Step-by-step, source-backed guidance: where to file, the exact offences to name, and how to escalate until your case is assigned.
911 (call, or text-to-911 for registered users in many regions). A small number of remote/rural areas without 911 coverage use a local 7- or 10-digit emergency number published by the RCMP and local detachments. The RCMP Online Crime Reporting tool states: "For emergencies please call 9-1-1 or your local emergency number."
Most people here are not in an active emergency. To start an official record, use the non-emergency steps below.
File a non-emergency report, and do the single most important thing: get your report / reference / occurrence number. That number is the key that unlocks platforms, prosecutors, employers and protective orders.
For NON-emergency incidents with no suspect on scene. Submit the report online; a police reviewer screens it and may follow up. SAVE the occurrence/reference number it generates, because that number is your official paper trail. Find your service's portal by searching '[your city/region] police online reporting'. This is the most-used channel for starting a record of harassment, threats, mischief, identity theft, etc. There is no single national non-emergency portal; you must use your own service's portal.
For non-emergency crimes in RCMP-policed jurisdictions. The system checks your location against detachment boundaries and routes the report, and explicitly directs emergencies to 911. If your area is not RCMP-policed (e.g. Ontario or Quebec, or a municipality with its own force), use your municipal or provincial force's portal instead.
Call the non-emergency line for your police service to file a report and obtain an official occurrence/file number when online reporting does not fit the offence (e.g. ongoing harassment or threats) and you need a record and an investigating officer assigned.
Centralized national online portal for the cyber/fraud dimension of your case, launched November 2025 and jointly delivered by the RCMP National Cybercrime Coordination Centre (NC3) and the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre (CAFC). It INTAKES and aggregates reports into a national repository to help police link cases; it does NOT itself investigate individual complaints. File here IN ADDITION to your local police report, not instead of it. Victims are still directed to report to local police and to call 911 in an emergency.
File here in addition to, not instead of, your local police report.
Centralized national online portal for victims and witnesses to report cybercrime and fraud, launched November 2025. Jointly delivered by the RCMP National Cybercrime Coordination Centre (NC3) and the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre (CAFC). It intakes and aggregates reports into a national repository to help police link cases and disrupt cyber/fraud activity; it does NOT itself investigate individual complaints. Victims are still directed to report to local police and to call 911 in an emergency.
Federal coordination hub (reached initial operating capability April 1, 2020) that supports Canadian law enforcement on cybercrime: provides technical expertise, coordinates domestic and international cybercrime investigations, and pushes victim notifications out through local police. This is a coordination/support body, not a direct public intake line and not the investigator of a given complaint. The public-facing intake is the Report Cybercrime and Fraud portal.
National anti-fraud intelligence and intake centre jointly operated by the RCMP, Ontario Provincial Police, and the Competition Bureau. It intakes fraud/cybercrime reports and gathers intelligence; it does NOT investigate individual files (those go to the police of jurisdiction). Phone and online intake; now integrated with the national Report Cybercrime and Fraud system.
Use the right words. Lead with threats, stalking and doxxing, not “someone is being mean.” Tap any offence for the full elements and the official source.
No standalone doxxing offence in Canadian criminal law. Doxxing is prosecuted through existing Criminal Code offences according to the conduct and intent: criminal harassment (s.264, up to 10 years), uttering threats (s.264.1), extortion (s.346, up to life), identity theft/fraud (s.402.2 / s.403), false/harassing/indecent communications (s.372), and, where intimate images are exposed, non-consensual publication of an intimate image (s.162.1, up to 5 years). Pure privacy harm with no criminal hook is pursued civilly (provincial torts such as intrusion upon seclusion / public disclosure of private facts) and via PIPEDA / provincial privacy commissioners. Criminal law is federal and uniform across Canada; the civil privacy torts and defamation are provincial.
One-party consent. A victim may lawfully record a conversation or phone call they are themselves part of, without telling the other party.
Source ↗You are entitled to be heard. Work up this ladder until your case is assigned.