Canadian Consumer Insolvencies Only Surpassed By 2010 & 2020 Peaks

The Canadian economy may be outperforming, but households are getting slaughtered. The latest data from the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy (OSB) shows consumer insolvencies surged in March. The 12-month volume has reached levels only seen during the 2010 and 2020 peaks—both periods known for sharp declines in economic activity. While annual growth had been slowing, March’s sudden spike suggests this trend may worsen before improving. 

Key Findings

  • March Spike: Insolvencies jumped 11.2% month-over-month to 12,126 filings (4.9% higher than 2024). 
  • 12-Month Total: 137,635 filings—just shy of the pandemic peak and 8% higher than last year
  • Recession Incoming: Consumer insolvencies have only reached this level twice before—in 2010 and 2020. 

Canadian Consumer Insolvencies May See A Second Wave Surge

Canadian consumer insolvencies continue climbing from pandemic lows. OSB reported insolvencies jumped 11.2% to 12,126 filings in March—4.9% higher than last year. Monthly data usually isn’t noteworthy due to seasonality, but noteworthy since it was the biggest jump since mid-2020. We’ll circle back to this in a moment.  

Canadian Consumer Insolvencies Now Rival 2010 & 2020 Peaks

Canadian consumer insolvencies for the 12 months ending. 

Source: OSB; Better Dwelling. 

Over the past 12 months, Canadians filed 137,635 insolvencies—nearing the pandemic-era peak. The volume is 8% higher than last year, up from February’s 7.4% (which previously marked the slowest growth in 3 years). While the broader trend had been decelerating, March’s abrupt reversal erased some progress. It was only a single month, and one month isn’t a trend, but it can signal the start of one.

Consumer Insolvencies Typically Peak Before The Recession 

History shows only two periods with comparable insolvency levels: the Global Financial Crisis (early 2010 peak), and the pandemic (March 2020 peak). Insolvencies peaked early in these recessions, suggesting today’s numbers might foreshadow an economic downturn. 

Recent data shows signs of peaking, with 12-month growth starting to slow. This aligns with historical numbers and the current narrative that a recession is underway or imminent. Whether March’s acceleration was noise or the start of a second wave of debt reckoning fueled by a trade war, remains unclear. 

5 Comments

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  • Reply
    GTA Landlord 2 days ago

    okay, let’s double down on this bizarre situation. Every indicator coming out of Statistics Canada says the economy is good. Every indicator coming out of banks, courts, and the financial industry are bad. So what’s happening?

    I don’t think it’s as simple as consumers are being negative nellys and the economy is great. I think there’s an issue with the inputs Statistics Canada has to deal with.

    • Reply
      George Stavro 2 days ago

      its fine as long as you can get more consumers. That was the take from the OECD when they said the population is growing so debt is fine—never mind that unemployment is growing even faster.

  • Reply
    Gerald Haw 2 days ago

    With the right team we can beat that record!

  • Reply
    Better Dwell On It 2 days ago

    look at that graph! Right as the pandemic hits insolvencies that was getting ready to go parabolic, turns the other way. It looks like the pandemic came at just the right time to give the government cover to hand out cash to hide a crisis that was already starting. It is a good thing I am not a conspiracy theory type. 🙂

  • Reply
    ElbowsUp 2 days ago

    Fingers crossed and SHTF

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