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High Interest Savings Accounts Canada March 2026 — Best HISA Rates Updated Daily + Hidden Fees Exposed

Publié le28 mars 2026 29 mars 2026.par Ahmada Ndao.Publié dansFinance, Insurance & Investing.
Finance & Insurance 🇨🇦 Canada · March 28, 2026 🔄 Rates Updated March 28, 2026 — Daily ⏱ 15 min read

High Interest Savings Accounts Canada March 2026 — Best HISA Rates Updated Daily + Hidden Fees Exposed

The Bank of Canada held its overnight rate at 2.25% on March 18, 2026 — meaning today's HISA rates are as good as they are going to get, and Canadian savers who are still keeping money in a Big Six bank account earning 0.01% are losing hundreds of dollars every month for absolutely no reason. EQ Bank pays 2.75% every day with zero fees. Neo Financial pays up to 3.00% with zero fees. KOHO pays 3.50% with a $19/month fee that pays for itself if you spend $800+ on the card. Meanwhile, RBC, TD, CIBC, BMO, and Scotiabank pay 0.01–0.50% on standard savings — the same accounts most Canadians leave their emergency fund and short-term savings in by default. On a $30,000 emergency fund, the annual difference between TD's 0.01% ($3/year) and EQ Bank's 2.75% ($825/year) is $822 — for doing nothing more than opening a free online account. This guide ranks the best high interest savings accounts in Canada for March 2026 with daily-verified rates, exposes the hidden fees that erode returns at big banks, shows the exact HISA vs TFSA strategy most Canadians should use, and gives you everything needed to maximize your savings this month.

Best Overall HISA EQ Bank — 2.75%
Highest Rate Canada KOHO Everything — 3.50%
Best No-Fee Rate Neo Financial — 3.00%
Best Promo Rate Simplii/Scotiabank — 4.50–4.75%
BoC Rate — Mar 18 2.25% — Held

Key Facts — Best HISA Rates Canada March 28, 2026 (Verified Daily)

  • EQ Bank Personal Account — Best overall: 2.75% everyday (with $2,000/mo direct deposit), 1.00% base. $0 fees, no minimum, CDIC-insured Schedule I bank. Ratehub #1 pick as of March 28, 2026
  • KOHO Everything — Highest rate: 3.50% everyday, $19/month fee — net positive vs EQ Bank only if spending $800+/month on KOHO card
  • Neo Financial — Best no-fee high rate: up to 3.00%, $0 fees, no minimum, up to $650 new account bonus
  • Oaken Financial — 2.80% everyday, $0 fees, no minimum, CDIC via Home Bank — best pure savings with no spending requirements
  • Simplii Financial — Best promo: 4.50% for first 5 months + $300 cash bonus + $50 Skip gift card. Then 0.30–1.50%
  • Scotiabank MomentumPLUS — 4.75% promo for 3 months with Ultimate Package (NerdWallet Canada, March 25, 2026)
  • Tangerine — 4.50% promo for 5 months on new money, offer ends April 30, 2026 (NerdWallet Canada)
  • WealthOne Bank — 2.50% everyday, CDIC insured, competitive alternative
  • Big banks (RBC/TD/CIBC/BMO/Scotia standard): 0.01–0.50% — losing $300–$825/year vs EQ Bank on $30,000
  • Bank of Canada rate held at 2.25% — rates not expected to rise in 2026, making current HISA rates near peak for this cycle
  • All online banks listed are CDIC-insured up to $100,000 per category — same protection as Big Six
3.50%Highest HISA rate Canada Mar 2026
$822Lost/yr at TD vs EQ Bank ($30K)
2.25%BoC rate — held Mar 18, 2026
$100KCDIC protection per category
Best HISA rates Canada March 28 2026 — EQ Bank 2.75% Neo 3.00% KOHO 3.50% Oaken 2.80% Simplii 4.50% promo
Best HISA rates Canada as of March 28, 2026 — verified daily from Ratehub.ca, NerdWallet Canada, and SavvyNewCanadians. EQ Bank leads for everyday no-conditions rate; KOHO leads highest rate with $19/mo fee; Simplii leads for first-5-months promotional rate. Big bank rates remain at 0.01–0.50%

Best HISA Rates Canada — March 28, 2026 (Updated Daily)

