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What Is a Good Credit Score in Canada? Ranges Explained (2026)

Updated

Your credit score is one of the most important numbers in your financial life. In Canada, scores range from 300 to 900, and where you land on that scale determines the interest rates you pay, the credit products you qualify for, and even whether a landlord approves your rental application. Understanding what counts as a good credit score — and what each range actually means for your borrowing power — puts you in a much stronger position when applying for a mortgage, credit card, or loan.

Credit Score Ranges in Canada

Both Equifax and TransUnion, Canada’’s two credit bureaus, use a 300-900 scale. Here is how the ranges break down and what each means for borrowers.

Range Score What It Means
Excellent 760-900 You qualify for the best rates and terms on virtually all credit products. Lenders compete for your business.
Good 725-759 You qualify for most products at competitive rates, though not always the absolute best promotional offers.
Fair 660-724 You qualify for standard products but may not get the lowest rates. Some premium cards may decline you.
Below Average 560-659 Limited options. You may need a co-signer, higher down payment, or alternative lender. Rates will be higher.
Poor 300-559 Difficulty getting approved for most credit. Secured credit cards, credit-builder loans, or subprime lenders may be your only options.

The average credit score in Canada is approximately 680 according to Equifax, placing the typical Canadian in the fair range.

What Each Score Range Qualifies You For

Your credit score does not just determine if you get approved — it determines how much borrowing costs you.

Score Range Mortgage Rates Credit Card Options Personal Loan Rates Auto Loan Rates Rental Approval
760-900 Best available (prime or below) All cards including premium Lowest rates (8-12%) Prime rate Very likely
725-759 Competitive (prime +0.1-0.3%) Most rewards cards Good rates (10-14%) Near-prime Very likely
660-724 Standard (prime +0.3-0.5%) Basic to mid-tier rewards Moderate rates (14-20%) Standard Likely
560-659 B-lender rates (prime +1-3%) Basic or secured cards Higher rates (20-30%) Subprime rates May require co-signer
300-559 Private lender only (8-15%+) Secured cards only May not qualify May not qualify Unlikely without guarantor

Score Requirements for Specific Products

If you have a specific goal in mind, here are the typical minimum credit scores Canadian lenders look for.

Product Minimum Score Typically Required
Mortgage (A-lender / big bank) 680+
Mortgage (B-lender) 550+
Mortgage (private lender) No minimum (asset-based)
Best rewards credit cards 720+
Basic credit card 600+
Secured credit card No minimum
Car loan (prime rate) 700+
Personal line of credit 660+
Apartment rental 650+

Equifax vs TransUnion: Two Bureaus, Two Scores

Canada has two credit bureaus — Equifax and TransUnion — and both use the 300-900 scale. However, your score may differ between them for several reasons:

  • Not all lenders report to both bureaus. A creditor might report your account to Equifax but not TransUnion, or vice versa.
  • Different scoring models. Equifax uses the Equifax Risk Score, while TransUnion uses CreditVision. Each weighs factors slightly differently.
  • Timing differences. Bureaus may receive updated information at different times during the month.

A difference of 20-50 points between your Equifax and TransUnion scores is common and not a cause for concern. However, a large gap (100+ points) could indicate an error on one report worth investigating.

FICO vs Credit Bureau Scores

In the United States, FICO scores dominate. In Canada, the landscape is different. Canadian lenders primarily rely on Equifax Risk Scores and TransUnion CreditVision scores rather than FICO. While FICO does operate in Canada and some lenders use FICO-based models, the scores you see through free tools like Borrowell and Credit Karma are bureau scores, not FICO scores. For practical purposes, the bureau scores are what matter most when applying for Canadian credit products.

What Affects Your Credit Score

Five main factors determine your score, each carrying a different approximate weight.

Factor Approximate Weight What It Measures
Payment History 35% Whether you pay bills on time. Even one missed payment can drop your score significantly.
Credit Utilization 30% How much of your available credit you are using. Below 30% is recommended; below 10% is ideal.
Credit History Length 15% How long your accounts have been open. Older accounts help your score.
Credit Mix 10% Having different types of credit (credit card, line of credit, loan, mortgage) is positive.
New Credit Inquiries 10% Each hard inquiry (from a credit application) can lower your score by a few points temporarily.

Payment history and credit utilization together account for 65% of your score. If you want to improve your score, focusing on paying every bill on time and keeping your credit card balances low will have the greatest impact.

How to Check Your Credit Score for Free

You do not need to pay to see your credit score in Canada. Several free options exist.

Service Bureau Cost Updates
Borrowell Equifax Free Weekly
Credit Karma TransUnion Free Weekly
RBC Mobile App TransUnion Free (RBC clients) Monthly
TD Mobile App TransUnion Free (TD clients) Monthly
BMO Mobile App TransUnion Free (BMO clients) Monthly
Scotiabank Mobile App TransUnion Free (Scotiabank clients) Monthly
CIBC Mobile App TransUnion Free (CIBC clients) Monthly

Checking your own score through any of these services is a soft inquiry and will never affect your credit score.

You can also request your full credit report directly from Equifax and TransUnion once a year at no cost. The report contains your detailed credit history, while the score is the numerical summary.

How Long Does It Take to Improve Your Score?

How quickly your score improves depends on what is dragging it down.

Situation Expected Timeframe
High utilization → pay down balances 1-2 months
Start making on-time payments (no prior missed payments) 1-3 months
Recovery from a single missed payment 3-6 months
Recovery from multiple missed payments 6-12 months
Recovery from collections or consumer proposal 12-24 months
Recovery from bankruptcy 6-7 years (remains on report)

The biggest quick wins are reducing your credit utilization below 30% and ensuring every payment is made on time. These two actions alone can produce noticeable gains within one to three months.

The Bottom Line

A good credit score in Canada is 725 or higher, and an excellent score is 760+. The average Canadian sits at around 680, which qualifies for most standard products but not the best rates. Your score is not permanent — it changes monthly based on your financial behaviour. Focus on paying every bill on time, keeping your credit utilization low, and maintaining a long credit history. Check your score regularly for free through Borrowell or Credit Karma, and review your full credit report at least once a year to catch any errors early.