Closing a credit card is one of the most misunderstood credit topics in Canada. Many people assume cancelling a card is responsible — but from a credit score perspective, an unused open card is usually better than a closed one. The key is understanding which cards are safe to close and which ones protect your score. This article is part of the Canadian credit scores hub.
How closing a card affects your score: two mechanisms
Mechanism 1: Utilization ratio increases
When you close a card, that card’s credit limit disappears from your “available credit.” Your balances on other cards haven’t changed, but the denominator of your utilization ratio has shrunk.
| Scenario | Total Credit | Balance | Utilization | Score Effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before closing: 3 cards ($5K, $5K, $5K) | $15,000 | $3,000 | 20% | Healthy |
| After closing $5K card | $10,000 | $3,000 | 30% | Moderate concern |
| After closing $5K card (if balance was $5K) | $10,000 | $5,000 | 50% | Significant hit |
Mechanism 2: Average account age decreases (if closing an older card)
Credit scoring models reward long account histories. Closing your oldest card removes a significant anchor from your average account age — for a full picture of how account age builds over time, see How Long to Build Good Credit in Canada.
| Scenario | Card Ages | Average Account Age |
|---|---|---|
| 4 cards: 12, 8, 5, 2 years old | All open | 6.75 years |
| Close the 12-year-old card | 8, 5, 2 years | 5.0 years |
| Close the 2-year-old card | 12, 8, 5 years | 8.33 years |
Closing an older card has more score impact on account age than closing a new one.
Which cards are safe to close
| Card Type | Safe to Close? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| New card (under 2 years old), low limit, no annual fee | ✅ Relatively safe | Little account age contribution; low limit impact |
| Newer card with high annual fee you can’t justify | ✅ Consider closing | Downgrade to no-fee version first if possible |
| Old card (5+ years), no annual fee, low or no balance | ❌ Keep open | Strong account age contribution; free to hold |
| Old card with high limit, no annual fee | ❌ Keep open | Major utilization benefit; free to hold |
| Store card with high interest, no annual fee | ❌ Keep open if low limit | Even store cards contribute to history |
| Duplicate card (you have 3 Mastercards) | ⚠️ Depends | Close the newest one with the smallest limit |
The annual fee question: when it is worth cancelling
If a card costs $120+/year and the rewards don’t justify the fee, the math may favour cancelling — even with a modest score impact:
| Option | Score Impact | Financial Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Cancel the card | −5 to −25 points (temporary) | Save $120+/year |
| Keep it open | No change | Lose $120+/year |
| Downgrade to no-fee version | ✅ No score impact | Save $120/year; keep account history |
Best approach: Before cancelling any annual fee card, call the issuer and ask:
- Can you waive the fee this year?
- Can I be downgraded to the no-fee version of this card?
Many Canadian issuers (TD, RBC, Scotiabank, etc.) offer product transfers that preserve your account history while eliminating the fee.
How to cancel a credit card with minimal score impact
If you decide to cancel:
- Pay the balance to zero — never close a card with a balance outstanding
- Redeem any outstanding rewards — points are forfeited on cancellation
- Ask about a product downgrade first — may preserve account history
- Cancel lower-limit or newer cards first — minimizes utilization and account age impact
- Wait 3–6 months after opening any new credit — stacking a cancellation on a recently opened account amplifies the score drop
- Call to cancel officially — do not just stop using the card; inactivity may lead to involuntary closure on the issuer’s terms, plus outstanding annual fee charges
Will a cancelled card still affect my credit report?
Yes — positively, for a long time:
| Status | Impact on Credit Report |
|---|---|
| Closed account (good standing) | Stays on report up to 10 years; positive payment history continues to count during this period |
| Closed account (missed payments before closing) | Negative history stays 6–7 years from date of last activity |
| Closed account — average account age | The account continues to count in average age calculations while it remains on the report |
The score damage from closing a card is primarily the immediate utilization increase — which is real but typically recovers within a few months as balances are paid down or the scoring model adjusts.
Credit score factors and how closing a card affects each
| Factor | Weight | How cancellation affects it |
|---|---|---|
| Payment history | 35% | No impact (past payments remain on file) |
| Credit utilization | 30% | Increases (less available credit) |
| Length of credit history | 15% | May decrease average age of accounts |
| Credit mix | 10% | Small impact if this was your only credit card |
| New credit inquiries | 10% | No impact from cancellation itself |
Timeline of credit score recovery after cancellation
After cancelling a card, the score impact typically follows this pattern:
- Immediately: Score drops due to higher utilization ratio
- 1–3 months: Utilization settles; score may partially recover as other accounts update
- 6–12 months: Score typically stabilizes if no other negative factors
- 6–10 years: Cancelled account with positive history remains on credit report, continuing to contribute to credit age
The recovery timeline depends heavily on whether the cancelled card was your oldest account and whether the cancellation significantly changed your utilization ratio.