the actual advertised rate of the loan might be lower; but the 48 per cent is meant to capture the total costs that a loan would accumulate over the course of a calendar year.
if a $100 loan could rack up $48 in fees, late charges and compounded interest over 12 months, it was considered a criminal loan.
under the new order, that annual rate has now dropped to 35 per cent. it’s the first time that the federal criminal interest rate has been lowered, although quebec already had its own maximum interest rate of 35 per cent.
“if (lenders) can’t lend profitably at 35 per cent apr, they’ll tighten their lending criteria and issue fewer loans. canadians who would have qualified at 48 per cent may now be shut out of the credit market entirely,” said sellery.
although the new rate is just entering into force, it was first introduced as part of the 2023 federal budget. under a section headlined “cracking down on predatory lending,” it said high-interest lenders take advantage of the “most vulnerable people in our communities.”
“the current criminal rate of interest … can trap canadians in a cycle of debt that they cannot afford and cannot escape,” it read.
the budget even provided a fictional example of a guelph woman named “hannah” forced to take out a two-year $5,000 high-interest loan to fix her car. the loan still ends up costing about $3,500 in interest at the maximum rate, but due to the lowered criminal interest rate “she will have saved $775 over the life of the loan.”