If you carry a credit card balance, you have probably heard a lot of “facts” that turn out to be wrong — that minimum payments are fine, that closing your old cards helps your score, that carrying a small balance somehow proves you are responsible. These myths are not harmless. They quietly cost Canadians thousands of dollars in interest and keep people stuck in debt for years longer than they need to be.
This guide walks through 13 of the most common credit card debt myths in Canada and replaces each one with the truth — drawn from the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC), credit bureau scoring rules, and the math behind how interest actually works. No judgement, no jargon — just the information you need to make better decisions about your credit card debt in 2026.
Why Credit Card Myths Are So Costly
Credit card debt is the most common form of unsecured debt in Canada, and most credit card balances are charged interest somewhere in the 19.99% to 22.99% range. According to the FCAC, that interest starts the day you make a purchase if you do not pay your balance in full by the due date. So a small misunderstanding — believing the minimum payment is “enough” or that carrying a balance helps your credit — quietly turns into hundreds or thousands of dollars in unnecessary cost.
The myths in this article do not come from one bad source. They come from old advice, well-meaning relatives, marketing language from card issuers, and viral social media tips. Some had a kernel of truth decades ago. Others were never true. What matters now is what is actually true for Canadian cardholders in 2026.
The 13 Biggest Credit Card Myths in Canada
Myth 1: All credit card debt is bad
Used responsibly — paid off in full each month — a credit card is a tool, not a trap. It builds credit history, gives you fraud protection that debit does not, and helps with everyday cash flow. The problem is not the card. The problem is carrying a balance at 20% interest.
Myth 2: Carrying a small balance helps your credit score
This is one of the most expensive myths in personal finance. Your credit score does not reward you for paying interest. What helps your score is using your card and paying on time — whether you pay the full statement balance or carry one over makes no positive difference to your score. Carrying a balance just costs you interest for no benefit.
Myth 3: The minimum payment is “enough”
The minimum payment is set by the card issuer to keep your account in good standing — not to get you out of debt. The FCAC credit card payment calculator shows that a $1,000 balance at typical rates can take roughly 10 years to pay off on minimums alone, with nearly $800 in interest on top.
Myth 4: Closing old credit cards helps your score
Closing an old card usually hurts your score in two ways: it shortens your average credit history, and it removes available credit, which raises your utilization ratio. Both factors are weighted heavily by Equifax and TransUnion. Unless the card has an annual fee you cannot justify, leaving an old card open and unused is generally better.
Myth 5: Checking your own credit score lowers it
Checking your own score — through Borrowell, Credit Karma, your bank’s app, Equifax, or TransUnion — is a “soft” inquiry. It has zero impact on your score. Only “hard” inquiries from lenders when you actually apply for credit can affect your score, and even then the impact is usually minor and short-lived.
Myth 6: Having multiple credit cards is dangerous
Having more cards is not automatically risky — what matters is how you use them. More cards mean more total available credit, which can lower your utilization ratio and help your score. The risk only kicks in if those extra cards lead to extra spending you cannot pay off.
Myth 7: You cannot get a credit card with bad credit
Secured credit cards exist exactly for this situation. You put down a refundable deposit (often $200–$500), and that becomes your limit. Used responsibly, a secured card reports to the credit bureaus and helps you rebuild — exactly the same way an unsecured card would.
Myth 8: A balance transfer always saves money
A 0% promo balance transfer can be powerful, but it only works if you actually pay off the balance during the promo period (usually 6 to 12 months in Canada). Most cards charge a 1% to 3% transfer fee up front, and any leftover balance jumps back to a regular rate of around 20% when the promo ends. Without a clear payoff plan, you can end up no better off — or worse.
Myth 9: Ignoring credit card debt makes it go away
Ignoring credit card debt makes everything worse. Your interest rate can increase, your account can be sent to collections, your credit score will drop, and creditors can sue you for the balance. The FCAC’s guidance on paying back your debt is clear: the earlier you make a plan, the more options you have.
Myth 10: Debt settlement and credit counselling are the same thing
They are not. Credit counselling through a non-profit agency typically rolls your debts into a Debt Management Plan with reduced or zero interest, paid back in full over 3 to 5 years. Debt settlement is when a third party tries to negotiate a lump-sum payoff for less than you owe — which can save money, but often hurts your credit harder and is not always reliable. They are different tools for different situations.
Myth 11: Bankruptcy and a consumer proposal mean the same thing
Both are legal options under Canada’s Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, but they work very differently. A consumer proposal lets you pay back a portion of your debt over up to five years with no interest, while a bankruptcy fully discharges most unsecured debt — usually faster — but with stricter conditions and more credit impact. Our guide on bankruptcy vs. consumer proposal in Canada walks through the differences in detail.
Myth 12: Credit card debt relief always destroys your credit
Most debt relief options do affect your credit — but if you are already missing payments or carrying very high balances, your score is likely already taking a hit. A structured plan, like credit counselling or a consumer proposal, lets you stop the bleeding and start rebuilding. The key is to act before the situation gets worse, not after.