BankEveryday RatePromo RateMonthly FeeMin. BalanceCDIC?
EQ Bank Personal Account2.75% (w/ $2K/mo deposit)None$0None✅ Yes (Equitable Bank)
KOHO Everything3.50%None$19/moNone✅ Yes (Peoples Bank)
Neo Financial SavingsUp to 3.00%$650 bonus (new accounts)$0None✅ Yes
Oaken Financial2.80%None$0None✅ Yes (Home Bank)
WealthOne Bank2.50%None$0None✅ Yes
Simplii Financial HISA0.30–1.50%4.50% for 5 months + $300 bonus$0None✅ Yes (CIBC)
Tangerine Savings~0.50%4.50% for 5 months (ends Apr 30)$0None✅ Yes (Scotiabank)
Scotiabank MomentumPLUS~1.00%4.75% for 3 months (w/ Ultimate Package)$0 (account fee separate)None✅ Yes
Wealthsimple SaveUp to 1.25%Varies$0None✅ Yes (via partners)
Big Banks (RBC/TD/BMO/CIBC)0.01–0.50%Occasional promos$0–$16.95/moVaries✅ Yes

Sources: Ratehub.ca (March 28, 2026 — updated 4:30 a.m.), NerdWallet Canada (March 25, 2026), SavvyNewCanadians (March 2026). Rates change without notice — always verify before opening.

EQ Bank Personal Account Best Overall — Ratehub #1
2.75%Everyday rate (w/ direct deposit)
2.75%Everyday Rate
$0Monthly Fee
Schedule ICharter (same as TD)
CDICDeposit Insurance
EQ Bank's Personal Account is the #1 HISA in Canada for March 2026 according to Ratehub.ca (updated March 28, 2026) — delivering 2.75% everyday with zero fees, zero minimum balance, and CDIC protection through Equitable Bank, a federally regulated Schedule I chartered bank with $74 billion+ in combined assets. The 2.75% rate requires a $2,000/month direct deposit (1.00% without it) — achievable by most employed Canadians who redirect their paycheque. Free Interac e-Transfers, free bill payments, and access to GICs, TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA accounts round out the most complete product lineup among Canadian online banks.
📊 Nexuora insight: The math on staying at a Big Six bank is stark. TD eSavings pays 0.01% — that's $1/year on $10,000. EQ Bank pays 2.75% — that's $275/year on the same $10,000. On $30,000 (a typical emergency fund), EQ Bank earns $825/year vs TD's $3. The switch takes 15 minutes online, costs nothing, and the money is just as safe (both CDIC insured, both federally regulated). The only difference: EQ Bank has no physical branches — which saves them overhead costs that they pass to you as higher interest.
Strengths
  • 2.75% everyday — consistently top-tier, non-promotional
  • $0 fees, no minimum balance
  • Schedule I charter — same regulation as RBC/TD/CIBC
  • CDIC-insured up to $100K per category
  • Full product suite: TFSA, RRSP, FHSA, GICs (3.15–3.75%)
  • Free Interac e-Transfers and bill payments
Limitations
  • Full 2.75% requires $2,000/month direct deposit — 1.00% without it
  • No physical branches — online only
  • TFSA rate is lower (1.50%) — use Oaken for higher TFSA cash rate
KOHO Everything Highest Rate — 3.50%
3.50%Everyday rate (+ $19/mo fee)
3.50%Everyday Rate
$19/moMonthly Fee
CDICvia Peoples Bank
CashbackOn Spending Too
KOHO Everything offers Canada's highest everyday HISA rate at 3.50% — but the $19/month fee ($228/year) only makes financial sense if KOHO is also your primary spending card and you spend $800+/month (generating cashback that offsets the fee). The net math: 3.50% on $50,000 = $1,750/year minus $228 fee = $1,522 net vs EQ Bank's 2.75% = $1,375 — a $147 annual advantage for KOHO if you meet the spending threshold. Below $800/month on the card, EQ Bank wins on net basis. Best as a combined spending + saving account, not a standalone HISA.
Strengths
  • 3.50% — highest everyday HISA rate in Canada
  • Cashback on purchases + interest simultaneously
  • CDIC insured through Peoples Bank of Canada
Limitations
  • $19/month fee — only worthwhile at $800+/month card spending
  • Net advantage over EQ Bank is only $147/year at maximum
Neo Financial Savings 3.00% — $0 Fees
3.00%Up to — no fees
Up to 3.00%Everyday Rate
$0Monthly Fee
$650New Account Bonus
CDICDeposit Insurance
Neo Financial offers up to 3.00% with absolutely no monthly fees and no minimum balance — making it the best no-conditions HISA alternative to EQ Bank for Canadians who can't or won't set up a $2,000/month direct deposit. Founded by the creators of SkipTheDishes, Neo was voted the Savings Account to Watch by the Financial Post and continues to offer competitive rates. Their new account bonus of up to $650 for accounts funded within a specific window provides additional first-year value. Free bill payments and free bank-to-bank transfers round out a strong product.
Strengths
  • Up to 3.00% — no direct deposit condition required
  • $0 fees, no minimum balance
  • Up to $650 new account bonus
  • CDIC insured
Limitations
  • No GICs, no RRSP, no FHSA — limited product suite vs EQ Bank
  • "Up to" 3.00% — tiered structure means not all balances earn max rate
Hidden fees Canadian savings accounts 2026 exposed — transaction fees service charges inactivity fees
Big bank savings accounts hide fees that erode returns — transaction fees up to $5 per withdrawal, monthly service charges of $4–$16.95, inactivity fees, and minimum balance penalties that effectively turn a 0.50% rate into a negative return for many Canadians

