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Before You Take Out a Loan in Canada: What to Check

Updated

Short Answer

A loan is a tool — it is worth using when the benefit exceeds the total cost of borrowing. This checklist helps you verify that before you commit.

Step 1: Calculate the True Cost of the Loan

Never focus on the monthly payment alone. Calculate total interest paid over the full term.

Loan amount Rate Term Monthly payment Total interest paid
$10,000 8% 3 years $313 $1,282
$10,000 15% 3 years $347 $2,484
$10,000 29% 3 years $403 $4,492
$10,000 8% 5 years $203 $2,166

Two observations: higher rates dramatically increase total cost, and longer terms reduce monthly payments but increase total interest. Use the shortest term you can comfortably afford.

Step 2: Know Your Current Credit Score

Your credit score determines what rate you will qualify for:

Score range Typical personal loan rate
760+ 6%–10%
720–759 10%–14%
680–719 14%–20%
620–679 20%–29%
Below 620 May be declined or offered 29%+

If your score is below 680, it may be worth delaying the loan and improving your score first. A 6-month improvement from 650 to 720 could save thousands in interest on a large loan.

Step 3: Understand Every Fee

Fee type What to look for
Origination fee Some lenders charge 1%–5% of the loan amount upfront or rolled in
Prepayment fee Charged if you pay off early — ask before signing
NSF fee Charged if a payment bounces — typically $40–$50
Insurance add-on Credit life/disability insurance is often offered at application — optional, often poor value
Late payment fee Usually $25–$50 per late payment plus potential rate increase

Watch for optional insurance products added at signing. These can add 2%–5% to your total borrowing cost and are almost always optional, not required.

Step 4: Compare Lenders

Do not accept the first offer. Shopping lenders within a short window counts as one hard inquiry on your credit file.

Lender type Typical rate range Notes
Big 6 bank 7%–15% for prime borrowers Requires strong credit
Credit union 6%–14% Member-owned, sometimes lower rates
Online lender 8%–29% Fast approvals, broader credit acceptance
Payday lender 300%–600%+ effective APR Avoid — legal but extremely expensive
Employer / credit program Varies Some employers offer low-rate emergency loans

Getting at least 3 quotes takes 30 minutes and can save hundreds or thousands of dollars over the loan term.

Step 5: Check the Lender’s Registration

All lenders operating in Canada must be registered in the provinces where they lend. Verify:

  • The lender has a physical address and/or registered business number
  • They disclose the APR (annual percentage rate) in writing before you sign
  • The loan agreement is in plain language you can read and understand
  • The rate is below 35% APR (the federal criminal rate cap as of January 2025)
  • No upfront fee is required before receiving the loan (red flag for scams)

Red flag: Any lender asking for a fee or gift card payment before releasing loan funds is operating a loan scam.

Step 6: Confirm the Loan Fits Your Budget

Monthly payment calculation Check
New loan payment $ _____
All existing debt payments $ _____
Housing (rent or mortgage) $ _____
Total monthly obligations $ _____
Monthly take-home income $ _____
Remaining after obligations $ _____

The remaining after obligations should be at least 20–25% of your take-home pay to maintain financial stability. If the new loan pushes you below that threshold, the loan may be too large for your current income.

When a Loan Makes Sense

Situation Why it can make sense
Consolidating high-interest debt If the loan rate is lower than existing rates, you save money
Essential purchase with no alternatives Car for work, necessary appliance, medical cost
Bridging a confirmed income gap Expected income arriving, just a timing issue
Planned home renovation with clear ROI Kitchen/bathroom reno that adds value

When to Reconsider

Situation Better alternative
Discretionary purchase (vacation, electronics) Save up instead
Already near TDS limit Paying off existing debt first is safer
Loan for another loan payment Serious debt spiral indicator — get credit counselling
Rate above 25% Explore credit union, secured credit, or debt management first

Checklist Before Signing

  • APR disclosed in writing (not just monthly rate)
  • Total interest over full term calculated
  • Monthly payment fits your budget with room left over
  • At least 3 lender quotes compared
  • Origination fees, prepayment penalties, and insurance reviewed
  • Lender is registered and legitimate
  • Loan purpose justifies the borrowing cost

Bottom Line

The right time to take out a loan is when the benefit clearly exceeds the total cost of borrowing, your monthly payment is comfortable within your budget, and you have compared multiple lenders. Signing the first offer or focusing only on the monthly payment are the two most expensive mistakes Canadian borrowers make.