June 17, 2026

No-Fee Banking in Canada Exists, So Why Are Millions Still Paying for Their Chequing Account?

No-Fee Banking in Canada Exists, So Why Are Millions Still Paying for Their Chequing Account?
Photo Courtesy: Unsplash.com

By Audrey Denise Cachuela

Most Canadians pay a monthly fee for their chequing account without giving it much thought. Institutions like Innovation Federal Credit Union have built their model around the idea that it shouldn’t cost money just to hold money, and a growing number of Canadians are starting to agree. The market for no-fee chequing accounts in Canada has expanded considerably over the past few years, and the options are better than most people realize.

Why Canadians Keep Paying Fees They Don’t Have to

Most people open a bank account when they’re young, usually at whichever institution their parents used, and keep that account indefinitely. Fees renew automatically, and nobody revisits them. Switching feels like a project, and the monthly cost is easy enough to absorb without thinking too hard about it.

Traditional banks bundled monthly fees with their services for decades, packaging branch access, transaction processing, and customer support all together. That arrangement made more sense when visiting a branch was genuinely necessary for basic tasks. Now most Canadians can open accounts, deposit cheques, pay bills, and move money around without setting foot in a branch, yet the fees have largely stayed put.

There’s also an awareness gap. Many Canadians don’t actually have a clear picture of how much they’re paying per year, or that real alternatives exist. This is especially true around credit unions, where most people have limited exposure and don’t fully understand what membership-based banking looks like in practice.

How Much Are We Actually Talking About?

More than most people realize. Research puts the average somewhere between $150 and $250 per year in banking fees for Canadian account holders. (Source: WealthNorth, 2026) Premium chequing accounts can run around $30 a month, which adds up to $360 a year, to maintain access to something that’s available elsewhere for free. (Source: Savvy New Canadians, 2026)

Over ten years, that’s several thousand dollars spent on account maintenance. For someone who mostly uses their bank for transfers and bill payments, it’s a hard number to justify.

In 2024, an independent report by North Economics compared banking fees at Canada’s Big Five banks with fees charged in the UK and Australia, finding that Canadian consumers absorb substantially higher fees than people in comparable markets. (Source: BNN Bloomberg, 2024) That research got significant attention and accelerated a conversation that was already underway.

Traditional Chequing Fees vs. No-Fee Banking

Fee-based accounts charge a fixed monthly amount and bundle services: a set number of transactions, branch access, digital banking access, paper statements, sometimes perks tied to premium tiers. If you genuinely use those services, particularly teller-assisted transactions or regular branch visits, paying for the bundle can be reasonable.

No-fee chequing works differently. There’s no monthly maintenance charge, and the account is built around what most people actually do: deposits, transfers, bill payments, and routine account management. Some services may still carry one-off fees, but the core everyday functions don’t cost anything month to month.

As Innovation Federal Credit Union has demonstrated through its own no-fee model, this approach is sustainable when banking is designed around digital delivery from the start. When most interactions happen through an app rather than a branch, the underlying cost structure shifts. Some institutions pass those savings to members. Others don’t.

What Actually Matters in an Everyday Bank Account

The monthly fee is the obvious starting point for comparison, but it’s not the whole picture. The better question is whether the account actually works for how you manage money day to day.

A monthly fee can still make sense for some people. If you visit a branch regularly, need frequent teller support, or use premium features like travel insurance or credit card rebates, a traditional account may provide value. However, it’s important to look beyond the monthly fee and consider what’s included. Some accounts limit transactions or Interac e-Transfers and charge extra once you exceed those limits. For Canadians who primarily bank online, a no-fee account with unlimited transactions can often provide better value. Innovation Federal Credit Union’s No-Fee Chequing Account, for example, includes unlimited transactions and Interac e-Transfers with no monthly fee.

At a minimum, a good everyday account should handle bills, transfers, deposits, and account monitoring without adding friction. A functional mobile app isn’t a nice-to-have anymore, it’s a must. Consumers also expect clear information about what the account charges and when. Forbes’ World’s Best Banks 2026 ranking, which surveyed more than 54,000 people across 34 countries, found that trust and transparency around terms and conditions consistently ranked among the top factors consumers use to evaluate their bank. (Source: Forbes and Statista, 2026) Picking a no-monthly-fee bank account in Canada removes one variable entirely: you’re not parsing fee schedules to figure out what you owe each month.

Younger Canadians and the Fee Calculation

People who grew up with subscription culture think differently about recurring costs. They’re used to evaluating whether a service is worth what it charges, and they cancel things that aren’t. Banking fees don’t automatically get a pass just because they’re associated with something as established as a bank.

A $15 monthly fee is $180 a year. For younger Canadians managing tighter budgets in a high cost-of-living environment, that’s exactly the kind of expense getting a second look.

There’s also a values dimension that comes up more with younger account holders. Many of them are paying attention to how financial institutions operate beyond the product itself, including whether they invest in communities or whether they’re structured to prioritize shareholders. Credit unions function as member-owned cooperatives, which means profits stay within the membership and get directed back into the communities they serve rather than flowing out to external investors. For people who care about that distinction, it matters.

How to Avoid Monthly Banking Fees

The practical steps aren’t complicated. Find an account without monthly fees and move to it. But there are few things worth checking before you do.

Watch out for accounts that market themselves as low-fee but require a minimum balance of $3,000 to $6,000 to waive the monthly charge. Keeping that much money idle to avoid a fee is still a cost, just a less visible one. A genuine no-fee chequing account in Canada carries no minimum balance requirement.

Beyond that, the best no-fee options today are broadly comparable to traditional accounts on the things that matter: unlimited transactions, free Interac e-Transfer® services, mobile cheque deposits, bill payments. The gaps that existed ten years ago have largely closed.

Before making the move, review your current account to see exactly what you’re paying and whether any of those fees are tied to services you’d actually miss. Most people find they wouldn’t. Updating a direct deposit and moving a few pre-authorized payments takes a few hours at most.

If you haven’t looked at what your account is costing you, that’s a reasonable place to start. Innovation Federal Credit Union offers a no-fee chequing account in Canada with no monthly charges, no minimum balance, and unlimited everyday transactions through a fully digital platform available to Canadians outside Quebec. You can open an account at innovationcu.ca.

Kivo Daily

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