What Collection Agency Does Ministry of Colleges and Universities Use?

Last updated: April 2026

If you have an unpaid account with Ministry of Colleges and Universities, your debt gets assigned to a third-party collection agency.

Collection agencies Ministry of Colleges and Universities uses

These are the collection agencies consumers have reported hearing from about Ministry of Colleges and Universities debts. If one of them is calling you, their number is below.

AgencyPhone
Gatestone & Co.

Based on consumer reports and public records. Always verify the agency's identity before making any payment.

What happens when Ministry of Colleges and Universities sends you to collections

Ministry of Colleges and Universities tries to collect the debt themselves first. You'll get reminder letters, phone calls, texts and emails from their internal team.

If you don't pay within 90 to 180 days, Ministry of Colleges and Universities assigns or sells the account to a collection agency. The agency contacts you directly from that point. The original debt now shows as a collection entry on your credit report.

You still owe the money to Ministry of Colleges and Universities. The collection agency is just the company chasing you for it.

What to do if Ministry of Colleges and Universities sends you to collections

Step 1: Request written verification. Get the original creditor's name (Ministry of Colleges and Universities), the account reference, and the total amount owed. Don't make a payment until you have this in writing.

Step 2: Don't share personal details. No banking info, date of birth, or address until you've confirmed the debt is yours.

Step 3: Cross-check the amount against your Ministry of Colleges and Universities account records or last bill.

Step 4: If the debt is valid, pay in full, negotiate a settlement, or set up a payment plan. If you don't recognise the debt, dispute it in writing with the collection agency.

Step 5: Know your rights. Learn what a collection agency can and can't do.

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Can you deal with Ministry of Colleges and Universities directly?

Sometimes. Contact Ministry of Colleges and Universities's billing department and ask if the account can be recalled from the collection agency.

Some companies take the account back if you arrange payment directly with them. Others won't. Once it's assigned, you deal with the agency.

Even if you pay Ministry of Colleges and Universities directly, the collection entry on your credit report doesn't disappear. It updates to show as paid, but the record stays for six years in most provinces.

Can you negotiate a Ministry of Colleges and Universities debt in collections?

Yes. But you're negotiating with the collection agency, not Ministry of Colleges and Universities.

Collection agencies often pay less than the full amount for debts they buy. That means they accept a lump-sum payment for less than what you owe. This is a settlement.

Get any agreement in writing before you pay. Make sure it confirms the amount, the payment date, and that the account will be marked as settled.

How to check if your Ministry of Colleges and Universities account is in collections

Pull your credit report from Equifax Canada or TransUnion.

Look for a collection entry with Ministry of Colleges and Universities listed as the original creditor. The collection agency's name appears as the current account holder.

If you see an entry you don't recognise, contact the agency listed and request written verification before doing anything.

How will this affect your credit score?

A debt sent to collections gets an R9 rating on your credit report. R9 is the worst possible rating.

That entry stays on your report for six years from the date of first delinquency.

Paying the collection agency doesn't remove the entry. It changes the status to “paid,” which looks better to lenders. But the record stays for the full period.

For a full breakdown, read our guide to how long collections stay on your credit report.

If you need help managing this debt or rebuilding your credit, see our debt help resources.