Credit Agreement (Canada)
CREDIT AGREEMENT
This Credit Agreement ("Agreement") is entered into as of [Agreement Date] between:
Lender: [Lender Name], [Lender Address] ("Lender")
Borrower: [Borrower Name], [Borrower Address] ("Borrower")
1. CREDIT FACILITY
Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, the Lender establishes in favour of the Borrower [Credit Type] ("Credit Facility") in the maximum amount of [Credit Limit] (CAD) ("Credit Limit").
Purpose: The Credit Facility shall be used solely for [Credit Purpose]. The Borrower shall not use the Credit Facility for any other purpose without the prior written consent of the Lender.
2. COST OF BORROWING DISCLOSURE
Annual Interest Rate: [Interest Rate]
Annual Percentage Rate (APR): [APR]
Total Cost of Borrowing (estimated): [Total Cost of Borrowing]
Interest is [Interest Calculation]. Interest accrues on the daily outstanding balance commencing on the date each advance is made and continues to accrue until the outstanding amount is repaid in full. All interest rates stated herein are expressed as annual rates and are calculated in compliance with the Interest Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. I-15) and the Criminal Code (R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46, s. 347).
3. REPAYMENT
Minimum Monthly Payment: [Minimum Payment].
Repayment Terms: [Repayment Terms]
All payments shall be applied first to accrued interest and fees, then to outstanding principal.
4. SECURITY
As security for all amounts owing under this Agreement: [Security Provided] of the Province of [Governing Province]. The Borrower shall execute all security documents required by the Lender and shall cooperate in the registration and perfection of the Lender's security interest.
5. DEFAULT
Each of the following constitutes an event of default: [Default Events].
Upon an event of default, the Lender may: (a) declare the entire outstanding balance immediately due and payable; (b) charge default interest at [Default Interest Rate] on all overdue amounts; (c) enforce any security granted by the Borrower; (d) report the default to credit reporting agencies (Equifax and TransUnion); and (e) pursue any other remedies available at law or in equity. The Borrower shall reimburse the Lender for all reasonable costs and legal fees incurred in enforcing this Agreement.
6. BORROWER COVENANTS
The Borrower covenants that during the term of this Agreement it will: (a) maintain its corporate existence and comply with all applicable laws; (b) provide the Lender with annual financial statements within ninety (90) days of fiscal year-end; (c) notify the Lender promptly of any material adverse change in its financial condition; (d) not grant any security interest over its assets in priority to the Lender's security without the Lender's written consent; and (e) use the Credit Facility only for the purposes specified in this Agreement.
7. GOVERNING LAW
This Agreement is governed by the laws of the Province of [Governing Province] and the federal laws of Canada applicable therein, including the Interest Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. I-15) and the Criminal Code (R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46) as applicable. The Borrower submits to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of [Governing Province] for the resolution of any dispute arising from this Agreement.
SIGNATURES
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have signed this Credit Agreement as of [Agreement Date].
LENDER: [Lender Name]
Authorized Signature: ___________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name and Title: ___________________________
BORROWER: [Borrower Name]
Authorized Signature: ___________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name and Title: ___________________________
Lender
________________
Signature
Borrower
________________
Signature
What Is a Credit Agreement (Canada)?
A Credit Agreement in Canada sets the credit limit, interest, and repayment terms binding lender and borrower, governed primarily by provincial consumer-protection and the federal Interest Act (R.S.C. 1985, c. I-15).
At the federal level, the Criminal Code of Canada (R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46, s. 347) establishes the criminal rate of interest — the effective annual rate above which charging or receiving interest constitutes a criminal offence. The criminal rate was historically set at 60% per annum (calculated on an effective annual basis including all fees, fines, penalties, commissions, and charges). Amendments introduced through Bill C-69 (Budget Implementation Act, 2023) lowered the criminal rate to 35% for most consumer credit agreements, effective when proclaimed in force, while the 60% rate continues to apply to commercial credit between sophisticated parties.
The Interest Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. I-15, s. 6) requires that interest on mortgages — charges on real property — be expressed as an annual rate in the mortgage document. If a mortgage does not disclose an annual interest rate, only 5% per year may be legally charged under section 8. This disclosure requirement protects Canadian mortgage borrowers and has been rigorously enforced by Canadian courts, including the Supreme Court of Canada in cases addressing mortgage interest calculation.
