contact or try to contact anyone about information other than for your telephone number or address, except in certain cases. This applies to members of your family and household, your friends and relatives, as well as to those around you, such as your employer and your neighbors. They can only contact them if:
- the person they’re contacting guaranteed (or co-signed) your loan and are contacting that person about that
- you gave them your consent to contact this person. If you gave verbal consent, they must send you a written confirmation of your consent (on paper or electronically)
- they don’t have your home address or phone number
- they tried to contact you at home and failed
- you gave them permission to contact you at work
- on holidays
- on Sundays except between 1:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. (unless you’ve given consent for them to do so)
- on any other day before 7:00 a.m. or after 9:00 p.m.
- using threatening, profane, intimidating or abusive language
- using undue pressure
- making public, or threatening to make public, your failure to pay
- legal fees, or
- fees for non-sufficient funds on payments that you made
You can ask that they contact you only in writing or contact only your legal advisor. You must send them a written request by registered mail. In the letter, you must provide:
- an address where they can contact you, or
- an address and telephone number where they can contact your legal advisor
Your federally regulated financial institution might have sold your debt to a collection agency. In that case, the laws protecting your rights are provincial or territorial, not federal.
When these rights apply to you
These rights apply when you’re dealing with a federally regulated financial institution like a bank or federal credit union.