Home – FAQs
Yes — but usually less than people expect, and often less than continuing to struggle
with debt.
👉 The goal is financial recovery, not perfect credit during a crisis.
No — your employer is not notified.
Once a Consumer Proposal or Bankruptcy is filed, CRA must stop all collection actions. This includes:
CRA becomes just another creditor under Canadian law
Consumer Proposal
Bankruptcy
👉We always review both options and recommend what’s best for you, not what’s
easiest.
Yes — CRA has the legal power to:
A Consumer Proposal or Bankruptcy immediately stops this power
No — your spouse is not affected unless:
Your spouse’s:
remain protected in most cases.
No — a Consumer Proposal is NOT bankruptcy.
Bankruptcy is only considered if a proposal is not suitable.
The only legal way to stop a CRA wage garnishment immediately is to file:
Once filed:
Ignoring CRA will not stop garnishment — legal action will.
A Consumer Proposal allows you to combine most unsecured debts into one affordable
monthly payment, with no interest.
Debts that CAN be included
✅ Credit card debt
✅ Personal loans & lines of credit
✅ CRA (Canada Revenue Agency) debt
✅ Payday loans & cash advances
✅ Unsecured business debt
✅ Collections, lawsuits & judgments
✅ Wage garnishments & CRA enforcement
❌ Secured debts
❌ Child support & spousal support arrears
❌ Court fines & penalties
❌ Student loans
payment replaces multiple debts
No — with a Consumer Proposal:
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