Provincially, consumer credit agreements are regulated by cost of borrowing disclosure statutes — Ontario's Consumer Protection Act, 2002 (S.O. 2002, c. 30, Sched. A) and its regulations; British Columbia's Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (S.B.C. 2004, c. 2); Alberta's Consumer Protection Act (R.S.A. 2000, c. C-26.3); and comparable legislation in each province — that require disclosure of the annual percentage rate (APR), the total cost of borrowing in dollars, the number of payments, and the borrower's cancellation rights before the credit agreement takes effect.
For business-to-business credit, the Personal Property Security Act 1990 in Ontario (Section 11 and Section 23), the Personal Property Security Act 1996 in British Columbia (Section 25), and the Personal Property Security Act 2000 in Alberta govern security interests taken in personal property as collateral for the credit extended. A credit agreement secured against inventory, accounts receivable, or equipment must create a valid security interest under the applicable PPSA, which requires registration of a financing statement in the provincial personal property registry to perfect the security interest and establish priority over other creditors.
Federal oversight of consumer credit is administered by the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC) under the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada Act 2001 Section 18, which enforces market conduct obligations on federally regulated financial institutions. The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) supervises the capital adequacy and risk management practices of federally chartered banks extending credit under the Bank Act 1991 Section 418. Provincial consumer protection offices — including the Ministry of Public and Business Service Delivery in Ontario, the Consumer Protection BC, and the Service Alberta — administer provincial cost of borrowing regulations and investigate complaints from borrowers. Disputes that cannot be resolved informally are adjudicated by the Superior Court of Justice in Ontario, the Supreme Court of British Columbia, or the Court of Queen's Bench in Alberta, with appeals to the respective Courts of Appeal and ultimately the Supreme Court of Canada. The Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act 2000 Section 7 governs the collection, use, and disclosure of personal financial information by lenders throughout the credit relationship.
When Do You Need a Credit Agreement (Canada)?
A Canadian Credit Agreement is needed whenever a business or individual extends credit to a customer, client, or counterparty and wishes to document the credit terms, repayment obligations, interest rate, security, and default remedies in a legally enforceable written contract.
Suppliers extending trade credit to business customers — for example, a building materials supplier allowing a construction company to purchase materials on 30, 60, or 90-day credit terms — need a Credit Agreement to document the credit limit, payment due dates, interest on overdue amounts (subject to the criminal rate under the Criminal Code), and the supplier's remedies on default, including the right to register a security interest under the provincial PPSA.
Equipment financing companies, lease-to-own providers, and machinery dealers that extend credit for the purchase of commercial equipment need a Credit Agreement that creates a valid purchase-money security interest (PMSI) in the financed equipment under the applicable PPSA. A PMSI, registered within prescribed time limits after the debtor takes possession of the collateral, takes priority over prior general security interests covering the same collateral — a significant advantage in insolvency proceedings under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. B-3).
Professional service firms — law firms, accounting practices, consulting firms, and marketing agencies — that extend credit to clients for professional fees benefit from a Credit Agreement that establishes agreed billing cycles, interest on overdue amounts at a rate that complies with provincial consumer protection legislation, and the client's consent to interest charges. Without a written credit agreement, enforcing interest charges above the presumptive 5% rate under the Interest Act can be difficult.
Canadian small businesses offering consumer financing — retailers, home improvement contractors, and health services providers — must comply with the provincial cost of borrowing disclosure requirements before the consumer signs the credit agreement. Ontario's Cost of Borrowing (Consumer Credit Agreements) Regulation (O. Reg. 17/05 under the Consumer Protection Act, 2002) specifies the mandatory disclosure items, including the APR, the total cost of borrowing, and the consumer's right to cancel within 10 days under section 96 of the Act.
Lenders registered under provincial mortgage broker legislation — Ontario's Mortgage Brokerages, Lenders and Administrators Act, 2006 (S.O. 2006, c. 29) or British Columbia's Mortgage Brokers Act (R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 313) — who extend private mortgage credit need a Credit Agreement that complies with both the Interest Act (annual rate disclosure) and the applicable provincial mortgage lending regulations.
