Skip to main content

Personal Loan vs Line of Credit vs Credit Card in Canada 2026

Updated

Choosing between a personal loan, line of credit, and credit card comes down to one question: do you need discipline or flexibility? A personal loan forces you to pay off the debt through fixed monthly payments — you can’t make minimum-only payments and pretend the balance will disappear. A line of credit gives you the lowest rate but lets you pay interest only forever. And credit cards are the most expensive option by far, but the only one that gives you rewards and a grace period. The right choice depends on the amount, how quickly you’ll repay, and — honestly — your spending behaviour.

Quick Comparison

FeaturePersonal LoanLine of CreditCredit Card
TypeFixed installmentRevolvingRevolving
Interest rate7-15% (fixed or variable)6-12% (variable)19.99-22.99%
Payment structureFixed monthly paymentsInterest-only minimumMinimum 2-3% of balance
Forced payoffYes (set term)No (can pay interest only)No (minimum traps you)
Borrowing limit$1,000-$50,000$5,000-$50,000+$1,000-$25,000+
RewardsNoNoYes (cashback, points)
Access to fundsLump sum upfrontDraw as neededDraw as needed
Best forLarge, planned expensesFlexible, ongoing accessSmall daily purchases

Interest Rate Comparison

Average Rates in Canada (2025)

ProductRate RangeTypical Rate
Secured line of credit (HELOC)5.5-6.5%5.45% (Prime + 0.5%)
Unsecured line of credit6.5-12%8-9% (Prime + 3-4%)
Personal loan (bank)7-13%9-11%
Personal loan (online lender)8-30%+10-18%
Credit card (standard)19.99%19.99%
Credit card (low-rate)8.99-12.99%11.99%
Credit card (store)25-29.99%28.99%

Annual Interest Cost ($10,000 Balance)

ProductRateAnnual InterestMonthly Interest
HELOC5.5%$550$46
Unsecured LOC8.5%$850$71
Personal loan10%$1,000$83
Credit card19.99%$1,999$167
Store credit card28.99%$2,899$242

When to Use Each

Personal Loan

SituationWhy It’s Best
Debt consolidationFixed rate, forced payoff, saves interest
Large planned purchase ($5K+)Lower rate than credit card
Home renovationFixed budget, predictable payments
Medical/dental expenseStructured payoff
Wedding financingSet repayment schedule
Vehicle purchaseFixed term (auto loan variant)

Line of Credit

SituationWhy It’s Best
Emergency fund alternativeDraw only when needed
Irregular expensesAccess without reapplying
Bridging cash flow gapsFlexible access and repayment
Self-employed income smoothingCover lean months
Ongoing renovation projectDraw as costs arise
Short-term borrowingPay off quickly, lower rate

Credit Card

SituationWhy It’s Best
Purchases you can pay off monthly21-day grace period = 0% interest
Everyday spending (earn rewards)Cashback/points only if paid in full
Online shopping (buyer protection)Chargeback rights
Travel (insurance, no FX fees)Travel cards offer insurance + rewards
Building credit historyRegular use + full payment builds score
Small emergency (<$1,000)Quick access, pay off ASAP

Repayment Comparison ($10,000 Debt)

This is where the real cost differences become clear. A personal loan at 10% over three years costs $1,616 in total interest and the balance reaches $0 guaranteed. A line of credit at 8.5% looks cheaper per month, but if you only make interest-only minimums, you still owe the full $10,000 after three years and have paid $2,550 in interest with nothing to show for it. A credit card at 19.99% with minimum payments takes 16 years and costs $8,500 in interest. The lesson: the cheapest rate doesn’t always mean the cheapest loan.

Personal Loan (10%, 3-Year Term)

MonthPaymentInterestPrincipalBalance
1$323$83$240$9,760
12$323$62$261$7,199
24$323$38$285$4,267
36$323$3$320$0
Total$11,616$1,616

Line of Credit (8.5%, Interest-Only Minimum)

MonthMinimum PaymentInterestPrincipalBalance
1$71$71$0$10,000
12$71$71$0$10,000
24$71$71$0$10,000
36$71$71$0$10,000
Total (3 years)$2,550$2,550$0$10,000 still owing

Credit Card (19.99%, Minimum Payment 3%)

MonthMinimum PaymentInterestPrincipalBalance
1$300$167$133$9,867
12$247$137$110$8,076
24$200$108$92$6,345
36$163$84$79$4,858
Payoff time~16 years
Total paid~$18,500~$8,500 interest

The personal loan costs $1,616 in interest and is paid off in 3 years. The credit card costs $8,500+ in interest and takes 16 years at minimum payments.

