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Average Household Debt in Canada by Age and Province (2026)

Updated

Average Household Debt in Canada

Metric Amount
Average household debt (total) ~$185,000
Average mortgage debt ~$160,000
Average non-mortgage debt ~$22,000
Debt-to-income ratio ~180%
Total Canadian household debt $2.4+ trillion

Household Debt Breakdown

By Debt Type

Type of Debt Average Amount % of Total
Mortgage $160,000 73%
HELOC $15,000 7%
Auto loans $12,000 5.5%
Credit cards $4,200 2%
Student loans $3,500 1.5%
Personal loans $8,000 4%
Lines of credit $15,000 7%

Mortgage vs Non-Mortgage

Category Total Outstanding Per Household (with debt)
Mortgage debt $1.8 trillion ~$350,000
Consumer debt $600+ billion ~$23,000

The majority of household debt is mortgage debt secured by home equity.

Average Debt by Age

Age Group Total Debt Mortgage Non-Mortgage
18–24 $15,000 $5,000 $10,000
25–34 $145,000 $120,000 $25,000
35–44 $230,000 $200,000 $30,000
45–54 $210,000 $170,000 $40,000
55–64 $135,000 $100,000 $35,000
65+ $55,000 $35,000 $20,000

Debt Lifecycle Pattern

Stage Age Typical Debt Profile
Education 18–24 Student loans, first credit card
Career start 25–34 First mortgage, auto loan
Peak debt 35–44 Largest mortgage, family expenses
Debt paydown 45–54 Mortgage reduction, may still be high
Pre-retirement 55–64 Accelerated paydown
Retirement 65+ Should be minimal

Average Debt by Province

Province Average Household Debt Debt-to-Income
British Columbia $220,000 205%
Ontario $215,000 195%
Alberta $165,000 175%
Quebec $120,000 155%
Manitoba $110,000 150%
Saskatchewan $125,000 160%
Nova Scotia $105,000 160%
New Brunswick $95,000 155%
Newfoundland $90,000 150%
PEI $100,000 155%

BC and Ontario have higher debt due to expensive housing markets.

Credit Card Debt Statistics

Metric Value
Average balance (all cardholders) $2,100
Average balance (carrying balance) $4,200
% who carry a balance ~40%
Average interest rate 19–22%
Total credit card debt $100+ billion

Credit Card Debt by Age

Age Group Average Balance
18–24 $1,800
25–34 $3,500
35–44 $5,200
45–54 $5,800
55–64 $4,500
65+ $3,200

Peak credit card debt is typically in the 45–54 age range.

Student Loan Debt

Metric Value
Average student debt at graduation $28,000
Median student debt $17,500
Average debt (Bachelor’s) $24,000
Average debt (Graduate) $38,000
Total student debt in Canada $20+ billion

Federal student loan interest rate (2026): Prime + 0% (effectively prime rate).

Auto Loan Debt

Metric Value
Average auto loan $35,000
Average monthly payment $650
Average loan term 72 months
Total auto debt $120+ billion

Auto Debt by Province

Province Average Auto Debt
Alberta $42,000
Ontario $38,000
British Columbia $36,000
Quebec $28,000
Prairie provinces $35,000
Atlantic provinces $25,000

Albertans carry the highest auto debt on average.

HELOC and Line of Credit Debt

Type Average Balance Average Limit
HELOC $65,000 $150,000
Personal line of credit $12,000 $25,000

Many Canadians use HELOCs as emergency funds or for major expenses.

Canada’s Debt-to-Income Ratio

Historical Trend

Year Debt-to-Income Ratio
2000 110%
2008 150%
2015 165%
2020 175%
2026 ~180%

International Comparison

Country Household Debt-to-Income
Switzerland 220%
Australia 200%
Canada 180%
Norway 175%
UK 145%
USA 100%
Germany 85%

Canada has high household debt relative to income, though much is secured by home equity.

Are Canadians Overleveraged?

Concerning Signs

Indicator Status
Debt-to-income Near record highs
Interest rate sensitivity High — many variable mortgages
Home price dependence Debt backed by volatile asset
Consumer debt growth Outpacing income growth

Mitigating Factors

Factor Impact
Home equity Debt backed by substantial assets
Mortgage quality Most mortgages are performing
Employment Low unemployment supports debt service
Net worth Canadians’ assets exceed liabilities

Debt Payment Burden

How Much Income Goes to Debt

Debt Type Avg Monthly Payment As % of Income
Mortgage $2,100 30–35%
Auto loan $650 10–12%
Credit cards (min) $125 2–3%
Total debt service $3,000–$3,500 45–50%

Many Canadian households spend more than the recommended 40% of gross income on debt payments.

How to Reduce Your Debt

Short-Term Strategies

Strategy Impact
Debt avalanche Pay highest interest first
Debt snowball Pay smallest balance first (motivation)
Balance transfer 0% promo rates reduce interest
Negotiate rates Call card issuers

Long-Term Approaches

Approach Best For
Accelerate mortgage payments Building equity
RRSP refund to debt Tax-efficient paydown
Consolidation loan Lower interest rate
Consumer proposal Unmanageable debt

Warning Signs of Too Much Debt

Sign Action Needed
Can’t pay minimums Seek credit counselling
Using credit for basics Budget review urgently
Debt-to-income over 40% Reduce debt or increase income
No emergency fund Build 3–6 months expenses
Stress over debt Free counselling available

Where to Get Help

Resource Service
Credit Counselling Canada Free debt advice
Licensed Insolvency Trustee Consumer proposals, bankruptcy
Financial Consumer Agency Information and resources
211 Canada Local financial help referrals

Key Statistics Summary

Metric Canada 2026
Total household debt $2.4+ trillion
Average household debt ~$185,000
Debt-to-income ratio ~180%
Average credit card debt $4,200
Average mortgage $350,000 (those with mortgages)
% with no debt ~25% of households

Data sources: Statistics Canada, Bank of Canada, Equifax Canada