What Really Happens When You Meet a Licensed Insolvency Trustee in Canada?
Introduction
When debt becomes overwhelming, it can feel hard to know where to turn. Meeting with a Licensed Insolvency Trustee (LIT) is often the first step toward getting clear answers and a sense of control again.
An LIT is a federally licensed professional who helps Canadians deal with serious debt problems. Only a Licensed Insolvency Trustee can administer a Consumer Proposal or Bankruptcy in Canada.
A first meeting with an LIT is free, confidential, and judgment-free. The person seeking advice is not agreeing to anything, and no one is being pushed toward bankruptcy. The purpose is simply for the LIT to understand the situation and explain the options available.
What to Expect in the First Meeting
A meeting with an LIT is a calm, private conversation. The LIT will work through:
- the person’s income and expenses
- their debts and assets
- the financial pressures they are facing
- their goals, such as keeping their home or reducing stress
The LIT will clearly explain all the legal options available — Consumer Proposals, Bankruptcy, and other alternatives.
Nothing is filed or decided during this meeting. The person leaves with a written recap of the options discussed and the time they need to think things through. Filing only happens later, if and when the person chooses it, and only after they sign the documents needed for the option selected.
Why This Meeting Matters
LITs are officers of the court. They are regulated by the federal government and required to act impartially. The role of the LIT is to:
- explain the available options
- answer the person’s questions
- act fairly between the debtor and the creditors
An LIT does not work for the creditors. LIT fees are set by federal regulation and are tied to administering the file, not to which option the person chooses. The LIT’s job is to provide clear, honest guidance so the person can make the best decision for their situation.
The Options Available
During the meeting, the person will learn about several possible solutions. The two formal options under federal law share an important feature: filing either one halts most collection activity directed at the debtor. Creditor and collection-agency calls have to stop, lawsuits cannot proceed, and wage garnishments are paused by law.
Consumer Proposal: A Consumer Proposal allows a person to reduce their debt and make affordable monthly payments. The debtor keeps their assets, and interest stops. The option is open to individuals whose unsecured debts total $250,000 or less, not counting the mortgage on a principal residence. A Consumer Proposal is noted on credit-bureau records for the length of the proposal plus an additional three years.
Bankruptcy: Bankruptcy may be considered when debts are too high or income is too low to support a repayment plan. Bankruptcy is not a failure – it is a legal tool that allows someone to reset and rebuild. A first-time bankruptcy generally stays on a person’s credit file for approximately six or seven years from the date of discharge, with the exact period varying by province.
Other options. Some people simply need budgeting support, help negotiating with creditors, or time to think. In some cases, doing nothing is also an option when there is no income or property for creditors to take.
Common Myths
Myth: Meeting an LIT means filing bankruptcy. Reality: It is only a conversation. Nothing can be filed by accident or without the person choosing to.
Myth: A person filing will lose everything. Reality: Most people keep their essential belongings, and many keep their home or vehicle depending on the situation.
Myth: The LIT will pressure the person into a decision. Reality: Filing is always the person’s choice. The meeting is to provide information, not to force anything.
How to Prepare for the Meeting
Nothing perfect or organized needs to be brought to a first meeting. A few simple steps help:
- bring bills, pay stubs, and any statements available
- make a list of questions
- be open — there is no judgment
The more the LIT understands, the better they can explain the options.
What Happens After the Meeting
After the meeting, the person will:
- leave with a written recap of the options
- have time to think things over
- be able to call or email with more questions
- decide on a next step when ready
There is no pressure and no obligation to file anything.
Taking the Next Step
Debt can feel heavy, but no one has to face it alone. A first meeting with a Licensed Insolvency Trustee is free, confidential, and focused entirely on helping the person understand the options available to them.
The sooner the conversation happens, the more choices remain.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Federal advertising rules allow Licensed Insolvency Trustees to offer free initial consultations, and most do. The meeting is a structured conversation: the LIT looks at the person’s income, expenses, debts, and assets at a high level, then walks through the formal and informal options available under Canadian law. Nothing is signed, nothing is filed, and there is no obligation to take a next step.
Yes. The first meeting is private. Creditors, employers, and family members are not notified that the person met with an LIT, and the conversation does not appear in any public record. Confidentiality changes only if and when the person decides to file something — at that point, the filing itself enters the federal public-records database and creditors are formally notified. Until then, the conversation stays between the person and the LIT.
A Licensed Insolvency Trustee is a federally licensed professional regulated by the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy. In recent years, regulators have raised concerns about unregulated debt consultants operating outside this framework and influencing how debtors first access insolvency advice. Only an LIT can administer the two formal debt-relief processes under Canadian law — the Consumer Proposal and the Bankruptcy. Credit counsellors and debt-settlement companies offer different services (informal negotiations, debt-management plans, for-fee settlement attempts) and cannot file or administer either federal option. LIT fees are set by federal regulation; debt-settlement companies typically charge sales-driven fees the person continues to owe whether the negotiated settlement succeeds or not.
