Avoiding Loan Scams
Loan scams targeting Canadian borrowers follow a handful of predictable patterns — here's how to recognize them and what to do if you've been targeted.
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Warning Signs to Watch For
"Guaranteed Approval" Advertising
A real lender reviews your credit and income before making any promises — there's no way around that step. If an ad promises approval regardless of your history before you've even applied, treat it as a red flag rather than good news.
A legitimate lender can pre-qualify you with a soft credit check, but the final yes always comes after verification.
Any Fee Requested Before Funds Arrive
If someone asks you to wire money, load a gift card, or send crypto for an "insurance," "processing," or "collateral" fee before releasing your loan, walk away. Real Canadian lenders take their fees out of the loan itself — they never ask you to pay in first.
Gift cards and cryptocurrency are the two payment methods no legitimate lender will ever ask you to use.
No Provincial License
Every lender doing business in Canada needs to be licensed in the provinces where they operate. Before you apply anywhere, look them up with your provincial regulator — Consumer Protection Ontario, Consumer Protection BC, or Quebec's Office de la protection du consommateur, depending on where you live.
Pressure to Sign Without Reading the Terms
Canadian lending law requires full written disclosure — the APR, total borrowing cost, and repayment schedule — before you sign anything. A lender who rushes you past that, or won't produce it in writing at all, isn't operating within the rules.
Requests for Sensitive Information
Be wary of anyone asking for your online banking password, a signed blank cheque, or your SIN without a clear explanation of why. A legitimate lender can confirm your income and set up repayment without ever needing your actual banking login.
If You Think You've Already Been Targeted
Stop sending money or documents immediately. Report it to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre and your provincial consumer protection office, and contact your bank right away if you've shared any account details. If money has already changed hands, file a police report as well.
Quick Reference
- A real lender never guarantees approval sight unseen
- No legitimate loan requires an upfront fee, in any form
- Confirm provincial licensing before you apply anywhere
- Insist on written terms — APR and total cost included — before signing
- Report anything suspicious to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre
Frequently Asked Questions
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