Updated: April 2025 | bremo.io financial guides
Debt Settlement in Canada: Risks and Better Alternatives
Debt settlement is the process of negotiating with creditors to accept a lump-sum payment for less than the full amount owed. In Canada, a large industry of for-profit companies offers to do this on your behalf — for a fee. While debt settlement can work in some circumstances, the industry carries well-documented risks that every Canadian should understand before signing anything.
How Debt Settlement Companies Work
Typically, a for-profit debt settlement company will:
- Tell you to stop paying your creditors and redirect those funds into a savings account they manage
- Charge fees — often 15–25% of your enrolled debt, or a monthly service fee
- After accumulating enough funds, attempt to negotiate lump-sum settlements with creditors
- Claim that creditors will accept 40–60 cents on the dollar once accounts are sufficiently delinquent
The Real Risks
Debt settlement companies in Canada are not federally regulated. There is no federal licensing requirement, no cap on fees in most provinces, and no guaranteed outcome. Here is what frequently goes wrong:
- Credit damage: Stopping payments to creditors on the company's advice immediately begins damaging your credit score. By the time settlements are reached (if ever), your credit may be severely damaged — often worse than if you had filed a consumer proposal.
- Lawsuits: While you stop paying, creditors can still sue you and obtain judgments — including wage garnishments. Debt settlement companies cannot legally stop this.
- No guarantee: Creditors are under no obligation to accept a settlement. A company can hold your money for years and ultimately fail to settle.
- High fees: Paying 20% of $30,000 in fees ($6,000) before any debt is settled means you need massive reductions just to break even compared to a repayment plan.
- Tax implications: Forgiven debt in Canada may be considered taxable income by the CRA. A debt forgiven through a consumer proposal is generally not — but informal settlements arranged by debt settlement companies may be.
Debt Settlement vs. Consumer Proposal
A consumer proposal provides many of the same outcomes as debt settlement — you pay less than you owe — but with critical legal protections:
- Administered by a federally licensed professional (LIT), not an unregulated company
- All unsecured creditors are legally bound once the majority accepts — no creditor can sue you during or after the proposal
- Interest stops the moment it is filed
- Wage garnishments and collection calls must stop immediately upon filing
- Fees are federally regulated — you are not paying 15–25% of your debt to an intermediary
- Forgiven debt through a consumer proposal is not a taxable event
When Informal Settlement Makes Sense
There are situations where negotiating directly with creditors — without paying a company — can work:
- You have a single creditor and a lump sum available
- The account is already in collections and has been sold to a collection agency at a discount
- You negotiate directly, without paying a third party to do it
Collection agencies often purchase charged-off accounts for 5–20 cents on the dollar. They may accept 40–50 cents on the dollar as a settlement — giving them a profit while reducing what you owe. You can attempt this yourself with a written offer. See our guide on negotiating with creditors in Canada.
What to Do Instead
If you are being approached by a debt settlement company or are considering settlement, first get a free consultation with a Licensed Insolvency Trustee. The LIT will explain whether:
- A consumer proposal can achieve similar or better reduction with legal protection
- A non-profit Debt Management Plan is more appropriate
- Bankruptcy provides a cleaner resolution
- You have sufficient leverage to negotiate directly
Bottom line: If a debt settlement company is promising to settle your debts for less than you owe, a Licensed Insolvency Trustee can almost certainly offer the same outcome through a consumer proposal — with legal protections, regulated fees, and a binding agreement that debt settlement companies simply cannot provide.
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