Updated: March 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Free Financial Literacy Resources in Canada 2025

Financial literacy — understanding how money, budgeting, credit, taxes, and savings work — is one of the most practical skills you can develop. The good news is that in Canada, there is an enormous amount of high-quality financial education available completely free. You do not need to pay for a course or hire an advisor to learn the basics.

Where to start: The Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC) at canada.ca/financial-consumer-agency offers the most comprehensive free financial literacy resources in Canada — all government-produced, unbiased, and practical.

Government Financial Literacy Resources

Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC)

The FCAC is the federal regulator for financial products, but it also produces outstanding free consumer education resources:

Website: canada.ca/financial-consumer-agency | Phone: 1-866-461-3222

Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) Financial Literacy

The CRA provides free resources to help Canadians understand the tax system and access all benefits they are entitled to:

Website: canada.ca/taxes

Non-Profit and Community Financial Education

Credit Counselling Society

Beyond counselling services, the Credit Counselling Society publishes extensive free financial education resources including articles, guides, and calculators on budgeting, debt, credit, and savings. All content is unbiased and not designed to sell you anything.

Website: nomoredebts.org

Prosper Canada

Prosper Canada works to expand economic opportunity for low-income Canadians. They operate a Financial Empowerment program through community organizations that provides free one-on-one financial coaching and workshops across Canada.

Website: prospercanada.org

AFOA Canada (Aboriginal Financial Officers Association)

AFOA Canada provides financial literacy programming specifically designed for Indigenous communities, available in culturally appropriate formats. Resources are available online and through community partnerships.

Website: afoa.ca

Free Online Courses

Khan Academy — Personal Finance

Khan Academy's free personal finance course covers budgeting, credit, taxes, retirement savings, insurance, and more. It is clear, practical, and genuinely free with no account required to watch videos. Available at khanacademy.org/college-careers-more/personal-finance.

Coursera and edX — Free Auditing

Many university personal finance courses on Coursera and edX can be audited for free (you view the content without paying for a certificate). Search for "personal finance" or "financial planning" and look for the "Audit" option.

Public Libraries — Free Access

Most Canadian public libraries provide free access to:

All you need is a library card, which is free for residents.

Key Topics Every Canadian Should Understand

Building financial literacy does not require mastering everything at once. These are the highest-impact topics to start with:

  1. Budgeting: knowing where your money goes is the foundation of everything else
  2. Credit scores: understand how they are calculated and how to build yours
  3. Government benefits: know what you are entitled to and how to access it
  4. TFSA vs. RRSP: understanding which is right for your situation
  5. Debt: understanding interest rates, minimum payments, and how to pay off debt efficiently
  6. Banking fees: knowing how to avoid fees that eat into your income

Free Financial Coaching

Many community organizations offer free one-on-one financial coaching — a step beyond reading materials. A coach can help you with your specific situation, create a personalized budget, identify missed benefits, and work through specific challenges.

Free Banking — No Minimum Balance Required

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