A Consumer Proposal is available where unsecured debts total at least $1,000 and no more than $250,000, not counting the mortgage on a principal residence. Bankruptcy requires the person to owe at least $1,000 and to be unable to pay debts as they come due, with no upper limit. People whose unsecured debts exceed $250,000 can still propose to creditors using a different process called a Division I Proposal, which has its own rules and risks.
Not necessarily. In a Consumer Proposal, the home stays with the person as long as the regular mortgage payments continue. In a Bankruptcy, the answer depends on the equity in the home and on the province’s exemption rules. If the equity exceeds the provincial exemption and the person cannot make arrangements with the Trustee to cover the excess, the home may have to be dealt with. People with significant home equity often choose a Consumer Proposal specifically because it preserves the home regardless of equity.
Often, no. Each province sets an exemption value for one vehicle; vehicles below that value are protected in a Bankruptcy. Vehicles above the exemption value can usually still be kept if the person makes arrangements with the Trustee for the excess equity. Financed or leased vehicles can stay as long as the loan or lease payments continue. In a Consumer Proposal, the vehicle stays with the person regardless of equity, provided any car loan continues to be paid on schedule.
Generally no, with two exceptions. Joint debts — anything both partners signed for — remain the other partner’s full responsibility, even after the filing person’s portion is resolved. Co-signed debts work the same way: the co-signer is on the hook for the full amount. Beyond joint exposures, a spouse’s separate credit, separate accounts, and separate assets are unaffected by their partner’s filing.
Almost never. An employer is not informed when someone files a Consumer Proposal or Bankruptcy. The common exception is an existing wage garnishment — in that case, the Trustee contacts the employer to stop the garnishment, and stopping it is often a strong reason to act in the first place. Some regulated professions also require self-reporting to a licensing body; people in those fields should raise it specifically at the first meeting.
Filing either a Consumer Proposal or a Bankruptcy triggers an automatic legal protection that pauses most collection activity directed at the debtor. Creditor and collection-agency calls have to stop. Civil lawsuits cannot proceed. Wage garnishments come off, with limited exceptions (garnishments for court-ordered child or spousal support, for example, continue). The protection takes effect on the day the filing is submitted to the federal regulator.
A Consumer Proposal is noted on credit-bureau records for the length of the proposal plus an additional three years (commonly six years from filing for most proposals). A first-time Bankruptcy generally remains on the credit file for approximately six or seven years from the date of discharge, with the precise period varying by province and by credit bureau. Rebuilding credit afterward is a deliberate process — secured cards, on-time payments, time — and many people see meaningful recovery within two to three years of completing the process.
A Consumer Proposal is a negotiated settlement: the person offers creditors a reduced amount payable over time (up to five years) and keeps their assets. A Bankruptcy is a transfer of non-exempt assets to a Trustee in exchange for the release of most unsecured debts; it typically lasts nine to twenty-one months for a first-time bankrupt, depending on income. A Proposal payment is fixed up front; a Bankruptcy payment can rise if income rises above a federal threshold. Both pause collection activity on filing. Both require two financial-counselling sessions during the process. The right choice depends on the person’s income, assets, total debt, and goals.
Most unsecured debts can be included: credit cards, lines of credit, payday loans, personal loans, overdrafts, and most income-tax debt. Certain categories generally cannot be discharged — court-ordered support payments, court fines and restitution orders, debts arising from fraud, and student loans where the person has been out of school for less than seven years. Secured debts (mortgages, car loans) are not erased; they continue to be paid (and the asset kept) or the asset is given up in exchange for releasing the loan.
CRA debts — income tax, GST/HST, source deductions — can be included in both a Consumer Proposal and a Bankruptcy, and are usually treated as ordinary unsecured debts. CRA votes on Consumer Proposals like any other creditor; proposals offering CRA less than they would receive in a Bankruptcy risk rejection. Anyone with a large CRA balance should make sure their tax filings are current before filing, as this materially affects how the file proceeds. For business owners dealing with active CRA collection actions such as garnishments or frozen bank accounts, read here a practical guide on stopping CRA garnishments and bank freezes.
LIT fees are set by federal regulation and are paid out of the file itself, not as a separate invoice. In a Consumer Proposal, the Trustee’s fee is built into the monthly proposal payment that is already negotiated — there is no surcharge layered on top. In a Bankruptcy, fees come out of the assets the Trustee administers and from a base payment that varies with income and family size. The first consultation is free, and there is no fee for considering an option and deciding not to proceed.
A Consumer Proposal can be paid off early at any time with no penalty, by lump sum or accelerated payments. If income drops, the proposal can sometimes be amended with creditor consent. If three monthly payments are missed, the proposal is automatically cancelled and the original debts come back — anyone in difficulty should call their Trustee well before that point. In a Bankruptcy, payments rise or fall with income and family size by formula; counselling sessions need to be attended, and missed obligations can delay the eventual discharge.

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