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Debt help in New Brunswick: your 2026 options

TL;DR

If you live in New Brunswick and you are working through consumer debt, you have three free-or-low-cost starting points: provincial consumer protection rules that set the rules for lenders and collectors, non-profit credit counselling, and a Licensed Insolvency Trustee (LIT) consultation. All three are before you file anything formal.

Atlantic provinces including New Brunswick tend to have lower consumer debt loads per capita than central or western Canada, but income levels are also lower.

Consumer protection in New Brunswick

New Brunswick's Financial and Consumer Services Commission (FCNB) oversees lending, payday loans, and collection agencies. Payday rates are capped at $15 per $100.

If a collection agency is harassing you, calling outside permitted hours, or making threats outside what the law allows, the provincial regulator is where you complain. Most provinces require collection agencies to be licensed, and you can check the license status before responding to any call.

Licensed Insolvency Trustees (LITs)

In Canada, only a Licensed Insolvency Trustee can file a consumer proposal or administer a bankruptcy. LITs are federally regulated by the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy (OSB).

The OSB maintains a public registry at the Government of Canada's website (ised-isde.canada.ca) where you can find LITs serving New Brunswick. The initial consultation is free by regulation. You are not committed to anything by having the conversation.

A consumer proposal lets you repay a portion of what you owe over up to five years without interest, and it avoids the full asset-disclosure process of bankruptcy. It is the most common formal option in Canada. Bankruptcy is a second option, typically when a proposal is not feasible.

Credit counselling in New Brunswick

Credit Counselling Services of Atlantic Canada serves New Brunswick with free credit counselling. Credit Counselling Society also covers the province.

Non-profit credit counselling agencies offer free intake sessions, budgeting help, and in some cases Debt Management Programs (DMPs) that consolidate unsecured debt into a single lower-interest payment over three to five years. A DMP is not the same as a consumer proposal, and the differences (credit reporting, creditor participation, fees) matter a lot. A free counselling call can walk you through which route fits your situation.

Be careful with for-profit "debt settlement" companies that advertise heavily online. They are not the same as non-profit counselling or an LIT, and they often charge large up-front fees for services that may not help.

What's specific to New Brunswick

See your payoff timeline before you book a call

Before you talk to a counsellor or trustee, it helps to know what your debt looks like on paper: how long it takes at current payments, how much interest you are on track to pay, and what would change if you added $50 or $100/month. Unburden does this on your device, with no bank connections and no sign-up required to start.

Find your Burden Score

When to reach out for help

Some signals that it is time to call a counsellor or trustee, not just a calculator:

None of these are judgments. They are signals. Most people who hit them and get help early end up with better outcomes than people who wait another year to act.

This page is educational. It is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Interest calculations use standard amortization math at a sample APR; your actual rates, fees, and terms will vary. Figures are illustrative, not a quote. Talk to a qualified professional before making decisions about debt, credit, or insolvency.