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Best Bond ETFs in Canada 2026: ZAG, VAB, XBB — Yields 3–5% (Full Comparison)

Updated

Bond ETFs are worth serious attention in 2026 for the first time in years. With yields at 3.5–4.5%, they’re actually paying meaningful income again — and they still serve as the ballast in your portfolio when stocks drop 20–30%. The main choice comes down to duration: short-duration funds (ZFS, VSB) are stable but yield less, while aggregate funds (ZAG, VAB) offer more income but fluctuate with interest rates. If you hold bonds outside registered accounts, you’re giving up a significant chunk to taxes — bond interest is taxed at your full marginal rate, making a TFSA or RRSP the obvious home for fixed income. For the broader fund-selection context, start with our ETFs and index funds hub.

Best Bond ETFs Canada 2026

Broad Market / Aggregate

ETFYieldMERDurationHoldingsFocus
ZAG~3.8%0.09%7.3 yrs1,400+Canadian aggregate
VAB~3.7%0.09%7.5 yrs1,200+Canadian aggregate
XBB~3.6%0.10%7.4 yrs1,500+Canadian aggregate

Government Bonds

ETFYieldMERDurationFocus
ZFS~3.5%0.09%3.0 yrsShort-term federal
CLF~3.3%0.10%2.5 yrs1-5 year government
XGB~3.4%0.17%10.0 yrsAll government
ZFL~4.0%0.20%15.0 yrsLong-term federal

Corporate Bonds

ETFYieldMERDurationFocus
ZCB~4.5%0.26%5.0 yrsCorporate bonds
XCB~4.4%0.44%5.0 yrsCorporate bonds
VSC~4.2%0.11%2.7 yrsShort-term corporate

Short-Term / Cash-Like

ETFYieldMERDurationFocus
VSB~3.8%0.11%2.8 yrsShort-term bonds
ZST~4.5%0.09%0.4 yrsUltra short-term
CASH~4.3%0.11%0 yrsCash equivalent
CSAV~4.2%0.16%0 yrsCash equivalent
PSA~4.3%0.16%0 yrsHigh interest savings

If you are deciding between these cash-like ETFs and pure cash vehicles, compare them with best money market ETFs in Canada.

Top Picks by Goal

Best Overall: ZAG

FeatureDetails
Yield~3.8%
MER0.09%
Duration~7.3 years
Holdings1,400+ bonds
Credit quality~75% government, ~25% corporate
DistributionMonthly

Best for: Core bond allocation within a diversified portfolio.

Best for Safety: ZFS

FeatureDetails
Yield~3.5%
MER0.09%
Duration~3.0 years
Credit quality100% federal government
Interest rate riskLow

Best for: Emergency fund parking, ultra-conservative investors.

Best for Income: ZCB

FeatureDetails
Yield~4.5%
MER0.26%
Duration~5.0 years
Credit qualityInvestment-grade corporate
RiskModerate (credit risk)

Best for: Income-seekers willing to accept some credit risk.

Best Cash Alternative: CASH / PSA

FeatureCASHPSA
Yield~4.3%~4.3%
MER0.11%0.16%
NAVStable (~$50)Stable (~$50)
RiskMinimalMinimal
LiquidityDailyDaily

Best for: Short-term savings, emergency funds, parking cash while deciding.

Bond ETF Income

Annual income on $50,000 invested:

ETFYieldAnnual IncomeMonthly Income
ZCB4.5%$2,250$188
CASH4.3%$2,150$179
ZAG3.8%$1,900$158
VAB3.7%$1,850$154
ZFS3.5%$1,750$146

Understanding Bond Duration

Duration is the single most important number to understand before buying a bond ETF. It tells you roughly how much the ETF’s price will move for every 1% change in interest rates: a fund with a 7-year duration drops about 7% if rates rise 1%, but gains 7% if rates fall 1%. If you think the Bank of Canada is done hiking and rates will trend down, longer-duration funds like ZFL stand to gain the most. If you’re not sure, aggregate funds like ZAG split the difference with moderate duration around 7 years. For the broader decision between bonds, cash, and guaranteed products, see GIC vs bond ETF vs HISA.

DurationInterest Rate ImpactExample
Short (1-3 yrs)Low volatilityZFS, VSB, VSC
Medium (5-7 yrs)Moderate volatilityZAG, VAB
Long (10+ yrs)High volatilityZFL, XLB

Rule of thumb: If rates rise 1%, a bond ETF with 7-year duration drops ~7%. Short duration = less risk.

Where to Hold Bond ETFs

AccountTax TreatmentBest Choice
TFSATax-free✅ Ideal — no tax on interest
RRSPTax-deferred✅ Good — tax paid on withdrawal
Non-registeredFully taxable❌ Least efficient (interest taxed at marginal rate)

If you are still deciding between those registered accounts, review TFSA vs RRSP for beginners.

Bond ETFs vs GICs vs HISA

FeatureBond ETFsGICsHISA
Yield3.5-4.5%3.5-5.0%3.0-4.5%
LiquidityDailyLocked (most)Daily
Principal protection❌ (price fluctuates)✅ CDIC insured✅ CDIC insured
Interest rate riskYesNoNo
Upside potentialYes (if rates fall)NoNo
Best forFlexible portfolioFixed term savingsEmergency fund

How Much Bonds to Hold

Age / SituationSuggested Bond %ETF
Under 30, long-term0-10%None or XEQT
30-45, accumulating10-20%XGRO/VGRO (built-in)
45-55, pre-retirement20-40%XBAL/VBAL or add ZAG
55-65, near retirement30-50%XCNS/VCNS or ZAG + equity
65+, retired40-70%Bond-heavy all-in-one or ZAG

For a fuller framework on matching fixed income to life stage, see asset allocation by age.

The Bottom Line

For most investors, ZAG or VAB as a core bond holding in a TFSA or RRSP covers all the bases — low MER, broad diversification, and monthly income. If you want to park cash short-term, CASH or PSA offer GIC-like yields with daily liquidity. The right mix of bonds for your portfolio depends on your age and risk tolerance — younger investors can hold less, while retirees should hold more.