What to Include in Your Credit Agreement (Canada)
A complete Canadian Credit Agreement contains specific clauses required by the Criminal Code, the Interest Act, provincial consumer protection legislation, and PPSA legislation to be enforceable and compliant.
The parties clause identifies the lender and borrower by full legal name, address, and — for corporate entities — registration number under the applicable corporate statute. For consumer credit, the borrower must be an individual of full legal capacity; for business credit, the borrower is typically a corporation or partnership whose signing authority must be confirmed by a corporate resolution or partnership authorization.
The credit facility description specifies whether the credit is a revolving line of credit (where advances and repayments can recur up to a maximum credit limit), an instalment loan (a fixed sum advanced once and repaid by scheduled payments), or an open account (for trade credit between suppliers and customers). Each type has different interest calculation mechanics and repayment obligations.
The credit limit clause states the maximum amount that may be outstanding at any one time under a revolving facility, or the total amount advanced under an instalment loan. For business credit, the credit limit should be reviewed periodically and the agreement should specify the lender's right to reduce or cancel the facility on notice.
The interest rate clause states the annual interest rate, expressed as a percentage per annum as required by the Interest Act 1985 Section 6 for mortgage credit and recommended for all Canadian credit agreements. For consumer credit, the APR must be calculated and disclosed in accordance with provincial cost of borrowing regulations under the Consumer Protection Act 2002 Section 78. The clause must confirm that the effective annual rate (including all fees and charges) does not exceed the criminal rate under the Criminal Code 1985 Section 347 (35% for consumer credit after the 2023 amendments take effect; 60% for business credit).
The repayment terms clause specifies the payment frequency (monthly, bi-weekly, weekly), the minimum payment amount, the payment due date, the allocation of payments between principal and interest, and the final maturity date. For instalment loans, an amortization schedule should be appended or incorporated by reference under the Cost of Borrowing Regulations 2001 Section 9.
The fees and charges clause discloses all fees payable by the borrower — origination fees, annual fees, late payment fees, over-limit fees, and NSF (non-sufficient funds) fees. Under the Consumer Protection Act 2002 Section 80 and the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada Act 2001 Section 18, all fees must be included in the APR calculation and disclosed before the agreement is signed.
The security clause describes any collateral securing the credit — including a general security agreement (GSA) over all present and after-acquired personal property, a specific security interest over identified equipment or inventory, or a charge on real property. Under the Personal Property Security Act 1990 Section 11, the security interest must be properly described to attach; under Section 23, it is perfected by registration of a financing statement in the provincial personal property security registry. In Ontario, PPSA registrations are made through the ServiceOntario system; in British Columbia, through the BC Personal Property Registry under the Personal Property Security Act 1996 Section 25.
The default and remedies clause specifies events of default — including non-payment, breach of covenant, insolvency, or material adverse change — and the lender's remedies on default: acceleration of the full outstanding balance, enforcement of security under the Personal Property Security Act 1990 Section 58 (including seizure and sale of collateral), reporting to credit bureaus Equifax Canada and TransUnion Canada, and legal action to recover the debt. For corporate borrowers in financial distress, the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act 1985 Section 49 and the Companies Creditors Arrangement Act 1985 Section 11 provide insolvency restructuring frameworks that affect the lender's priority.
The governing law and dispute resolution clause specifies the applicable province's law and the forum for resolving disputes — typically the Superior Court of Justice in Ontario or the Supreme Court of British Columbia. For cross-border credit facilities involving US entities, the governing law choice interacts with the Limitation Act 2002 Section 4 (two-year basic limitation period in Ontario) and the federal Bills of Exchange Act 1985 Section 9 governing negotiable instruments.
Privacy and data protection provisions must comply with the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act 2000 Section 7, which governs the collection and use of personal financial information by federally regulated lenders. Provincially regulated lenders in British Columbia, Alberta, and Quebec must comply with provincial privacy statutes including the Personal Information Protection Act 2003 Section 6. The forms-legal.com Credit Agreement (Canada) template covers all mandatory disclosure elements required under the Interest Act 1985 Section 8, the Criminal Code 1985 Section 347, and the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada Act 2001 Section 18.
