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Credit Score Explained Canada | Complete Guide

Updated

Your credit score is a three-digit number between 300 and 900 that determines whether you get approved for a mortgage, credit card, or car loan - and at what interest rate. A 50-point difference can mean thousands of dollars more or less in interest over the life of a mortgage. The good news: your score is entirely within your control. It’s built from five factors, and two of them (payment history and utilization) account for 65% of the number. Master those two and your score will take care of itself. You can check it for free at any time through Borrowell (Equifax) or Credit Karma (TransUnion) without any impact on your score.

For a full framework that compares all Canadian scoring concepts in one place, see the Credit Scores Hub.

What is a Credit Score?

The Basics

FeatureDetails
Range300-900
Higher =Better creditworthiness
Used forLoans, mortgages, credit cards
Calculated byEquifax and TransUnion

Why It Matters

ForImpact
MortgageApproval and interest rate
Credit cardsApproval and limits
Car loansInterest rate
RentingLandlords may check
Some jobsEmployers may check

Credit Score Ranges

Canada Credit Score Tiers

RangeRatingWhat It Means
800-900ExcellentBest rates, easy approval
760-799Very GoodMost products available
725-759GoodMost products, good rates
660-724FairMay get approved, higher rates
560-659PoorLimited options
300-559Very PoorLikely declined

Average Canadian Score

StatisticScore
Average~680-710
Median~720

What Affects Your Score

Your credit score is calculated from five factors, each weighted differently. Payment history (35%) and credit utilization (30%) together control nearly two-thirds of your score, which means paying on time and keeping balances low are far more important than the other three factors combined. Credit history length (15%) rewards patience — keeping your oldest card open helps even if you rarely use it. Credit mix (10%) means having both revolving credit (credit cards) and installment credit (loans) is better than having only one type. New credit (10%) penalizes applying for too many products at once.

The Five Factors

FactorWeightImpact
Payment history35%Biggest factor
Credit utilization30%Keep under 30%
Credit history length15%Longer is better
Credit mix10%Variety helps
New credit inquiries10%Too many hurts

Payment History (35%)

Most Important Factor

ActionImpact
On-time paymentsPositive
Late payment (30+ days)Negative
Missed paymentVery negative
CollectionsVery negative
BankruptcySevere negative

How Long Things Stay

EventRemains On Report
Late payment6 years
Collections6 years
Consumer proposal3 years after completion
Bankruptcy (first)6-7 years
Bankruptcy (second)14 years

Credit Utilization (30%)

Utilization is the second most important factor and the one most people get wrong. It measures how much of your available credit you’re using. If you have a $10,000 limit and carry a $3,000 balance, your utilization is 30%. The sweet spot is under 10% — which means using your card regularly but paying most of it off before the statement date. Requesting a credit limit increase (without increasing spending) is one of the fastest ways to improve your score because it lowers your utilization ratio instantly.

What It Is

CalculationExample
Balance ÷ Credit Limit$3,000 ÷ $10,000 = 30%

Optimal Utilization

UtilizationImpact
0-10%Excellent
11-30%Good
31-50%Fair
Over 50%Hurts score
Over 75%Significant drop

Tips to Improve

StrategyAction
Pay before statementLower reported balance
Request limit increaseSame balance, lower %
Multiple cardsSpread out usage
Pay twice a monthKeep balance low

Credit History Length (15%)

Age of Accounts

FactorImpact
Average ageImportant
Oldest accountVery important
New accountsLower average

Strategy

DoDon’t
Keep old accounts openClose your oldest card
Use old cards occasionallyLet them go inactive
Be patientExpect quick improvement

Credit Mix (10%)

Types of Credit

TypeExample
RevolvingCredit cards, LOC
InstallmentCar loan, mortgage
Both typesShows you can manage

New Credit (10%)

Hard vs Soft Inquiries

Hard InquirySoft Inquiry
You applied for creditChecking own score
Affects scoreNo effect
Stays 2-3 yearsNot reported

Multiple Applications

SituationImpact
Many applications quicklyLooks risky
Rate shopping (mortgage/car)Often grouped as one

How to Check Your Score

Checking your own score is a “soft inquiry” and has zero impact on your number — so check it as often as you want. Borrowell shows your Equifax score weekly, Credit Karma shows TransUnion, and most major bank apps now include a score in the dashboard. It’s worth checking both Equifax and TransUnion because they may show different scores — not all creditors report to both bureaus, and the scoring models differ slightly. If you find errors, dispute them immediately because even small mistakes can cost you points.

Free Options

ServiceScore TypeFeatures
BorrowellEquifaxFree, weekly updates
Credit KarmaTransUnionFree, monitoring
Bank appsVariesOften included

Official Reports

BureauHow to Get
Equifaxequifax.ca (free by mail)
TransUniontransunion.ca (free by mail)

Why Two Scores?

BureauMay Differ
EquifaxDifferent data reported
TransUnionDifferent calculation
Check bothSee complete picture

Improving Your Credit

Quick Wins (1-2 Months)

ActionImpact
Pay down card balancesLower utilization
Set up automatic paymentsNever miss payment
Become authorized userOn family member’s card
Pay bills on timeBuild positive history

Medium-Term (3-12 Months)

ActionImpact
Keep cards activeUse and pay monthly
Request limit increasesAfter 6 months good history
Get secured cardIf rebuilding
Don’t close old cardsPreserves history

Long-Term (1+ Years)

ActionImpact
Maintain good habitsConsistent improvement
Diversify creditAdd installment loan
Wait for negatives to dropAfter 6 years

Building Credit from Zero

If New to Credit

StepAction
1Get a secured credit card
2Use 10-20% of limit
3Pay full balance monthly
4After 6-12 months, upgrade

Secured Card Basics

FeatureDetails
Deposit requiredUsually $300-500
Becomes your limit$300 deposit = $300 limit
After 6-12 monthsMay convert to unsecured
Reports to bureausBuilds credit

Credit Score Myths

Common Misconceptions

MythTruth
Carrying a balance helpsNo—pay in full
Checking score hurts itNo—soft inquiry
Income affects scoreNo—not directly
Closing cards helpsNo—often hurts
You need to pay interestNo—never needed

Credit Score by Life Stage

Targets

AgeReasonable Goal
18-25650+ (building)
25-35700+ (established)
35+750+ (optimized)

Credit Score for Major Purchases

Mortgage Requirements

ScoreTypical Result
760+Best rates
680-759Good rates
640-679May qualify, higher rate
Under 640May need alternative lender

Credit Card Approvals

Card TypeTypical Minimum
Basic rewards650+
Premium rewards700+
Travel elite750+

Checking Your Credit Report

What to Look For

ItemAction
ErrorsDispute with bureau
Wrong accountsNot yours—possible fraud
Incorrect balancesReport to bureau
Closed accountsShould show closed

How to Dispute Errors

StepAction
1Get report from Equifax/TransUnion
2Identify errors
3File dispute online or mail
4Bureau investigates (30 days)
5Errors corrected

The Bottom Line

Your credit score comes down to two things: pay on time (every time) and keep your utilization under 30% (ideally under 10%). Everything else — credit mix, history length, new inquiries — matters far less. Check your score regularly for free, dispute any errors, and don’t close old accounts. Start now, and a score of 750+ is achievable within 12–24 months for most Canadians.