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Canadian Household Debt Statistics (2026)

Updated

Canada household debt overview

Canada has one of the highest household debt levels in the developed world. Here are the key figures for 2025-2026.

MetricValueSource
Total household debt$2.9 trillionBank of Canada
Household debt-to-disposable-income177%Statistics Canada
Household debt-to-GDP102%Bank of Canada
Average debt per consumer$73,500Equifax
Average non-mortgage debt per consumer$21,800Equifax
Mortgage debt share of total73%Bank of Canada
Insolvency filings (2025)~138,000OSB
Delinquency rate (90+ days)1.2%Equifax

Figures as of Q3/Q4 2025. Consumer debt figures are per credit-active individual. Household figures include all members.

Average debt by type

Debt TypeAverage Balance (per holder)Total OutstandingShare of Total Debt
Mortgage$320,000$2.12 trillion73%
Home equity line of credit (HELOC)$73,000$310 billion10.5%
Auto loan$25,200$215 billion7.4%
Credit card$4,200$107 billion3.7%
Personal line of credit$32,500$95 billion3.3%
Student loan$15,300$42 billion1.4%
Other consumer$21 billion0.7%
Total$2.9 trillion100%

Source: Bank of Canada, Equifax Canada. “Average balance per holder” includes only those who hold that type of debt.

Debt-to-income ratio trend

Canada’s household debt-to-disposable-income ratio has been among the highest in the developed world for over a decade.

YearDebt-to-Income RatioContext
2010161%Recovery from financial crisis
2012164%Housing boom begins
2014165%Low interest rate environment
2016171%Toronto/Vancouver housing surge
2018175%Post-stress test cooling
2019176%Stable growth
2020170%Pandemic savings reduce ratio
2021180%Pandemic housing boom
2022186%Peak — rate hikes begin
2023182%High rates slow borrowing
2024179%Gradual deleveraging
2025177%Rate cuts ease pressure

Source: Statistics Canada, National Balance Sheet Accounts.

The ratio peaked in early 2022 as Canadians took on large mortgages during the pandemic housing boom. Since then, rising incomes and slower credit growth have brought the ratio down slowly.

International comparison

CountryHousehold Debt-to-IncomeHousehold Debt-to-GDP
Canada177%102%
Australia186%119%
South Korea196%105%
Sweden188%89%
United Kingdom135%84%
United States100%73%
Germany93%54%
France110%67%
Japan115%65%

Sources: BIS, central bank data, 2024-2025 figures. Definitions may vary slightly between countries.

Canada ranks among the most indebted households globally. The high figure is almost entirely explained by the size of Canadian mortgage debt relative to incomes — a function of expensive housing markets in Toronto, Vancouver, and other major cities.

Average debt by age group

Debt levels rise through peak earning and home-buying years, then decline approaching retirement.

Age GroupAverage Total DebtAverage Non-Mortgage DebtMortgage Holders (%)
18–25$18,000$9,5008%
26–35$120,000$17,20042%
36–45$255,000$22,80058%
46–55$225,000$23,50051%
56–65$155,000$19,00035%
65+$72,000$12,50018%

Source: Statistics Canada Survey of Financial Security, Equifax. Figures are per individual with active credit.

Key observations:

  • 26-35: Debt surges as this group takes on first mortgages. Student loan balances also peak here.
  • 36-45: Highest total debt — maximum mortgage balances plus auto loans and lines of credit. This is also peak consumer spending.
  • 56-65: Debt declines as mortgages are paid down. However, the share of 55+ Canadians carrying mortgage debt into retirement has been rising.
  • 65+: A growing concern — 18% of seniors still carry mortgage debt, up from 10% a decade ago.

Average debt by province

ProvinceAverage Debt per ConsumerAverage Mortgage (holders)Non-Mortgage Debt
British Columbia$95,500$410,000$24,300
Ontario$86,200$355,000$22,400
Alberta$81,000$310,000$25,600
Saskatchewan$59,500$225,000$21,800
Manitoba$51,200$215,000$18,500
Quebec$48,800$220,000$17,600
Nova Scotia$49,200$220,000$18,900
New Brunswick$44,500$180,000$17,200
Newfoundland & Labrador$42,800$190,000$17,800
Prince Edward Island$43,100$200,000$16,900

Source: Equifax Canada, Q3 2025.

