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KOHO vs EQ Bank 2026: Which Canadian Digital Bank Should You Use?

Updated

KOHO and EQ Bank are both popular Canadian digital banking products, but they were designed for fundamentally different financial jobs. Choosing between them — or deciding whether to use both — comes down to understanding which problem each one solves.

KOHO is a spending and budgeting platform. The prepaid Mastercard at its centre means you can only spend what you load, which enforces spending discipline mechanically. Cashback on purchases, round-up savings, automated savings rules, and the Credit Building feature make it a strong tool for managing day-to-day money flows. The trade-off is a lower base savings rate and a monthly fee for the features that make it worth using.

EQ Bank is a savings and banking platform. Its Savings Plus Account pays one of Canada’s highest HISA rates — around 3.75% — on all balances, for free, with no conditions. It also functions as a fully operational bank account for payroll, bill payments, Interac e-Transfers, and purchases. The EQ Bank Card is a Mastercard debit with no foreign transaction fee and 0.5% cashback. For Canadians who want their savings working harder without switching their entire banking relationship, EQ Bank is a direct upgrade from a Big 5 savings account earning 0.01%.


What KOHO Offers

KOHO’s core product is a prepaid Mastercard loaded from your existing bank account or payroll. The prepaid structure means there is no credit check to qualify, no overdraft risk, and no interest charges — you spend what you have. The app wraps this with spending categorization, savings goals, and automation tools that most Canadian bank apps lack.

FeatureDetails
Card typePrepaid Mastercard
Cashback (Essential, free)0.5% broadly
Cashback (Everything, $9/mo)1% broadly, up to 10% at partners
Cashback (Premium, $19/mo)2% broadly, up to 10% at partners
Savings interest (free)0.5%
Savings interest (Everything)4.0%
Savings interest (Premium)5.0%
Credit BuildingIncluded on paid plans; $7/mo add-on on free
Registered accountsNone
CDIC insuranceVia Peoples Trust

The Credit Building feature deserves separate attention. KOHO reports a monthly instalment loan to Equifax without a hard credit check, generating payment history entries that build your credit score over time. No direct competitor offers this in a no-hard-check format. For newcomers to Canada, students, and anyone rebuilding after credit problems, this feature alone can justify the monthly plan cost. See the full KOHO review for a plan-by-plan breakdown.


What EQ Bank Offers

EQ Bank’s Savings Plus Account is the product that most Canadians use it for: a HISA paying approximately 3.75% on all balances, with no monthly fee, no minimum balance, and no conditions. Unlike a traditional savings account at a Big 5 bank that may pay 0.01–0.5%, EQ Bank applies the HISA rate to your entire balance from day one, including payroll deposits.

FeatureDetails
Savings interest~3.75% on all balances (no conditions)
Monthly fee$0
EQ Bank CardMastercard debit; 0.5% cashback; no FX fee
Registered accountsTFSA, RRSP, RRIF, FHSA
GICsYes — 3 months to 10 years
USD accountYes
International transfersYes (via Wise partnership)
Bill paymentsYes
Interac e-TransferYes (free, unlimited)
CDIC insuranceVia Equitable Bank (Schedule I chartered bank)

The registered account access is a meaningful EQ Bank advantage over KOHO. A TFSA or RRSP at EQ Bank earns the same ~3.75% HISA rate, sheltered from tax. KOHO offers no registered accounts. For anyone building long-term savings — an emergency fund in a TFSA, RRSP contributions earning competitive interest — EQ Bank’s registered account options are a direct reason to keep savings there rather than in KOHO. See the EQ Bank review for full account details and current GIC rates.


Head-to-Head Comparison

FeatureKOHOEQ Bank
Primary purposeSpending and budgetingSavings and banking
Free tier savings rate0.5%~3.75%
Best savings rate5.0% (Premium, $19/mo)~3.75% (free)
Cashback on purchases0.5%–2% (plan-dependent)0.5% flat (EQ Card)
Credit buildingYes (Equifax reporting)No
Registered accountsNoneTFSA, RRSP, RRIF, FHSA
GICsNoYes
USD accountNoYes
Budgeting toolsYes — core featureBasic
Monthly fee$0–$19$0
CDIC insuranceVia Peoples TrustVia Equitable Bank

Which to Choose

Choose KOHO if your priority is managing day-to-day spending. The prepaid model prevents overspending; the cashback on groceries and transport offsets everyday costs; the budgeting tools provide visibility that bank apps rarely match. Add the Credit Building feature if you are working on your credit score — it is KOHO’s unique differentiator and there is no equivalent in the EQ Bank product lineup. KOHO is also stronger for partner cashback: up to 10% at select merchants on paid plans is a meaningful benefit for regular shoppers at those partners.

Choose EQ Bank if your priority is earning competitive interest on savings with full banking functionality. The 3.75% free rate beats KOHO’s free tier by 3.25 percentage points — on $20,000 in savings, that is $650 versus $100 per year, a $550 annual difference from choosing one account over the other. EQ Bank’s registered accounts and GICs make it the better long-term savings vehicle. For most Canadians, EQ Bank is also the better payroll destination: money earns 3.75% from the moment it lands rather than sitting in a Big 5 chequing account at 0%.

Use both if you want to optimize for both spending and saving. This is the most efficient setup for most Canadians: deposit payroll to EQ Bank to earn interest on the full amount, then transfer your spending budget to KOHO weekly or bi-weekly to earn cashback on purchases and use the budgeting tools. Savings, emergency fund, TFSA, and RRSP all stay at EQ Bank working at 3.75%. Both accounts are free at the base level — there is no cost conflict.

On savings alone, KOHO Premium ($19/month) earning 5.0% interest beats EQ Bank’s free 3.75% only when the incremental 1.25% interest gain on your balance exceeds the $228 annual fee — which requires approximately $18,000 in savings. Below that threshold, EQ Bank is the better savings vehicle even against KOHO’s highest-tier rate.