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Bank Fees Comparison in Canada in 2026

Updated

The average Canadian pays $150-$250 per year in bank fees — money that is entirely avoidable. Free banking alternatives like EQ Bank, Simplii Financial, and Tangerine offer unlimited transactions, free e-Transfers, and no monthly fees. Over a decade, switching from a Big 5 premium account to a no-fee bank saves $1,500-$2,200 — before counting the thousands more in interest you earn on a high-interest savings account versus the 0.01% your Big 5 bank pays.

Monthly Account Fees Comparison

Big 5 Banks

BankBasic AccountMid-TierPremiumFee Waiver (Min Balance)
RBC$4.00/mo (Day to Day)$10.95/mo (Enhanced)$16.95/mo (VIP)$3,000 / $4,000 / $5,000
TD$3.95/mo (Minimum)$10.95/mo (Unlimited)$16.95/mo (All-Inclusive)$3,000 / $4,000 / $5,000
Scotiabank$3.95/mo (Basic Plus)$11.95/mo (Preferred)$16.95/mo (Ultimate)$3,000 / $4,000 / $5,000
BMO$4.50/mo (Performance)$11.95/mo (Plus)$16.95/mo (Premium)$3,000 / $4,000 / $5,000
CIBC$4.00/mo (Smart)$10.95/mo (Smart Plus)$16.95/mo (Smart Premium)$3,000 / $4,000 / $6,000

No-Fee Alternatives

BankMonthly FeeTransactionsInterac e-TransferNotable Feature
EQ Bank$0UnlimitedFree unlimitedEarn interest on chequing
Simplii Financial$0UnlimitedFree unlimitedCIBC ATM network
Tangerine$0UnlimitedFree ($0.50 for some)Scotiabank ATM network
Wealthsimple Cash$0UnlimitedFree unlimited1% cashback option
Neo Financial$0UnlimitedFree unlimitedCashback rewards
KOHO$0 (basic)Unlimited$0–$2Prepaid, cashback
PC Financial$0UnlimitedFreePC Optimum points
Motive Financial$0UnlimitedFreeHigh HISA rate

ATM Fees

Using another bank’s ATM in Canada typically costs $3-$5 total (a fee from each bank). This adds up quickly if you are not near your own bank’s ATMs. The best way to avoid ATM fees entirely is to use a no-fee bank that piggybacks on a Big 5 ATM network: Simplii customers get free access to 3,400+ CIBC ATMs, and Tangerine customers use 3,500+ Scotiabank ATMs. Credit union members can use THE EXCHANGE network of 3,700+ ATMs.

ScenarioFeeHow to Avoid
Own bank ATM$0Use your bank’s ATMs
Other bank’s ATM (domestic)$1.50–$3.00 (per side, possibly $5+ total)In-network ATMs
International ATM$3.00–$5.00 + 2.5% FXUse Wise card or partner ATMs
THE EXCHANGE network (credit unions)$0 for members3,700+ ATMs across Canada
Simplii/CIBC ATMs$0 for Simplii customers3,400+ CIBC ATMs
Tangerine/Scotiabank ATMs$0 for Tangerine customers3,500+ Scotiabank ATMs

Common Fee Schedule

Beyond the monthly fee, Big 5 banks charge for all sorts of individual services that no-fee banks include for free. Paper statements ($2-$4/month), excess transactions ($0.65-$1.50 each), international wire transfers ($25-$80), and NSF fees ($45-$48) are among the most common. The single most expensive fee most people encounter is the NSF (non-sufficient funds) charge — a single bounced payment costs $45-$48 at most Big 5 banks, compared to $0-$25 at online alternatives.

Fee TypeBig 5 BankNo-Fee BankNotes
Monthly account fee$4–$17/mo$0Waivable with min balance
Excess transactions$0.65–$1.50/each$0Basic plans only
Interac e-Transfer (send)$0–$1.50$0Most banks now free
Paper statement$2–$4/mo$0Switch to e-statements
Cheque book (50)$30–$50$20–$50 or freeOrder online for cheaper
Certified cheque$10–$15N/ANot all banks offer
Bank draft$7.50–$10N/AUsually in-branch only
Stop payment$12.50–$15N/APer cheque
Wire transfer (domestic)$15–$30$0–$15Use e-Transfer instead
Wire transfer (international)$25–$80N/AUse Wise for cheaper
Overdraft (per use)$5$0 (most no-fee banks)Plan charges may differ
Overdraft interest21–22%N/AAnnual rate on balance
NSF (bounced payment)$45–$48$0–$25Non-sufficient funds
Safety deposit box$45–$200/yearN/ASize-dependent
Account closure (within 90 days)$0–$25$0Some charge early closure

Annual Cost of Banking at Each Tier

Banking StyleMonthly FeesATM (est.)e-TransfersOther FeesAnnual Total
Big 5 basic account$48–$54/yr$30–$60$0–$18$20–$50$98–$182
Big 5 mid-tier$120–$144/yr$0 (unlimited)$0$10–$30$130–$174
Big 5 premium$192–$204/yr$0 (unlimited)$0$0–$20$192–$224
No-fee online bank$0$0–$30$0$0–$10$0–$40

Over 10 years, the difference between a Big 5 premium account and a no-fee bank is $1,500–$2,200.

Fee Waivers Available

If you want to stay with a Big 5 bank, you can often eliminate fees by qualifying for a waiver. Students, seniors (60+), youth, and newcomers typically get free accounts. For everyone else, maintaining a minimum balance of $3,000-$6,000 waives the monthly fee — though keeping that much money sitting in a 0% chequing account has its own cost in lost interest. At 4% in an online bank, $5,000 earns $200/year.

GroupBanks Offering WaiversSavings
Students (18–25)All Big 5$48–$204/yr
Seniors (60+)All Big 5Standard monthly fee waived
Youth (under 18)All Big 5Free youth accounts
New immigrantsAll Big 5 (first 12 months)1 year fee waiver
Multi-product (mortgage + account)Most Big 5Reduced or waived fees
Minimum balance ($3,000–$6,000)All Big 5Monthly fee waived
Staff/employee plansVariesVarious discounts

The Bottom Line

There is no financial justification for paying $15-$17 per month for a bank account when free alternatives offer identical or better services. If you value branch access, keep a basic Big 5 account and waive the fee with a minimum balance. Move your savings to an online bank for 4%+ interest. And stop paying for services — e-Transfers, bill payments, unlimited transactions — that every no-fee bank includes for free.