Hidden Fees in Canadian Savings Accounts — What Banks Don't Advertise

The interest rate is only half the story. Many Canadians are earning less than they think because of fees that silently erode returns — and that banks don't prominently advertise. Here are the most common hidden fees in Canadian savings accounts and how to avoid them:

Fee TypeWho Charges ItAmountAnnual Impact on $30K
Transaction fee per withdrawalMost Big Banks$3–$5 per transaction$36–$60/year (1x/month)
Monthly service chargeRBC, TD, CIBC, BMO$4–$16.95/month$48–$203/year
Minimum balance penaltySome traditional banksMonthly fee if below minimum$0–$120/year
Interac e-Transfer feeBig Banks (some accounts)$1–$1.50 per transfer$12–$18/year (1x/month)
Inactivity feeSome banks and credit unions$10–$25 per quarter$40–$100/year
Paper statement feeMost banks$2–$5/month$24–$60/year
EQ Bank / Neo Financial / OakenOnline banks$0 all fees$0/year ✅

⚠️ The effective rate trap: A big bank offering 0.50% on $30,000 earns you $150/year. If you also pay $16.95/month in service charges ($203.40/year) plus $3/transaction for 12 withdrawals ($36/year) plus $1.50/e-Transfer for 12 transfers ($18/year) — your total annual fees are $257.40. Your NET return is $150 minus $257.40 = -$107.40 per year. You are paying the bank to hold your money. EQ Bank earns $825/year on the same $30,000 with $0 in fees. The net difference: $932 per year.

HISA vs TFSA Canada March 2026 — which account to use first and how to combine them
The TFSA HISA combination is the optimal structure for most Canadians — holding EQ Bank or Oaken Financial inside a TFSA eliminates income tax on all interest earned. Fill your TFSA room first ($7,000 in 2026), then use an unregistered HISA for savings above the limit

HISA vs TFSA in Canada — The Strategy That Saves Most Canadians Thousands

Understanding the difference between a HISA (account type) and a TFSA (tax wrapper) is the most important savings concept in Canada — and most Canadians don't fully understand it.

AccountTax on Interest2026 Contribution RoomCumulative Room (since 2009)Best Use
TFSA HISA (EQ Bank, Oaken)0% — tax-FREE ✅$7,000$95,000First priority — all interest tax-free
Unregistered HISATaxed as income (T5 slip)UnlimitedUnlimitedSavings above TFSA room
RRSP HISATax-deferred18% of earned incomeVariesHigh earners planning for lower retirement income
FHSA0% on qualifying home purchase$8,000$40,000 lifetimeFirst-time buyers — double tax advantage

The Optimal Strategy for Most Canadians

  1. Open a TFSA HISA first — EQ Bank offers their 2.75% rate inside a TFSA. All interest earned is completely tax-free. Fill your $7,000 2026 contribution room (or up to $95,000 cumulative if you've never contributed). Use Oaken Financial's TFSA at 2.80% for a slightly higher TFSA cash rate.
  2. If buying a first home: open an FHSA — $8,000/year contribution room, tax-deductible contributions (like RRSP), and completely tax-free withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase. The most powerful savings vehicle for first-time buyers introduced since the TFSA.
  3. RRSP next if high income — contributions reduce taxable income at your marginal rate. Best for Canadians earning $80,000+ who expect to be in a lower tax bracket at retirement.
  4. Unregistered HISA last — for savings above your registered contribution room. EQ Bank's 2.75% is still dramatically better than any big bank even after paying income tax on the interest.

💡 TFSA HISA real money example: A Canadian in the 30% marginal tax bracket holds $50,000 in an unregistered EQ Bank HISA earning 2.75% = $1,375/year — but pays $412 in income tax = net $963. The same $50,000 in a TFSA HISA at the same 2.75% = $1,375/year with $0 income tax = full $1,375 net. The TFSA structure saves $412/year on the same money at the same bank. Check your available TFSA contribution room in CRA My Account before contributing — over-contribution triggers a 1% monthly penalty.