British Columbia has the highest debt per consumer, driven by Vancouver’s expensive housing market. Alberta has notably high non-mortgage debt — partly due to higher incomes supporting larger auto loans and lines of credit.

Credit card debt in Canada

MetricValue
Total credit card debt outstanding$107 billion
Average balance per cardholder$4,200
Percentage carrying a balance45%
Average interest rate20.99%
Average minimum payment (on $4,200)$84/month
Time to pay off at minimum (20.99%)40+ years
Interest cost on $4,200 at minimum payment$12,500+

Carrying a credit card balance at 20.99% is one of the most expensive forms of consumer debt. A $4,200 balance paid at the minimum would cost over $12,500 in interest and take decades to pay off.

Consider a balance transfer card to reduce the interest cost, or use the credit card payoff calculator to build a repayment plan.

YearTotal Mortgage DebtAverage New Mortgage5-Year Fixed Rate
2018$1.57 trillion$285,0003.59%
2019$1.64 trillion$290,0003.09%
2020$1.73 trillion$308,0002.39%
2021$1.94 trillion$360,0002.14%
2022$2.05 trillion$385,0004.99%
2023$2.08 trillion$355,0005.49%
2024$2.10 trillion$358,0004.99%
2025$2.12 trillion$365,0004.49%

Source: CMHC, Bank of Canada, financial institutions.

Mortgage debt nearly doubled from $1.1 trillion in 2012 to $2.12 trillion by 2025. The pace of growth slowed significantly after the Bank of Canada raised rates in 2022-2023, but total outstanding debt continues to grow as new mortgages are larger on average.

YearConsumer InsolvenciesBankruptciesConsumer ProposalsChange
2019137,17847,01490,164+4.7%
202096,45828,23368,225-29.7%
202192,00423,80768,197-4.6%
2022107,99028,47879,512+17.4%
2023128,84630,21298,634+19.3%
2024135,60029,800105,800+5.2%
2025 (est.)138,00029,500108,500+1.8%

Source: Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy (OSB).

Consumer proposals have replaced bankruptcy as the preferred form of debt relief in Canada — proposals now outnumber bankruptcies by nearly 4 to 1. Insolvencies dropped during the pandemic (due to government support programs and payment deferrals) and have been rising since as those supports expired and interest rates rose.

Debt-to-asset ratio

Not all debt is problematic when offset by assets. The Bank of Canada tracks the overall financial position of Canadian households:

YearTotal AssetsTotal DebtNet WorthDebt-to-Asset Ratio
2018$13.3 trillion$2.17 trillion$11.1 trillion16.3%
2020$14.4 trillion$2.33 trillion$12.1 trillion16.2%
2022$16.9 trillion$2.81 trillion$14.1 trillion16.6%
2024$16.5 trillion$2.87 trillion$13.6 trillion17.4%
2025$16.8 trillion$2.90 trillion$13.9 trillion17.3%

Source: Statistics Canada, National Balance Sheet Accounts.

While Canadians carry high debt, total assets (primarily real estate and financial investments) significantly exceed liabilities. The debt-to-asset ratio has remained relatively stable at 16-17%, though it ticked up in 2024 when home values softened while mortgage balances remained.

Key takeaways

  1. Mortgage debt is the dominant factor — 73% of all Canadian household debt is mortgage-related. High home prices in Toronto and Vancouver are the primary driver
  2. The debt-to-income ratio is declining — from a 2022 peak of 186% to 177%, as income growth outpaces new borrowing
  3. Insolvencies are still rising — consumer proposals have surged as Canadians seek structured debt relief options
  4. Seniors carrying debt is a growing concern — 18% of Canadians 65+ still have mortgage debt, up from 10% a decade ago
  5. Canada compares poorly internationally — among G7 nations, only Japan comes close to Canada’s household debt-to-GDP ratio
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