Myth 13: Once it is on your credit report, there is nothing you can do
Late payments and other negative items do drop off your credit report eventually — usually after six to seven years in Canada. In the meantime, you can dispute genuine errors with Equifax or TransUnion, ask for a goodwill adjustment from a creditor, and keep your current accounts in good standing to push your score back up. Patience plus consistent on-time payments rebuilds credit faster than people expect.
Pros and Cons of Knowing the Truth
Who Should Pay Closest Attention
- You are carrying a balance on one or more credit cards from month to month.
- You only pay the minimum payment most months.
- You are not sure whether to close old cards, open new ones, or transfer balances.
- You are trying to rebuild your credit score after a rough financial stretch.
- You are weighing debt consolidation, credit counselling, or a consumer proposal.
- You already pay your full statement balance every month and never carry interest.
- You have no credit card debt and are not planning to apply for new credit anytime soon.
- You already work with a Licensed Insolvency Trustee or non-profit credit counsellor on a structured plan.
A Real Cost Example: Minimum vs. Real Payments
Here is what those myths actually cost in dollars. Imagine you have a $5,000 credit card balance at 19.99% interest — close to a typical Canadian rate. The numbers below are illustrative, based on the FCAC’s published examples and standard amortization math.
The takeaway is simple: even modest increases above the minimum payment dramatically shorten the time you spend in debt and the total interest you pay. That is exactly why the minimum-payment myth is so expensive.
How to Take Back Control of Credit Card Debt
If reading those myths felt uncomfortably familiar, here is a practical sequence to follow. These are the steps in the order they actually need to happen — not the order they sound nicest.
- List every credit card balance, rate, and minimum. Pull out each statement (or log in online) and write down the balance, interest rate, and minimum payment for each card. You cannot make a plan you cannot see.
- Confirm you are paying at least the minimum on every card on time. Late payments do real damage. Set up automatic minimum payments so you never miss one by accident, then add extra payments manually.
- Build a realistic monthly budget. Figure out how much extra — even $50 or $100 — you can put toward debt every month without missing other essentials like rent, groceries, or utilities.
- Pick a payoff strategy. Two common options: the avalanche (extra payments go to the highest-rate card first to save the most interest) or the snowball (extra payments go to the smallest balance first for momentum). Both work — choose whichever you will actually stick with.
- Consider consolidating credit card debts if rates are crushing you. A consolidation loan, line of credit, or balance transfer card can lower your interest, but only if you stop using the cleared cards.
- If consolidation is not realistic, get free advice. A non-profit credit counsellor or Licensed Insolvency Trustee can review your situation at no cost and explain options such as a Debt Management Plan, consumer proposal, or other relief.
- Track progress monthly and protect your wins. Watch the balances drop, keep the cleared cards open but unused, and build a small emergency fund so the next surprise expense does not push you back into debt.
The Bottom Line
Ready to see if you qualify for a structured plan to clear your credit card debt?
Frequently Asked Questions
Does carrying a balance on my credit card actually hurt my credit score?
It does not directly hurt your score for “having” a balance, but it does hurt indirectly. Carrying a high balance pushes your credit utilization ratio up, and utilization is the second-biggest factor in your credit score. Keeping balances under 30% of each card’s limit — and ideally under 10% — protects your score. The cleanest approach is to pay your full statement balance each month, which avoids interest and keeps utilization low at the same time.
Will a debt consolidation loan or balance transfer hurt my credit?
There is usually a small short-term dip from the hard inquiry and the new account being added to your file. But if the new loan or balance transfer significantly lowers your overall utilization, the long-term effect is often a net positive, sometimes within 30 to 60 days. The key is to actually pay down the new debt and to avoid running up the cards you cleared. Debt consolidation in Canada works best when paired with a budget that prevents new balances from building up.
How long does it take to recover my credit score after credit card debt problems?
Most negative items, including late payments and accounts that went to collections, drop off your Canadian credit report after six years in most provinces — sometimes seven, depending on the bureau and province. But your score can start improving much sooner than that. As long as you keep your current accounts in good standing, lower your utilization, and avoid new missed payments, you can usually see meaningful score improvements within 6 to 12 months. Tools like credit repair services in Canada can also help if there are genuine errors on your report.
Are non-profit credit counselling services in Canada really free?
The initial consultation and budgeting advice from a reputable non-profit credit counsellor are typically free. If you enrol in a Debt Management Plan, there is usually a small administrative fee built into the monthly payment, but interest is reduced or eliminated, which often saves much more than the fee costs. Be careful with companies that charge large upfront fees or promise to “erase” your debt — they are usually for-profit debt settlement firms, not non-profit counsellors. Our guide on credit counselling in Canada explains how to tell the difference.
When should I stop trying to pay credit card debt on my own and get help?
It is time to talk to a professional if you are using one credit card to pay another, only making minimum payments and watching balances stay flat or grow, getting collection calls, or feeling like you cannot see a realistic end to the debt within a few years. A non-profit credit counsellor or a Licensed Insolvency Trustee will lay out every option — including ones that do not involve insolvency — at no cost and with no obligation. Acting earlier almost always means more options and less damage to your credit, not less.