Impact on Credit Score

All three products affect your credit score differently. Personal loans add installment credit to your mix (which helps diversify your profile) and don’t count toward your utilization ratio — making them credit-score-friendly even at high balances. Lines of credit and credit cards are both revolving credit, and carrying a balance above 30% of your limit hurts your score. If you’re carrying $8,000 on a $10,000 credit card, transferring that balance to a personal loan can boost your score immediately just from the utilization drop.

FactorPersonal LoanLOCCredit Card
Hard inquiry (applying)-5 to -10 points-5 to -10 points-5 to -10 points
Credit mix (variety)Helps (installment)Helps (revolving)Helps (revolving)
Utilization ratioDoes not affectAffects (keep under 30%)Affects (keep under 30%)
Payment historyHelps (if on time)Helps (if on time)Helps (if on time)
Available credit increaseNo (fixed amount)YesYes
Best for building creditLong-term mixOngoingMonthly use + full payment

Debt Consolidation Strategy

Consolidation is the most common reason people compare these three products. If you’re carrying $15,000 across multiple credit cards at 19.99%, moving that balance to either a personal loan at 10% or a line of credit at 8.5% saves $8,000–$10,000 in interest. The personal loan is the safer choice because the fixed payments guarantee payoff. The line of credit is cheaper per month but only works if you have the discipline to pay more than the minimum — otherwise you just move the debt around without ever eliminating it.

Example: $15,000 in Credit Card Debt

StrategyRateMonthly PaymentTotal InterestPayoff
Keep on credit card19.99%$450 (min)$12,000+10+ years
Balance transfer card (0% for 12 months)0% then 22.99%$1,250$0 (if paid in 12 months)12 months
Personal loan (10%, 3 years)10%$484$2,4243 years
Line of credit (8.5%)8.5%$484 (match loan)$1,945~3 years
Best optionLOC or personal loanSaves $8,000-$10,000

Where to Get Each Product

Personal Loans

LenderRate RangeBest For
Big 5 banks7-12%Existing customers, good credit
Fairstone19.99-39.99%Lower credit scores
LendingArch9-30%Quick online approval
Borrowell (marketplace)VariesCompares options

Lines of Credit

LenderRateBest For
Big 5 banks (unsecured)Prime + 2-5%Good credit (680+)
HELOC (secured)Prime + 0.5-1%Homeowners
TangerinePrime + 1.5-4%Online banking customers
DesjardinsPrime + 2-4%Quebec residents

Credit Cards for Debt Management

Card TypeRateBest For
Low-rate card (MBNA, BMO)8.99-12.99%Carrying a balance
Balance transfer (MBNA)0% for 12 monthsPaying off debt quickly
Secured card17.99-19.99%Rebuilding credit

Decision Framework

QuestionPersonal LoanLOCCredit Card
Need fixed payoff schedule?BestNoNo
Need lowest rate?GoodBest (unsecured)Worst
Need flexibility?LowBestModerate
Want to earn rewards?NoNoYes
Paying off in < 1 month?UnnecessaryUnnecessaryBest (0% grace)
Amount > $5,000?BestGoodExpensive
Amount < $1,000?UnnecessaryGoodFine (if paid off quickly)
Tendency to overspend?Best (forced payments)Risky (interest-only trap)Worst (minimum payments)

The Bottom Line

Use a personal loan when you need forced discipline and a guaranteed payoff date. Use a line of credit for flexible, short-term borrowing when you trust yourself to pay more than the minimum. Use a credit card only for purchases you can pay off in full each month — the moment you carry a balance, you’re paying the highest rate in the comparison. For debt consolidation, a personal loan is almost always the right choice.


→ Back to: Debt Management Guide Canada