunately, some for-profit companies disguise themselves as credit counsellors. Warning signs:
- They charge upfront fees before providing any service
- They guarantee to eliminate debt by a specific percentage
- They tell you to stop paying creditors before entering their program
- They promise to remove accurate negative information from your credit report
- They pressure you to sign up immediately
Legitimate non-profit credit counselling is always free or very low cost (some agencies charge a small monthly administration fee of $5–$10 on DMPs). You should never pay hundreds or thousands of dollars in upfront fees for credit counselling.
Rebuild Your Credit With KOHO
KOHO's Credit Building feature reports to Equifax monthly for just $7/month. Combined with no monthly banking fees, it's the smartest way to rebuild your credit score while getting your finances on track. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a bonus.
Get KOHO + Credit Building — Code 45ET55JSYA
Credit Counselling vs. Other Debt Solutions
Credit counselling (and DMPs) works best when your total unsecured debt is manageable and you have sufficient income to repay it in full over 2–5 years — just at a reduced interest rate. If your debt is so large that even 5 years of payments can't cover it, a consumer proposal (through an LIT) may be more appropriate. Credit counsellors can help you assess which option is right for your situation.
What to Expect at Your First Appointment
Your first credit counselling session is a confidential review of your finances. Bring:
- A list of all your debts (creditor, balance, rate)
- Your most recent pay stubs or proof of income
- Your monthly expense estimates (rent, food, transportation, utilities)
- Bank statements if available
The counsellor will not judge you. Their job is to help, not to shame. Many Canadians leave their first appointment feeling significant relief just from having a clear picture of their situation and a plan.