Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Statute of Limitations on Debt in Canada by Province

Every province in Canada has a limitation period — a time window during which a creditor can sue you to collect a debt. Once this period expires, the creditor loses the legal right to obtain a court judgment against you for that debt. However, the debt does not disappear — and collectors may still contact you.

Understanding limitation periods is important for anyone dealing with old debts, collection calls on accounts that have not been active in years, or considering whether to make a partial payment on an old account.

Limitation Periods by Province

Province / TerritoryBasic Limitation PeriodKey Notes
Ontario2 yearsRuns from when the debt was "discovered" (typically last payment or acknowledgment)
British Columbia2 years2 years from discovery; 15-year ultimate limit
Alberta2 years2 years basic; 10-year ultimate limit
Quebec3 yearsCivil law province; different legal framework
Manitoba6 yearsStill 6 years for most contract debts
Saskatchewan2 yearsFrom last payment or written acknowledgment
Nova Scotia6 yearsFrom last payment or acknowledgment
New Brunswick2 yearsLimitation Periods Act
Newfoundland & Labrador6 yearsLimitations Act
Prince Edward Island6 yearsStatute of Limitations
Yukon2 yearsLimitation of Actions Act
Northwest Territories / Nunavut6 yearsLimitation of Actions Act

Note: Always confirm with a lawyer or licensed professional. Laws can change and individual circumstances affect limitation calculations.

What "Discovered" Means

The limitation clock generally starts running from the date the creditor knew or reasonably should have known they had a claim. For an unpaid credit card, this is typically:

Different provinces calculate the start date slightly differently. In Ontario and BC, it is the date of "discovery" — when the creditor knew they had a claim. In older limitation statutes (still used in some provinces), it may be the date of the last payment or last written acknowledgment.

What Resets the Limitation Clock

Making a payment or acknowledging a debt in writing can restart the limitation clock in many provinces. This is why legal experts typically advise being very careful before making a small payment on a very old debt that may be approaching or past its limitation period.

Actions that can restart the clock:

A verbal acknowledgment may or may not restart the clock depending on the province. If in doubt, do not acknowledge an old debt in writing without first consulting a professional.

What Happens After the Limitation Period?

Once the limitation period expires:

Limitation period expiry does not eliminate the debt — it only removes the creditor's ability to sue. If a debt collector contacts you about an old debt, you can raise the limitation period as a defence, but you must raise it. Courts do not automatically dismiss time-barred claims.

Court Judgments

An existing court judgment is different from an unpaid debt. Once a creditor has obtained a judgment, a separate and much longer enforcement limitation period applies (typically 10+ years). Judgments can often be renewed. If a creditor already has a judgment against you, the limitation period on the original debt is no longer relevant.

Federal Debts: CRA and Student Loans

Federal debts — including CRA tax arrears — are not subject to provincial limitation periods in the same way. The CRA has extensive collection powers under federal law with different time constraints. Federal student loans have their own limitation rules.

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