By Jason Williams, Personal Finance Editor at Loanspot.ca · Updated July 2026
Need a $500 loan? Compare licensed Canadian lenders in one 60-second application and get funded by e-transfer — often the same day, with no impact to your credit to compare.
A $500 loan is a small, short-term loan that covers an unexpected bill or a gap before payday — enough for a real expense without taking on a large balance. Loanspot matches you with licensed Canadian lenders from one 60-second application, so you compare real offers instead of applying to each lender on its own, and approved funds are usually sent by e-transfer.

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Approval is based on your income and ability to repay rather than your credit score alone, so fair and bad credit are still considered. Need less or more? Compare a $250 loan or a larger personal loan.
A $500 loan suits a small, one-time need you can clear quickly:
Borrow only what you need and repay it on schedule. If you need money urgently, compare emergency loans; if you need longer to repay, an installment loan spreads the cost into predictable payments.

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Apply once and compare real offers — comparing won't affect your credit.
Tell us you need $500 and confirm your income with IBV — no documents to fax.
We compare licensed lenders and show you real options for your province.
Choose an offer and receive your $500 — often by e-transfer the same day.
With a small $500 loan, check the total cost of borrowing, not just the payment — a short term can carry a high cost relative to the amount. Every lender in the network follows Canadian cost-of-borrowing laws and must disclose the full cost before you sign, and reputable lenders never ask for an upfront fee to release funds.
To qualify you generally need to be the age of majority in your province, a Canadian resident, and have steady full-time or part-time employment income confirmed with a 60-second read-only IBV check. No lender can promise guaranteed approval — treat that claim as a red flag.
Yes — a $500 short term loan is exactly what most lenders in the network offer at this amount: you repay by your next payday or over a few instalments rather than carrying the balance for months. The short term keeps total interest low in dollars, and because Canada caps the cost of borrowing at 35% APR (payday-style advances at $14 per $100), a $500 loan Canada lenders write today can never legally exceed those limits. If a few weeks is too tight, ask for an instalment schedule up front — the payment is smaller and the cost is still capped.

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The questions Canadians ask most before borrowing.
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Most applicants are matched within minutes, and many lenders send approved funds by e-transfer the same day.
Often yes. Approval is based mainly on your income and ability to repay, so fair and bad credit are still considered.
No. Comparing options on Loanspot does not affect your credit score. A lender may only run a check if you move forward with an offer.
You repay on a short, agreed schedule — often by your next payday or in a few instalments. Borrow only what you can comfortably repay on time.
Generally you need to be the age of majority in your province, a Canadian resident, and have steady full-time or part-time employment income verified through IBV.
Yes — compare a $250 loan for less, or a larger personal loan if you need more.
It depends on the lender and term, and the full cost is disclosed before you sign. Always compare the total cost, not just the payment.
One 60-second application. No obligation. No impact to your credit score to compare.
Get matched now →Jason Williams writes about personal loans, borrowing and everyday money for Canadians at Loanspot.ca. He focuses on helping readers compare lenders, understand approval and IBV, and choose financing that fits their income. Read more from Jason Williams →