Canada is one of the few countries where short-term lending is regulated at the provincial level rather than federally. The same $500 loan can cost $70 in Newfoundland, $75 in Ontario, and as much as $125 on PEI. You can read each province’s actual rules through the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC).
Quick summary
- Payday loan rules in Canada are set province by province, so fees, cooling-off, and licensed lenders depend on where you live.
- Fee caps run from $14 per $100 in Newfoundland to $25 per $100 on PEI, with most regions at $15 to $17.
- The Cashero calculator shows your specific cost.
- Every region requires lenders to be licensed locally, with a two-day cooling-off to cancel at no cost.
- Our provincial rules guide covers each region’s details before signing.
- Cashero is an independent Canadian comparison service, helping compare licensed providers locally.
Why payday loan rules differ by province in Canada
Canada has ten provinces, with short-term lending governed by each separately. The Criminal Code lets them set their own rules, creating a patchwork of caps, cooling-off periods, and licensing nationwide.
That matters more than it sounds. The same $500 borrow costs $70 in Newfoundland and $125 on PEI just because of where you live. After a move, double-check the new rules.
Fee caps in each Canadian province
The simplest comparison: the maximum a licensed lender can charge per $100:
| Province | Max fee per $100 | $500 loan cost |
|---|---|---|
| Newfoundland and Labrador | $14 | $70 |
| Ontario, Alberta, BC, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick | $15 | $75 |
| Manitoba, Saskatchewan | $17 | $85 |
| Prince Edward Island | $25 | $125 |
| Quebec (different rule) | 35% annual cap | Varies |
Quebec is the outlier with a 35% annual interest limit, making traditional payday loans uncommon.
Canadian provinces map: fee tiers
Click any province for details:
💡 Click for rules and licensed lenders.
Quick snapshot of every Canadian region
Quick look at each:
Ontario
$15 / $100Strict rules under the Payday Loans Act, public lender registry.
Alberta
$15 / $100Among the strongest protections nationally. Installments required on most loans.
British Columbia
$15 / $100Two-day cooling-off, NSF fees capped, dollar-based cost disclosure.
Nova Scotia
$15 / $100Aligned with Ontario. Utility and Review Board oversees lenders.
New Brunswick
$15 / $100Standard cap with cooling-off and capped default interest.
Newfoundland & Labrador
$14 / $100Lowest fee cap in Canada. Public registry online.
Manitoba
$17 / $100Higher cap, strong consumer protections and disclosure rules.
Saskatchewan
$17 / $100Mirrors Manitoba on fees. Cooling-off and rollover limits apply.
Prince Edward Island
$25 / $100Highest cap in Canada. Fewer lenders, comparison matters more.
Quebec
35% annual capDifferent model entirely. Traditional payday loans are uncommon; alternatives dominate.
Rules that apply in every Canadian province
A few core protections apply almost everywhere. A lender breaking these is a serious red flag. See our provincial rules guide.
- Mandatory licensing: lender must hold a current local licence and display the number.
- Cooling-off period: most regions allow two business days to cancel at no cost.
- Cost disclosure in dollars: the lender must show full cost in plain dollars, not percentages, before signing.
- NSF fee caps: the lender’s NSF charge is limited to $20–$25 in most regions.
- No rollovers: a lender cannot extend your loan by adding a new fee; you must fully repay the existing one first.
How to find a licensed lender in your province
Before applying, take five minutes to confirm the lender is licensed where you live. Each provincial consumer protection website publishes a public registry of approved lenders.
Two checks: look up the lender on the registry, and verify the licence number matches. If a lender claims to operate “across Canada” but lacks a local licence, walk away. Our how it works guide covers the safer comparison steps.
Cheaper alternatives, no matter which province you’re in
Wherever you live, cheaper options exist. The most common:
- A credit card cash advance, roughly $5 for a $500 borrow over two weeks.
- Bank overdraft protection, cheap if used briefly.
- A credit union small loan, often under 20% APR.
- An employer pay advance, usually free.
- Free non-profit credit counselling, like the Credit Counselling Society.
For a fuller breakdown of options, see our responsible lending guide.
Mistakes Canadians make when borrowing across provinces
Three expensive mistakes:
- Assuming the same rules apply everywhere. A move can change your fee cap by up to $50 on a $500 loan.
- Not comparing two licensed lenders first. The cap is a maximum, not a minimum, so some lenders charge less.
- Ignoring the cooling-off period. Within two business days, you can cancel at no cost.
When to contact your provincial regulator
If a lender breaks rules, threatens you, or ignores cooling-off, your consumer protection office takes complaints seriously. The regulator can issue penalties or revoke licences. Keep written records.
Frequently asked questions
Why do payday loan rules differ from province to province in Canada?
Payday lending in Canada is regulated provincially. Each region sets its own maximum fee, cooling-off period, and licensing rules. A $500 loan costs $70 in Newfoundland, $75 in Ontario, and up to $125 on PEI.
Which province has the cheapest payday loans in Canada?
Newfoundland and Labrador has the lowest cap at $14 per $100. Quebec uses a 35% annual interest cap that effectively makes payday loans uncommon. Use the Cashero calculator for your specific cost.
Can I borrow from a payday lender in another province?
Generally no. Lenders are licensed where you live, and your agreement is subject to local rules. Most online lenders verify your address first. See our FAQ for related questions.
How can I check if a payday lender is licensed in my province?
Each provincial consumer protection website publishes a public registry of licensed lenders. Lenders must also display the licence number on their website and in the agreement.
Do all Canadian provinces give a cooling-off period for payday loans?
Most provinces offer a two-business-day cooling-off period, during which you can cancel the loan and return the principal at no cost. The exact rules and timelines can vary slightly, so always check the agreement and your provincial regulator. For a quick comparison, see our provincial rules page.
The bottom line
Where you live in Canada changes what your payday loan costs, sometimes by a lot. A $500 borrow ranges from $70 to $125 nationwide. Confirm the lender is licensed locally, see your cost in dollars, and compare options before signing.
Compare the real cost in your province
See your exact payday loan cost across licensed Canadian lenders, before you commit to anything.