Bank of Canada rate held 2.25% March 18 2026 — impact on HISA savings rates Canada
The Bank of Canada held its overnight rate at 2.25% on March 18, 2026 — meaning HISA rates will remain stable for at least another 6 weeks. With no rate hike expected for most of 2026, current HISA rates of 2.75–3.50% are near their peak for this economic cycle

Bank of Canada Rate Decision — March 18, 2026 & What It Means for Your Savings

The Bank of Canada held its overnight lending rate at 2.25% at its March 18, 2026 meeting — with no rate hike expected for most of 2026 according to NerdWallet Canada's analysis (March 25, 2026). HISA rates follow the BoC overnight rate closely — when the Bank cuts rates, HISA rates typically fall within weeks.

What this means for Canadian savers in March 2026:

  • Current HISA rates are near peak for this cycle. With no rate hike expected, today's 2.75–3.50% HISA rates represent the best environment for liquid savings this cycle. Savers who maximize their HISA contributions now lock in these rates for as long as they hold the account.
  • GICs may offer better value for money you won't need for 12+ months. Current 1-year GIC rates from EQ Bank (3.15%) and Oaken Financial are higher than everyday HISA rates for comparable terms. Ratehub notes the best GIC rates range from 2.25%–3.85% across 1–5 year terms as of March 2026.
  • The cost of staying at a big bank has never been higher. At 0.01%–0.50% vs 2.75%–3.50% at online banks, the annual gap on a $50,000 balance ranges from $1,125 to $1,750. This is real money lost every year for the inertia of not switching.
  • Promotional rates from Simplii (4.50%) and Scotiabank (4.75%) are expiring soon. Simplii's offer ends implicitly when the 5-month window closes; Scotiabank's 3-month promo ends earlier. Act now to capture these rates before they expire.
Canadian savings strategy March 2026 — how to maximize HISA TFSA FHSA returns
The optimal Canadian savings strategy for March 2026: TFSA HISA first ($7,000) at EQ Bank or Oaken → FHSA if buying a home ($8,000) → RRSP if high income → unregistered HISA for surplus. The promo rate strategy (Simplii 4.50% for 5 months then transfer to EQ Bank) adds an additional $60–$100 in first-year returns

The Optimal HISA Strategy for March 2026 — Maximize Your Returns

HISA Maximization Checklist — Canada March 2026

  • Check your TFSA contribution room in CRA My Account — $7,000 for 2026, up to $95,000 cumulative
  • Open a TFSA HISA at EQ Bank (2.75%) or Oaken Financial (2.80%) — all interest earned is completely tax-free
  • If you're a first-time buyer: open an FHSA immediately — contribution room accrues from the year you open it even if you don't contribute yet ($8,000/year, $40,000 lifetime)
  • For maximum first-year returns: open Simplii Financial HISA for the 4.50% promo rate for 5 months + collect the $300 cash bonus — then transfer to EQ Bank after the promo ends
  • Use the promo rate strategy: capture Scotiabank's 4.75% for 3 months if you have a qualifying package — set a calendar reminder to transfer when the promo expires
  • Consider Neo Financial for up to $650 new account bonus — best for savings above TFSA room
  • For savings you won't need for 12+ months: compare EQ Bank GICs (3.15% 1-year) vs everyday HISA rate — lock in GIC rates before any future BoC cuts
  • Split deposits across 2 CDIC institutions if savings exceed $100,000 in any category — CDIC protects $100,000 per category per institution
  • Verify any promotional rate end date — set a calendar alert to move money before it drops to the standard rate
  • Never leave significant savings in a Big Bank standard savings account — even after-tax HISA returns at online banks exceed big bank rates by 1,000–27,000%

