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Fixing Your Credit While in a Private Mortgage

A private mortgage is often described as a “bridge.” But a bridge is only useful if it leads somewhere. If you are in a private mortgage in 2026, your primary goal is to use this 12-month window to rehabilitate your credit so you can “graduate” to a lower-interest bank or B-lender.

At LendingMoney.ca, we don’t want you to stay in a private loan forever. We want to help you fix the issues that put you there in the first place. Here is your month-by-month guide to Credit Rehabilitation while using a private mortgage.

1. The Private Mortgage Reporting Reality

In 2026, most individual private lenders do not report to Equifax or TransUnion.

  • The Problem: Even if you make every payment on time for a year, your credit score might not go up because the bureaus don’t see the “good behavior.”
  • The Hero Move: You must focus on your other tradelines. Since the mortgage isn’t helping your score, your credit cards, car loans, and phone bills have to do the heavy lifting.
  • The Catch: While private lenders don’t report the “good,” they will certainly report the “bad” if they have to take legal action (Power of Sale). On-time payments are mandatory to protect your equity.

2. Eliminate “R9” and “R7” Ghost Debts

If you took a private mortgage to consolidate debt, you likely have old collections (R9) or settled accounts (R7) on your report.

  • The Strategy: Use a small portion of your mortgage “holdback” or savings to pay off any remaining small collections.
  • The 2026 Rule: A “Paid Collection” is significantly better than an “Active Collection” when applying for a B-Lender. It shows the underwriter that you have cleared the wreckage of the past.

3. The 10% Utilization Rule

The fastest way to jump your score while in a private mortgage is to change how you use your credit cards.

  • The Math: If you have a $5,000 limit, never let the balance exceed $500 (10%) on the day the statement is produced.
  • The Hero Move: In 2026, many apps allow “Real-Time Reporting.” Pay your credit card balance every time you get paid (bi-weekly) rather than once a month. This keeps your “average utilization” extremely low, which is the #1 “Point Booster” in the Equifax algorithm.

4. Add Two “Fresh” Tradelines

To get back to a traditional bank, you usually need a “2-2-2” profile: 2 years of history on 2 lines of credit with at least $2,000 limits.

  • The Strategy: If your old cards were closed during a Consumer Proposal or bankruptcy, open two new Secured Credit Cards immediately.
  • The Timeline: By the time your 12-month private mortgage is up, these cards will have 12 months of perfect history, making you an ideal candidate for a B-Lender (Trust Company).

5. Diversify with a “Credit Builder” Loan

In 2026, lenders like seeing a mix of credit types. If you only have credit cards, your score will plateau.

  • The Move: Open a small Installment Credit-Builder Loan (like those offered by Nyble or KOHO).
  • How it works: You pay a small amount monthly ($20–$50), and they report it as a “Personal Loan” payment. This adds “Credit Mix” to your profile, which accounts for 10% of your total score.

Your 12-Month Credit Rehab Calendar

The Goal: Graduation Day

Fixing your credit while in a private mortgage requires discipline. You are paying a higher interest rate now so that you never have to pay it again. At LendingMoney.ca, we provide the tools and the coaching to ensure that when your private term ends, you are ready for a prime-rate mortgage.

Currently in a private mortgage and want to see your “Graduation Date”? [Get a Free Credit Rehabilitation Roadmap] from LendingMoney.ca today and let’s start moving you back to the bank.

Read blog – Breaking the Cycle: A Guide to Loans for Debt Consolidation with Poor Credit

Alternative Lending Blogs Credit Rehabilitation Personal Finance

The Payday Trap: The Hidden Costs That Keep You in Debt

When you’re a few days away from your next paycheck and an unexpected expense hits—a car repair, a dental bill, or a late utility notice – the “Instant Cash” sign at a payday lender can look like a lifesaver. It’s fast, there’s no credit check, and the fee seems small: “Just $14 per $100 borrowed.”

But in the world of Canadian finance, that $14 is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. At LendingMoney.ca, we specialize in Credit Rehabilitation, and the first step in that journey is stopping the “payday cycle.” Here is the reality of what those loans actually cost you and why they are the most expensive way to borrow money in 2026.

1. The APR Shock: 365% vs. 10.95%

Payday lenders often talk in “fees” rather than “interest rates” to hide the true cost of the loan. Under 2026 Canadian regulations, the maximum a lender can charge in most provinces is $14 for every $100 borrowed for a 14-day term.

While $14 sounds manageable, let’s look at the Annual Percentage Rate (APR):

  • A typical credit card has an APR of 19.99%.
  • A personal installment loan from a lender like LendingMoney.ca might range from 10.95% to 35%.
  • A payday loan has an APR of 365%.

If you borrowed that same $100 for a full year at payday rates, you wouldn’t owe $114 – you would owe hundreds in compounding fees. You are essentially paying “VIP prices” for a “budget” service.

2. The “Invisible” Fees: NSFs and Bounced Cheques

The $14 fee is only the beginning. The real “hidden” costs kick in if anything goes wrong:

  • The Bank Hit: If the payday lender tries to withdraw the repayment and you don’t have the funds, your bank will charge you an NSF (Non-Sufficient Funds) fee, which in 2026 averages $45 to $50.
  • The Lender Hit: On top of your bank’s fee, the payday lender can charge a “Dishonoured Payment” fee (capped at $20 in most provinces).
  • The Result: A simple $300 loan can suddenly cost you an extra $70 in fees in a single day – all before you’ve even touched the principal.

3. The Silent Credit Killer

One of the biggest myths is that paying back a payday loan helps your credit score. It does not.

  • No Upside: Most payday lenders do not report your on-time payments to Equifax or TransUnion. You can pay back 50 loans perfectly and your credit score won’t move an inch.
  • Massive Downside: If you miss a payment, they will sell your debt to a collection agency. That agency does report to the bureaus, resulting in an R9 rating (the same as bankruptcy) that can haunt your report for six years.

4. The Debt Spiral (The Rollover Trap)

The most devastating hidden cost of a payday loan is the loss of your future income. Because the loan is due in full on your next payday, many borrowers find themselves short on cash for rent or groceries the very next day.

This leads to the “Cycle of Debt”:

  1. You take a loan to pay a bill.
  2. Your next paycheck goes entirely to the lender.
  3. You immediately take another loan to survive the month.
  4. You are now paying a “subscription fee” of $14 per $100 just to access your own salary.

[Image: The Payday Cycle – A hamster wheel of debt]

5. New 2026 Protections: What You Need to Know

As of 2025 and 2026, the Canadian government has significantly tightened the rules to protect you:

  • Criminal Interest Rate: The federal criminal interest rate has been lowered to 35% APR for most personal loans. While payday loans have a specific exemption, the “net” is closing in on predatory lenders.
  • Cooling-Off Periods: In provinces like Ontario and BC, you have two business days to cancel a payday loan contract without any penalty. If you realize you’ve made a mistake, you can give the money back and walk away for free.

The Hero Alternative: The Installment Loan

At LendingMoney.ca, we offer a different path. Instead of a 14-day “trap,” we provide Installment Loans with terms from 9 to 60 months.

Final Thoughts: Stop Feeding the Machine

Payday loans are designed to be easy to get into and impossible to get out of. If you are caught in the cycle, the best “Hero Move” you can make is to consolidate those high-interest “fires” into one structured, lower-interest loan that actually helps your credit score.

Are you ready to break the cycle? [Apply for an Installment Loan] today and let’s get you on the path to true financial freedom.

Read Blog –Breaking the Cycle: A Guide to Loans for Debt Consolidation with Poor Credit