From IRCC Website (emphasis mine):
Proof of Funds
Purpose
To confirm whether the applicant meets the low-income cut-off (LICO), assessed by the amount of money they hold compared to the number of people in their family
Document requirements
- The applicant should provide an official letter(s) from one or more financial institutions that lists all current bank and investment accounts as well as outstanding debts, such as credit card debts and loans.
- o The letter(s) must be printed on the letterhead of the financial institution and must include the applicant’s name, the contact information of the financial institution (address, telephone number and email address), the account numbers, the date each account was opened and the current balance of each account as well as the average balance for the past six months.
- Other documents may also be requested, as necessary.
I have seen advice on here both saying that you
do need to declare your debts and also advice saying you
do not have to disclose your debts. The language above, however, to me seems pretty unambiguous. You MUST declare all of your debts - including credit cards. Failure to do so may lead to your application being rejected under misrepresentation and you getting a 5 year ban from Canada.
That being said - As far as I can gather, IRCC are not interested in your net worth - i.e. your total funds in your bank minus any debts. They are concerned that you may have borrowed money either using credit cards or loans to show POF. You need to show your outstanding debts to prove that you haven't borrowed money to show POF.
The requirement is also that the funds must be available and transferable and unencumbered by debts or other obligations. The funds are required to ensure that you have sufficient resources to settle in Canada without a job. So long as your debts are structured so as to not wipe out your savings within that period, there should be no issue. If your debts that fall due within say 6 months to a year of your landing (i.e. repayments on loans, minimum payments on credit cards) are going to bring you below the threshold then you would likely be refused on grounds that you don't have sufficient settlement funds. On the other hand, if that isn't the case, I don't see why they would reject you as such debts would normally be considered to be paid off with future employment income.
There isn't any authoratitive source on this, I'm afraid - I am in a similar position to you and this is the best that I can come up with based on internet advice and what seems sensible given what IRCC are trying to achieve by having you declare POF. Some members will say that IRCC doesn't care about your credit cards - I can say for sure that they will care if they find out that you have credit card debts as the instructions are very clear. You may have no problems as they may not find out about them if you don't declare, but you're taking a risk by doing this. Rather save up for a few more months and pay your debts off rather than get rejected under misrepresentation and have to curse your decision to keep your debts quiet for the next five years!