A debt consolidation loan is a loan used to combine multiple debts into one structured repayment arrangement.
Debt consolidation loan means a loan used to combine multiple debts into one structured repayment arrangement. The borrower usually uses the new loan to pay off several existing balances so that repayment can continue through one account instead of many.
Debt consolidation loan matters because it can simplify repayment and change the shape of a borrower’s monthly obligations. For some borrowers, one scheduled payment is easier to track than several card balances, lines of credit, or smaller loans.
It also matters because consolidation is often misunderstood as a cure by itself. The new loan can improve structure, but it does not erase the underlying debt or guarantee that the overall cost will be lower.
In Canada, a debt consolidation loan is often structured as a Personal Loan that pays out existing debts and replaces them with one installment obligation. Depending on the lender and borrower profile, the product may be secured or unsecured.
Borrowers should look at the full picture, including rate, fees, term length, and whether the new arrangement actually improves control over repayment. A lower monthly payment can still mean more total borrowing cost if the debt is stretched over a longer period.
A borrower has several card balances and a small line-of-credit balance with different due dates. They take a debt consolidation loan that pays those balances off and leaves them with one scheduled monthly payment instead of several revolving accounts.
Debt consolidation loan is not the same as a Balance Transfer. A balance transfer usually moves debt from one revolving account to another, while a consolidation loan usually converts multiple debts into one installment path.
It is also not the same as automatic debt reduction. If the borrower keeps reusing old credit lines heavily, the overall debt problem can return.