Updated: March 2025 | bremo.io financial guides
Financial Hardship Resources in Canada 2025
Financial hardship can happen to anyone. A job loss, unexpected illness, relationship breakdown, or economic downturn can quickly push even careful planners into crisis. If you are struggling financially in Canada right now, you are not alone — and there are many programs, organizations, and services designed to help.
This guide brings together the major financial hardship resources available across Canada in 2025, organized by the type of help you might need.
In immediate crisis? Call 211 (available across most of Canada) to be connected instantly to local emergency financial help, food banks, housing support, and other urgent resources.
Government Income Support Programs
Every province and territory has a social assistance (welfare) program for residents in financial need. These programs provide monthly financial support for basic needs and shelter.
Provincial Social Assistance
- Ontario: Ontario Works (~$733/month single); ODSP for disabilities (~$1,228/month)
- BC: BC Income Assistance (~$935/month single employable)
- Alberta: Alberta Income Support (~$876–$1,050/month single)
- Quebec: Aide sociale (~$726/month single)
- Manitoba: Employment and Income Assistance
- Saskatchewan: Saskatchewan Assistance Program
- Nova Scotia: Income Assistance
- New Brunswick: Social Development
Apply through your provincial government website or by calling your local social assistance office.
Federal Government Benefits
The federal government also provides financial support to low-income Canadians:
- GST/HST Credit — quarterly tax-free payments; single person can receive up to ~$519/year
- Canada Child Benefit (CCB) — tax-free monthly payments for families with children under 18
- Canada Workers Benefit (CWB) — refundable tax credit for low-income workers
- Old Age Security (OAS) + Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS) — monthly income for seniors 65+; GIS provides up to ~$1,065/month for low-income seniors
- Employment Insurance (EI) — if you've recently lost a job and have enough insured hours
- Canada Dental Care Plan — launched 2024; for uninsured Canadians with family income under $90K
File your taxes every year, even with zero income — many federal benefits are calculated based on your tax return.
Food Assistance
If you cannot afford enough food, food banks and meal programs provide free groceries and meals with no judgment and no cost to you.
- Food Banks Canada — network of 900+ food banks across Canada; visit foodbankscanada.ca to find one near you
- Local food pantries and community kitchens — many churches, community centres, and nonprofits run regular programs
- School nutrition programs — free breakfast and lunch programs for children in most provinces
- Meal programs for seniors — Meals on Wheels and similar services in most communities
Housing and Rent Help
If you are struggling to pay rent or facing eviction:
- Provincial rent banks — emergency loans for rent arrears (Ontario, BC, Alberta, and others)
- Canada Housing Benefit — federal top-up administered provincially for low-income renters
- Subsidized housing — apply through your local housing authority or nonprofit housing provider
- Emergency shelters — 211 can connect you to emergency shelter if you are at risk of homelessness
Utility and Energy Assistance
- Ontario: Low-income Energy Assistance Program (LEAP), Ontario Electricity Support Program (OESP)
- BC: BC Hydro Customer Crisis Fund, FortisBC Energy Affordability Program
- Alberta: Alberta Utilities Consumer Advocate programs
- Federal: Canada Greener Homes Grant for energy efficiency improvements
Many utility companies also have hardship programs. Contact your provider directly and ask about their low-income or crisis assistance options.
Debt and Financial Recovery
If you are overwhelmed by debt:
- Credit counselling agencies — non-profit agencies offer free budget counselling and debt management plans; find one through the Credit Counselling Society (nomoredebts.org) or FCAC
- Consumer proposals — legally settle debt for less than you owe, without bankruptcy; arranged through a Licensed Insolvency Trustee
- Bankruptcy — last resort but provides a legal fresh start; also through a Licensed Insolvency Trustee
- FCAC (Financial Consumer Agency of Canada) — free online tools, financial literacy resources, and complaint handling for banking issues
Health and Dental
- Canadian Dental Care Plan — launched 2024; for uninsured Canadians with family income under $90K
- Community health centres — many offer sliding-scale or free medical and dental services
- Provincial drug benefit programs — each province has a program for low-income residents; ask your pharmacist
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Getting Help to Navigate the System
The Canadian social support system can feel overwhelming. These organizations can help you figure out what you are entitled to and how to access it:
- 211 Canada — call or text 211; free referral service connecting you to local programs
- Community legal clinics — free legal advice on benefits, housing, and employment issues
- Settlement services — for newcomers to Canada; help navigating programs and services
- Financial empowerment programs — free one-on-one financial coaching at many community organizations
There is no shame in seeking help. These programs exist because financial hardship is a shared human experience, and Canadian society has decided to support people through it. Accessing what you are entitled to is not a burden on others — it is exactly what these programs are for.