How to build credit in Canada from scratch (2026)
Whether you just arrived in Canada or you're starting your financial life as a young adult, you likely have the same problem: no credit history means no credit, and no credit means no credit history. Here is exactly how to break out of that loop.
Why a Canadian credit history matters
Canadian lenders, landlords, and even some phone carriers check your credit before approving you. A thin or non-existent file means you may be rejected outright, asked for a large deposit, or offered much higher interest rates. Your credit history from another country does not transfer to Canada — you start fresh.
Step 1 — Open the right first credit product
You need a credit product to build credit. Debit cards and bank accounts don't count. Your two realistic options when starting from zero:
Secured credit card
You deposit cash (typically $200–$500) as collateral and receive a credit card with that amount as your limit. The deposit is refundable when you close or upgrade the card. Almost anyone can get one — including newcomers with no Canadian credit history — because the bank's risk is covered by your deposit. Look for cards with no (or low) annual fees.
Newcomer credit card program
Major Canadian banks — RBC, Scotiabank, TD, CIBC, and BMO — all offer newcomer banking packages that include a credit card with a modest limit, often with no Canadian credit history required. If you've just arrived in Canada on a work permit, study permit, or as a permanent resident, ask about these programs specifically when you open your bank account.
Becoming an authorized user
If a trusted family member already has Canadian credit, being added as an authorized user on their card can help your file start building — but the primary cardholder's behaviour affects you too, so choose wisely.
Step 2 — Use it small and pay in full
Charge something small and predictable each month — a streaming subscription, a phone bill, groceries once a month. The goal is regular activity, not big spending. Then pay the full statement balance before the due date, every single time.
Paying in full has two benefits: you pay zero interest (Canadian credit cards typically charge ~20% annually — expensive), and your credit score builds just as well as if you carried a balance. There is no benefit to carrying a balance.
Step 3 — Keep utilization low
Credit utilization — how much of your limit you're using — is one of the most influential factors in your score. The rule of thumb is to stay under 30% of your limit. On a $500 secured card, that means keeping your balance below ~$150 before the statement closes.
If you need to spend more in a given month, consider making a mid-cycle payment so your balance is low when the statement generates.
Step 4 — Be patient and consistent
Credit bureaus (Equifax and TransUnion are the two in Canada) typically need at least 6 months of account history before they generate a score. After that, scores improve gradually with each on-time payment. Expect the following rough timeline:
| Milestone | Typical timeframe |
|---|---|
| First score generated | ~6 months |
| Fair score (560–659) | 6–12 months |
| Good score (660+) | 12–24 months |
| Very good score (725+) | 2–4 years |
These are rough averages — results depend on your payment record, utilization, and whether any negative marks appear.
Step 5 — Avoid multiple applications
Each time you apply for credit, the lender does a hard inquiry on your file, which can drop your score by a few points and stays on your report for up to 2 years. When you're building from scratch, one well-chosen card is enough. Avoid applying for several cards or loans at the same time — it looks risky to lenders and slows your progress.
Once you have a score: check it regularly
After 6 months, check your score through Borrowell (Equifax) or Credit Karma Canada (TransUnion) — both are free and don't affect your score. Read our guide on how to check and improve your credit score in Canada for a full breakdown of what the numbers mean and how to raise them further.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Missing a payment. Even one missed payment can set you back months. Set up autopay for at least the minimum — better yet, the full balance.
- Maxing out the card. A $500 card with a $490 balance looks bad even if you pay it off every month. Aim to keep balances low before the statement date.
- Closing your first card too soon. Length of credit history matters. Keep your first account open even after you get a better card.
- Applying for many products at once. Multiple hard inquiries in a short window signal desperation to lenders.
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