When debt becomes unmanageable, two formal debt relief mechanisms are frequently discussed: consumer proposals and bankruptcy. While both provide structured relief from overwhelming debt, they operate very differently — with significantly different consequences for your credit, your assets, and your financial future. Understanding these differences is essential before choosing a path in 2026.
What Is a Consumer Proposal?
A consumer proposal is a formal legal agreement, primarily used in Canada, in which you offer to pay creditors a portion of what you owe over a defined period — typically up to 5 years. Administered by a Licensed Insolvency Trustee, the proposal must be accepted by creditors holding the majority of your debt. Once accepted, it is legally binding on all unsecured creditors.
Key characteristics of a consumer proposal:
- You repay a negotiated percentage of your debt — not the full amount
- Interest on unsecured debt stops the moment the proposal is filed
- You keep your assets — no liquidation required
- Creditors cannot take legal action during the proposal period
- It appears on your credit report for 3 years after completion
- Available only to individuals — not corporations
Note: Consumer proposals are a Canadian mechanism. U.S. consumers do not have a direct equivalent — the closest U.S. options are Chapter 13 bankruptcy (court-supervised repayment plan) or private debt settlement programs.
What Is Bankruptcy?
Bankruptcy is a federal legal process that allows individuals with unmanageable debt to either liquidate assets to repay creditors (Chapter 7) or restructure debt into a court-supervised repayment plan (Chapter 13). Both provide an automatic stay that immediately halts most collection activity upon filing.
Key characteristics of U.S. personal bankruptcy:
- Chapter 7: Discharges most unsecured debt within 3 to 6 months; may require asset liquidation; income must pass the means test; stays on credit for 10 years
- Chapter 13: 3 to 5-year court-supervised repayment plan; allows asset retention; stays on credit for 7 years
- Not all debt is dischargeable — student loans, child support, recent tax debt generally survive bankruptcy
- Public record visible to lenders, landlords, and some employers
The U.S. Private Alternative: Professional Debt Settlement
For U.S. consumers, the private alternative to bankruptcy that most closely resembles the structure of a consumer proposal is professional debt settlement — specifically United Debt Relief’s done-for-you Debt Settlement program.
Like a consumer proposal, debt settlement:
- Negotiates to pay less than the full balance owed — typically 40 to 50% before fees
- Addresses all enrolled unsecured creditors simultaneously
- Stops accumulating interest on enrolled accounts during the program
- Provides a defined timeline to resolution — 12 to 48 months
- Does not require court filing or a public record
Unlike bankruptcy, debt settlement does not require a means test, does not involve asset liquidation, does not create a federal court record, and is not governed by a court-supervised repayment plan. The credit impact is real but does not carry the 7 to 10-year public record of a bankruptcy filing.
Key Comparison: Debt Settlement vs Bankruptcy for U.S. Consumers
- Credit impact: Both are significant. Settlement resolves in 12 to 48 months; bankruptcy stays 7 to 10 years on the credit report
- Asset protection: Settlement does not threaten assets; Chapter 7 may liquidate non-exempt assets
- Court involvement: Settlement is private; bankruptcy is a federal court proceeding
- Public record: Bankruptcy is a public federal record; settlement is not
- Non-dischargeable debt: Settlement can address any negotiable debt; bankruptcy cannot discharge student loans, recent taxes, child support
- Cost: Both involve professional fees; settlement fees are paid only after successful resolution with no upfront charges through United Debt Relief
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is there a consumer proposal option for U.S. residents?
Not as a formal legal mechanism. U.S. consumers can achieve similar outcomes through private debt settlement — negotiating to pay a reduced portion of debt over time without court involvement. Chapter 13 bankruptcy is the closest court-supervised equivalent, providing a repayment plan structure. A free consultation with United Debt Relief identifies which private or legal mechanism is most appropriate for your situation.
Q: Can I do a debt settlement after a bankruptcy?
Yes, for debts that were not discharged in bankruptcy or that arose after filing. Debt settlement through United Debt Relief is available to anyone with $10,000 or more in qualifying unsecured debt, regardless of prior bankruptcy history. Timing and eligibility for specific programs depend on your specific situation.
Q: How do I know which is better for my situation?
The key factors are: total debt amount, type of debt (dischargeable vs non-dischargeable), income level relative to state means test thresholds, asset situation, and long-term credit and professional goals. A free consultation with United Debt Relief reviews all of these and provides a clear recommendation — including whether bankruptcy or a private alternative is the more appropriate path.
Weighing your options? Call United Debt Relief at 1 (888) 802-2092 for a free consultation. We review bankruptcy vs settlement for your specific situation. All 50 states. No upfront fees.