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Best Line of Credit Rates in Canada 2026

Updated

Best Personal Line of Credit Rates

Unsecured Personal Lines of Credit

Lender Rate Minimum Credit Score Minimum Income Credit Limit
Desjardins Prime + 1.0–3.5% 680+ Varies $5,000–$50,000
National Bank Prime + 1.0–4.0% 680+ Varies $5,000–$50,000
Credit unions (avg) Prime + 1.0–4.0% 660+ Varies $5,000–$50,000
TD Prime + 1.5–5.0% 680+ $35,000+ $5,000–$50,000
RBC Prime + 2.0–5.0% 680+ $35,000+ $5,000–$50,000
BMO Prime + 2.0–5.5% 680+ $35,000+ $5,000–$50,000
Scotiabank (ScotiaLine) Prime + 2.0–5.0% 680+ $35,000+ $5,000–$50,000
CIBC Prime + 2.0–5.5% 680+ $35,000+ $5,000–$50,000
Tangerine Prime + 1.5–5.0% 700+ Varies $1,000–$50,000
Simplii Prime + 2.0–5.0% 680+ Varies $5,000–$50,000

Prime rate as of March 2026: ~4.95%. Rates are variable and change with the Bank of Canada rate.

Secured Lines of Credit (Home Equity)

Lender Rate LTV Maximum Minimum Equity Credit Limit
TD (HELOC) Prime + 0.5–1.0% 65% 35% equity $10,000–$500,000+
RBC Homeline Prime + 0.5–1.0% 65% 35% equity $10,000–$500,000+
BMO Homeowner ReadiLine Prime + 0.5–1.0% 65% 35% equity $10,000–$500,000+
Scotiabank STEP Prime + 0.5–1.0% 65% 35% equity $10,000–$500,000+
CIBC Home Power Prime + 0.5–1.0% 65% 35% equity $10,000–$500,000+
National Bank Prime + 0.5–1.0% 65% 35% equity $10,000–$500,000+
Desjardins Prime + 0.5–0.7% 65% 35% equity $10,000–$500,000+
Credit unions Prime + 0.5–1.0% 65–80% 20–35% equity $10,000–$250,000+

Rate by Credit Score

Credit Score Unsecured LOC Rate Secured LOC Rate
760+ (excellent) Prime + 1.0–2.0% Prime + 0.5%
720–759 (very good) Prime + 2.0–3.0% Prime + 0.5–0.7%
680–719 (good) Prime + 3.0–5.0% Prime + 0.7–1.0%
660–679 (fair) Prime + 5.0–7.0% Prime + 1.0–1.5%
Below 660 Likely declined May qualify with strong equity

Line of Credit vs Other Borrowing Options

Feature Unsecured LOC Secured LOC (HELOC) Personal Loan Credit Card
Typical rate Prime + 1–5% Prime + 0.5–1% 6.99–12.99% (fixed) 19.99–22.99%
Rate type Variable Variable Fixed or variable Fixed
Access to funds Revolving Revolving Lump sum Revolving
Repayment Interest-only minimum Interest-only minimum Fixed monthly Minimum payment
Collateral None Home equity None None
Best for Flexible ongoing needs Large borrowing, low rate One-time fixed expense Short-term convenience

Interest Cost Comparison: $20,000 Borrowed

Borrowing Option Rate Monthly Interest Annual Interest Cost
HELOC 5.45% $91 $1,090
Unsecured LOC 7.95% $133 $1,590
Personal loan (fixed) 9.99% $167 $1,998
Credit card 20.99% $350 $4,198
Payday loan equivalent 390%+ $6,500+ N/A (short-term)

How to Get the Best LOC Rate

Strategy Potential Impact
Have a credit score of 750+ Access best rate tiers
Bank where you have your mortgage Loyalty negotiating leverage
Ask for rate matching Banks will often match competitor offers
Consolidate banking (chequing + savings + mortgage) Bundle discounts
Opt for a secured LOC if you own a home ~2–4% lower rate
Apply at a credit union Often 0.5–1% lower than Big 5 banks
Negotiate at renewal/review Annual rate reviews are an opportunity
Maintain a low utilization ratio Using less than 30% of limit helps maintain rate

LOC Minimum Payments: The Trap

Balance Interest Rate Interest-Only Payment Time to Pay Off (Interest-Only)
$5,000 7.95% $33/month Never (balance doesn’t decrease)
$10,000 7.95% $66/month Never
$20,000 7.95% $133/month Never
$50,000 7.95% $331/month Never

Most LOCs only require interest-only payments, meaning you’ll never pay down the balance unless you actively pay more than the minimum. Set up automatic payments above the minimum to pay down principal.

Repayment Schedule: $20,000 at 7.95%

Monthly Payment Time to Pay Off Total Interest Paid
$133 (interest only) Never Infinite
$250 10 years, 2 months $10,408
$400 5 years $4,025
$600 3 years $2,558
$1,000 1 year, 9 months $1,516

When to Use a Line of Credit

Good Uses Bad Uses
Emergency fund backup Everyday spending
Home renovations (HELOC) Vacations
Debt consolidation (lower rate) Keeping up a lifestyle you can’t afford
Bridge financing (short-term) Investing (unless Smith Manoeuvre strategy)
Self-employed income smoothing Paying minimum bills on other debts
Education costs Impulse purchases