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How to Build Credit From Scratch in Canada (2026 Guide)

Updated

Why You Need to Build Credit

Your credit score determines whether you can rent an apartment, get a phone plan without a deposit, qualify for a car loan, or eventually get a mortgage. In Canada, starting with no credit history is almost as limiting as having bad credit — lenders simply have nothing to assess.

Building credit is not complicated, but it requires patience and the right products.


The Four Building Blocks of a Credit Score

Before choosing a strategy, understand what a credit score is built from:

Factor Weight (approx.) What Helps
Payment history 35% Never miss a payment
Credit utilization 30% Keep balances below 30% of limits (ideally below 10%)
Length of credit history 15% Keep old accounts open
Credit mix 10% Have more than one type (card + loan)
New credit inquiries 10% Avoid applying for several products at once

Step 1: Open a Secured Credit Card (The Fastest Starting Point)

A secured card is specifically designed for people with no credit history. Your deposit to the lender becomes your credit limit. The card functions identically to a regular credit card at point of sale.

How to Use It Correctly

  1. Use the card for 1–2 small recurring purchases per month (e.g., a streaming subscription)
  2. Pay the full balance every month, before the due date
  3. Never carry more than 30% of your limit as a balance — ideally keep it under 10%
  4. Do not close the account after upgrading to unsecured (closing old accounts shortens your average credit age)

Top Canadian Secured Credit Cards (2026)

Card Deposit Required Annual Fee Reports To Notes
Home Trust Secured Visa $500 $0 (no-fee version) Equifax Popular starter card
Capital One Guaranteed Mastercard $75 $59 Equifax & TransUnion Lower deposit; both bureaus
Refresh Financial Secured Visa $200 $12.95/month Equifax & TransUnion Higher cost but accessible
Neo Secured Mastercard $50 $0 Equifax & TransUnion Cashback rewards; low entry

Step 2: Become an Authorized User (Optional Shortcut)

If a parent, spouse, or trusted family member has a long-standing credit card with a good payment history, asking to be added as an authorized user can immediately import their account history onto your credit file.

What to Look for in the Primary Account

  • Account age: older is better (5–10+ year accounts have the most impact)
  • Utilization: ideally under 30% of their limit
  • Payment history: zero missed payments

Caution

You are not legally responsible for the debt, but their missed payments become yours on your credit report. Only do this with someone you fully trust to pay on time every month.


Step 3: Add a Credit-Builder Loan (Optional — Adds Credit Mix)

Some Canadian lenders (credit unions, Refresh Financial) offer credit-builder loans: you make monthly payments into a locked savings account, and those payments are reported to the credit bureaus. At the end of the term, the money is released to you.

This adds an installment loan to your credit file (different from revolving credit), which improves your “credit mix” factor.

Product Provider Typical Term Interest Rate
Refresh Financial Credit Builder Refresh 12–36 months ~19.99% APR
Credit Union Credit Builder Various CUs 12–24 months 5–12%

This is optional — a secured card alone is enough to build strong credit over 12–18 months.


Step 4: Get a New-to-Canada Credit Card if Eligible

If you are a newcomer to Canada, several major banks offer credit cards without requiring an established Canadian credit score:

Bank Program Notes
RBC RBC New-to-Canada Banking Package Includes credit card approval without Canadian score
TD TD New to Canada Banking Package Eligible within first 2 years of arriving
CIBC CIBC Smart Account for Newcomers Credit card with employment letter
Scotiabank Scotiabank StartRight Program Up to 3 years as newcomer
BMO BMO NewStart Program Standard unsecured card available

Getting an unsecured card through these programs is preferable to a secured card because there is no deposit required — but either works equally well for score building.


Realistic Credit Score Timeline

Milestone Typical Timeframe What Needed
First score appears 3–6 months One open account with 1–2 payment cycles reported
Score reaches 600–650 (Fair) 6–12 months Consistent on-time payments, low utilization
Score reaches 700+ (Good) 12–18 months Clean payment history, adding second product
Score reaches 750+ (Very Good) 2–3 years Growing account age, mixed credit types
Score reaches 780+ (Excellent) 3–5 years Long, clean history with mix of products

What Slows Down Credit Building

Mistake Impact
Paying late (even once) Major set-back — payment history is 35% of score
High utilization (over 30%) Suppresses score even with perfect payment history
Applying for too many products Multiple hard inquiries signal risk
Closing your first secured card Erases your oldest account; shortens credit history
Not using the card at all Some accounts are reported as inactive; may not improve score

Equifax vs TransUnion: Do You Need Both?

Equifax TransUnion
Free annual credit report Yes — annualcreditreport.ca or by mail Yes — transunion.ca
Free monthly credit score Via Borrowell (Equifax data) Via Credit Karma (TransUnion data)
Which lenders use Big banks, car lenders, many credit cards Major banks, some credit cards

Check both at least once per year. When starting from scratch, verify both bureaus are picking up your new accounts within 60–90 days of opening them.


Summary: Fastest Path From Zero to 700+

  1. Month 1: Open a secured credit card (Neo, Home Trust, or Capital One)
  2. Month 1: If eligible, become an authorized user on a trusted family member’s long-standing card
  3. Month 2–6: Use secured card for 1–2 small purchases per month; pay in full before the due date; keep utilization under 10%
  4. Month 6–12: Check your score — if 650+, apply for an unsecured entry-level card (Canadian Tire, PC Financial, Tangerine); keep both cards open
  5. Month 12–18: Consider adding a credit-builder loan or applying for a store credit product to improve credit mix
  6. Year 2+: Maintain accounts, keep utilization low, never miss a payment — time does the rest
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