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Adding a new loan to pay off old loans does not solve the underlying problem. If the new loan has a similar interest rate, you are just moving the balance from one creditor to another.
In 2026, there are practical alternatives for reducing debt on a fixed income without taking on more credit.
Four alternatives to taking on more credit
The first step is to list all your debts, the interest rate on each, and the minimum payment.
With that information, you can compare four alternatives: debt validation, debt consolidation, credit counselling, and debt settlement.
1. Debt validation
Debt validation reviews each debt to confirm the creditor has the legal right to collect.
Some debts are past the statute of limitations, some have errors, some are from creditors that no longer have collection rights.
Validation may reduce or eliminate certain balances. The review is done by sending a formal request to each creditor.
The creditor has 30 days to provide proof of the debt. If no proof is provided, the debt may be removed from the credit report.
2. Debt consolidation
Debt consolidation takes out a new loan (line of credit or personal loan) to pay off multiple debts.
The benefit is a single monthly payment. The risk is a higher rate, fees, or a longer term that increases the total cost.
Consolidation is appropriate only when the new loan has a significantly lower rate, usually 3 to 5 percentage points lower than the average of existing debts.
3. Credit counselling
Credit counselling proposes a debt management plan with reduced interest rates, waived fees, and a single monthly payment.
The cost is usually a monthly fee added to the payment. The reduced rates are negotiated with your existing creditors, not with new lenders.
The plan typically completes in 36 to 60 months.
4. Debt settlement
Debt settlement negotiates a reduced payoff (typically 30 to 50 percent less) over 24 to 48 months.
You make a single monthly payment to the program account, which distributes funds to creditors as settlements are reached.
The reduced payoff is a private negotiation. The percentage depends on the creditor, account age, and lump-sum amount available.
How to choose the right option
The right option depends on the total unsecured debt, the monthly budget, and your willingness to participate in a multi-month program.
As a general rule, validation is the first step regardless of which option you choose. It can reduce the total before any other option is applied.
| Option | Best for | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Validation | Suspected errors or old debts | None |
| Consolidation | Lower-rate new loan available | Higher total cost if rate not lower |
| Credit counselling | Single payment at lower rate | Monthly fee for the service |
| Settlement | Large unsecured debt over $5,000 | Temporary credit impact |
Common mistakes to avoid
1. Taking the first offer without comparison
Each option has trade-offs. The cheapest surface option may be the most expensive over the long term.
Compare the total cost over the expected duration, not just the monthly payment. A $200 monthly payment for 48 months totals $9,600; a $300 monthly payment for 24 months totals $7,200.
2. Stopping the program halfway through
Each option requires a commitment of 24 to 48 months.
Stopping early reduces the savings and may leave you with a higher balance than when you started. Commit to the duration before signing.
3. Ignoring the home equity alternative
The alternative for homeowners is to use home equity to pay off unsecured debt.
See the 2026 update on home equity options for seniors →
Why is consolidating debt with a new loan usually a bad idea?
What is debt validation?
What is the best first step?
Is this guide an official Service Canada publication?
Independent guide. Not affiliated with any debt consolidation or credit counselling provider. The options are offered by private companies; confirm details on the official company websites before acting. Programs, fees, and provincial regulations vary; review the contract and provincial licensing before signing.
