Saving
Most Canadians keep their savings in the same bank account as their chequing — and that's usually a mistake. The Big Five banks pay as little as 0.01% on standard savings accounts, while online banks and credit unions routinely offer rates 200-300 times higher. On a $10,000 balance, that's the difference between earning $1 and $400 per year.
The Canadian Savings Landscape
Saving in Canada comes in three main flavours:
High-Interest Savings Accounts (HISAs): Flexible, liquid, and CDIC-insured up to $100,000. Ideal for emergency funds and short-term goals. Online banks like EQ Bank and Neo Financial consistently offer the highest rates because they don't have branch overhead.
Guaranteed Investment Certificates (GICs): Lock your money for a fixed term (1-5 years) in exchange for a guaranteed rate. Rates are typically higher than HISAs for longer terms, but you lose access to your money. GICs are also CDIC-insured.
Tax-Advantaged Savings: Use your TFSA to shelter interest income from tax. If you're earning 4% in a HISA and you're in a 30% marginal tax bracket, holding that HISA inside a TFSA saves you 1.2% in tax per year. Over decades, that compounds significantly.
How Much Cash Should You Keep?
The standard advice is 3-6 months of essential expenses in an emergency fund. But the right number depends on your situation:
- Stable job + dual income: 3 months is usually sufficient
- Variable income (freelance, commission): Aim for 6+ months
- Single income with dependents: Err on the higher side
- High-interest debt: Keep $1,000-$2,000 in cash and throw everything else at the debt
Your emergency fund should be in a HISA — somewhere you can access it same-day, not locked in a GIC or invested in the market. A common question: should you save or invest? The answer is both, but in the right order. Build your emergency fund first (savings), then direct any surplus to your TFSA (investing). Money you might need within 3 years stays in savings. Money you won't need for 5+ years goes into investments. This simple rule prevents you from selling investments during a market dip.
HISA vs GIC: How to Decide
Both are CDIC-insured savings vehicles, but they serve different purposes:
- Use a HISA when you need flexibility — emergency funds, short-term goals, or money you might access on short notice. Rates are variable but you can withdraw anytime without penalty.
- Use a GIC when you have a known timeline — saving for a home purchase in 18 months, a sabbatical next year, or any goal where locking in a rate is worth giving up liquidity. GIC rates are fixed for the term; breaking a GIC early usually forfeits some or all interest.
A laddered GIC strategy — splitting your savings across 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5-year terms — gives you some liquidity each year while capturing higher long-term rates. This works well for larger cash positions that exceed your emergency fund.
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How Much Cash Should You Keep?
3-6 months of essential expenses is the standard advice, but the right number depends on your job stability, income sources, and dependents. Use our Emergency Fund Calculator to get your exact target, then park it in a high-interest savings account where it earns while it sits.
Quick Tools
- Emergency Fund Calculator → — Find your target in 2 minutes
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