Sources & Citations
Statutory citations link to official government sources.
- R.S.C. 1985, c. I-15CA official
- R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46CA official
- R.S.C., 1985, c. I-15CA official
- R.S.C., 1985, c. B-3CA official
Cite this page
Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Credit Agreement (Canada) (Canada) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/canada/financial/agreements/credit-agreement-canada
"Credit Agreement (Canada) (Canada)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/canada/financial/agreements/credit-agreement-canada.
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note = {Free legal document template. Based on Bills of Exchange Act (R.S.C. 1985, c. B-4)}
}Also available for these jurisdictions:
Frequently Asked Questions
Under the Criminal Code of Canada (R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46, s. 347), it is a criminal offence to charge or receive interest at a criminal rate — defined as an effective annual rate of interest exceeding 60% on the credit advanced. This 60% criminal rate cap applies to all credit agreements in Canada regardless of the lender's identity or the jurisdiction. It is calculated on an effective annual basis, which includes interest, fees, fines, penalties, commissions, and other charges related to the credit advanced. In 2023, Parliament amended the Criminal Code to lower the criminal rate to 35% for most consumer credit agreements (though the 60% rate continues to apply to business credit), effective when proclaimed in force. Lenders must carefully calculate the effective annual rate inclusive of all costs to ensure compliance.
Consumer credit agreements in Canada are regulated by both federal and provincial legislation. At the federal level, the Interest Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. I-15) requires that if interest is charged in a mortgage, it must be expressed as an annual rate in the mortgage document; otherwise, only 5% per year may be charged. Provincially, consumer credit is regulated by statutes such as Ontario's Consumer Protection Act, 2002 (S.O. 2002, c. 30, Sched. A) and Ontario's Mortgage Act (R.S.O. 1990, c. M.40); BC's Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (S.B.C. 2004, c. 2); and Alberta's Consumer Protection Act (R.S.A. 2000, c. C-26.3). These statutes require prescribed disclosure of the cost of borrowing, annual percentage rate (APR), cancellation rights (often a 10-day cooling-off period), and prohibit certain unfair practices.
Canadian provincial consumer protection legislation (particularly for open credit and credit card agreements) requires credit agreements to disclose: the credit limit; the annual interest rate (AIR) and annual percentage rate (APR) including all fees; the calculation method for interest charges; the minimum payment required each period and the consequences of making only minimum payments; fees for late payment, over-limit use, or returned payments; the statement frequency; the borrower's right to dispute charges; and how to request changes to the account. For closed-end credit (fixed-term loans), the cost of borrowing in dollars and the APR must be disclosed before the agreement is signed. These disclosure requirements are enforced by provincial consumer protection offices and violations can render the credit agreement voidable or expose the lender to regulatory penalties.
A credit agreement should clearly specify the consequences of default, which typically include: acceleration of the full outstanding balance (making the entire debt immediately due and payable); accrual of interest at the contract rate (subject to the criminal rate cap) on overdue amounts; the right to enforce any security (such as a general security agreement registered under provincial personal property security legislation, including Ontario's Personal Property Security Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.10 or BC's Personal Property Security Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 359); the right to report the default to credit bureaus (Equifax and TransUnion); the right to obtain judgment and enforce through wage garnishment, bank account garnishment, or seizure of non-exempt assets; and the right to claim reasonable collection costs. For consumer debtors, provincial exemptions protect certain assets from seizure, and the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. B-3) provides formal insolvency options.
Yes. A promissory note (governed by the Bills of Exchange Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. B-4) is a negotiable instrument — a formal, unconditional promise in writing by one party to pay a specific sum of money to another party at a fixed or determinable future time. A promissory note is a single-advance, single-repayment instrument and derives its legal status from the Bills of Exchange Act rather than common law contract. A credit agreement is a broader contractual document that may govern a revolving line of credit (multiple advances and repayments), sets out terms and conditions for ongoing credit, includes covenants, representations, and conditions precedent, and typically is not a negotiable instrument. In practice, a credit agreement often references or is accompanied by a promissory note for each advance; the credit agreement governs the overall credit facility, while the promissory note evidences a specific advance.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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