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Home»Mortgage»Equifax report says 1.4M consumers missed a credit payment in Q1
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Equifax report says 1.4M consumers missed a credit payment in Q1

May 27, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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Equifax report says 1.4M consumers missed a credit payment in Q1
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By Ritika Dubey

Rebecca Oakes, Equifax Canada’s vice-president of advanced analytics, said much of the trend stems from the high cost of living, growing unemployment and rising trade tensions.

“In order for anybody to kind of keep making the payments … you need to have an income, you need to have good employment,” said Oakes. “When there’s economic uncertainty, that does create a few impacts.”

The report found one in 22 consumers, or 1.4 million people, missed at least one credit payment during the first quarter, even as the average monthly credit card spend fell by $107 per cardholder.

“We actually think this is more to do with pulling back on that discretionary spend. And that is going to have a knock-on impact to business and that ultimately will have a knock-on impact to employment levels,” she said.

“It’s all kind of interlinked a little bit when you start to see that economic uncertainty,” Oakes added.

The report said consumer-level delinquency rates among non-mortgage holders rose 8.9% year-over-year, compared to 6.5% for mortgage holders.

Average non-mortgage debt per consumer rose to $21,859 in the first quarter, the report said, mainly driven by a strong auto loan market as buyers looked to lock in car purchases before prospective tariff-induced price hikes.

Younger consumers appear to be having a tough go, the report showed. Credit card delinquency rates among that cohort was 5.38%, up 21.7% year-over-year.

“If you have got credit commitments and your day-to-day living costs go up … or it’s harder to get employment, or maybe your incomes haven’t risen at the same amount as cost of living, then it’s just harder to keep making the payments that you’ve committed to,” Oakes said.

See also  What happens if you go over your credit card limit?

The total consumer debt grew to $2.55 trillion in the first three months of 2025, up four per cent year-over-year, but down more than $6 billion from the end of 2024, the report showed.

A high number of mortgage renewals also added to increased levels of debt. Many homeowners who locked in low interest rates at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic are looking at mortgage renewals, which Oakes called “the great renewal.”

Ontario became a hot spot of financial stress during the first quarter, the report showed. The province’s 90-plus day mortgage delinquency rate surged to 0.24% since last year.

“We are just seeing missed payments linked to consumers that have a mortgage in Ontario go up and up,” Oakes said.

The province also saw the highest non-mortgage delinquency rate, up 24% year-over-year, followed by Alberta and Quebec. 

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credit debt payments delinquencies equifax equifax Canada missed payments mortgage delinquency rate non-mortgage debt rebecca oakes Ritika Dubey The Canadian Press

Last modified: May 27, 2025

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1.4M consumers credit Equifax Missed Payment report
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