FAQ — Best HISA Rates Canada March 2026

What is the best HISA in Canada in March 2026?
EQ Bank Personal Account — Ratehub #1 as of March 28, 2026. 2.75% everyday ($2K/mo direct deposit), $0 fees, CDIC insured (Schedule I bank). For highest rate: KOHO Everything 3.50% (+ $19/mo fee). For best no-fee rate: Neo Financial up to 3.00%. Best promo: Simplii 4.50% for 5 months + $300 bonus. See also our full 2026 HISA guide for the complete comparison.
Are EQ Bank and Neo Financial as safe as TD or RBC?
Yes — both are CDIC members. EQ Bank is operated by Equitable Bank, a federally regulated Schedule I chartered bank (same category as TD, RBC, CIBC) with $74 billion+ in assets. CDIC protects deposits up to $100,000 per category per institution and has never failed to pay out an insured depositor. The only difference: no physical branches, which has zero effect on deposit safety.
Is HISA interest taxable in Canada?
Yes — in an unregistered HISA it's taxable as income at your marginal rate (T5 slip). To avoid: hold inside a TFSA (100% tax-free). The TFSA contribution limit is $7,000 for 2026 ($95,000 cumulative). A Canadian in the 30% bracket saves $412/year in taxes on $50,000 by holding the HISA inside a TFSA vs outside — same bank, same rate, $412 extra net.
Should I use Simplii's 4.50% promo or EQ Bank's 2.75% everyday?
Use both: open Simplii for the 4.50% promo + $300 cash bonus during the 5-month window. Set a calendar reminder. Transfer to EQ Bank (2.75%) or Neo (3.00%) when the promo ends. Never stay in Simplii after the promo — rate drops to 0.30–1.50%. The combo approach maximizes first-year returns while maintaining long-term competitive rates.
What is the Bank of Canada rate in March 2026?
2.25% — held on March 18, 2026. No rate hike expected for most of 2026 (NerdWallet Canada, March 25, 2026). HISA rates follow the BoC rate — current rates of 2.75–3.50% are near peak for this cycle. For savings you won't need for 12+ months, 1-year GICs (EQ Bank 3.15%) may lock in better guaranteed returns before any future cuts.
What hidden fees should I watch for in Canadian savings accounts?
Big banks charge: $3–$5 per transaction, $4–$16.95/month service fee, $1–$1.50 per e-Transfer, $10–$25/quarter inactivity fee. These can turn a nominal 0.50% rate into a negative net return. All online banks in this guide (EQ Bank, Neo, Oaken, Simplii, Tangerine) charge $0 for all of these — their higher rates are entirely net returns.
What is the 2026 TFSA contribution limit?
$7,000 for 2026 — $95,000 cumulative since 2009 for those never contributed. Check exact room in CRA My Account — over-contribution triggers 1% monthly penalty. Withdrawals restore contribution room the following January 1. Fill TFSA room with a HISA first — all interest is completely tax-free.
GIC vs HISA Canada 2026 — which is better?
HISA: fully liquid anytime, lower rate (2.75–3.00% everyday). GIC: locked for a term, higher guaranteed rate (EQ Bank 1-year GIC: 3.15%, 5-year: 3.75%). Best strategy: keep 3–6 months emergency fund in a liquid HISA (EQ Bank 2.75%). For savings you won't touch for 12+ months: 1-year GIC locks in today's rates before any future BoC cuts. With the BoC holding at 2.25% and no hikes expected, GIC rates may decline — locking in now is prudent for longer-term savings.

Related Finance Guides on Nexuora

Finance 🇨🇦Best HISA Canada 2026 — Full Guide Credit CardsBest Credit Cards USA 2026 Finance & InsuranceBest Life Insurance USA 2026 MortgageBest Mortgage Lenders USA 2026
🍁
Nexuora Canada Finance Research Team Rates Verified Daily · March 28, 2026

Research methodology: Ratehub.ca HISA comparison (March 28, 2026 — updated 4:30 a.m. daily), NerdWallet Canada best HISA (March 25, 2026), SavvyNewCanadians HISA Canada 2026 (March 2026), LooniesMart best HISA Canada (March 26, 2026 — 2-day-old article), MillionDollarJourney HISA 2026 (February 18, 2026), WOWA.ca HISA comparison (March 25, 2026), Bank of Canada rate announcement March 18, 2026, CDIC deposit insurance verification for all listed institutions. External authority sources: bankofcanada.ca, cdic.ca, CRA canada.ca. Rates change without notice — always verify at each institution before opening. Nexuora receives no compensation from any financial institution for rankings.

Ahmada Ndao

Ahmada Ndao is a financial research analyst and independent journalist
specializing in US consumer finance, legal rights, and insurance markets.
With over 5 years covering American financial products, he has helped
thousands of readers navigate complex insurance decisions, find the right
legal representation, and optimize their credit strategies. His research
methodology combines primary data analysis, direct outreach to industry
professionals, and continuous monitoring of federal regulatory changes.
Ahmada’s work has been cited by financial communities across the US and
reviewed by licensed attorneys and insurance professionals for accuracy.

nexuora.com
Étiquettes: best savings rate Canada, EQ Bank, high interest savings account Canada, HISA rates March 2026, Neo Financial, TFSA HISA

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