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GICs in Canada Explained (2026)

A Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) is a deposit at a Canadian bank or credit union that returns a fixed amount of interest after a set term. The principal is guaranteed; CDIC-insured GICs are protected up to $100,000 per eligible category per member institution if the bank fails. In 2026, 1-5 year GIC rates from major […]

A Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) is a deposit at a Canadian bank or credit union that returns a fixed amount of interest after a set term. The principal is guaranteed; CDIC-insured GICs are protected up to $100,000 per eligible category per member institution if the bank fails. In 2026, 1-5 year GIC rates from major Canadian banks are roughly 4.0-4.5%, with credit unions and online banks (EQ, Tangerine, Wealthsimple) sometimes offering 0.25-0.5% more.

Quick answer: A GIC locks money for a fixed term (30 days to 10 years) at a guaranteed rate. CDIC insurance covers up to $100,000 per category per institution. 2026 GIC rates run 4.0-4.5% for 1-5 year terms.

What this means: GICs trade liquidity for certainty. They are the right tool for emergency-fund Tier 2, short-term savings goals (1-5 years), and the cash portion of a balanced portfolio. They are the wrong tool for retirement growth over 20+ years.

What to do next: Calculate the maturity value of a GIC with your rate, term, and compounding frequency. Calculate GIC maturity value →

How GICs work

  1. You deposit a lump sum at a Canadian bank, credit union, or trust company.
  2. The institution promises a fixed interest rate over a fixed term (30 days, 1 year, 5 years, etc.).
  3. Interest accrues at the agreed rate. Depending on the GIC, interest is paid annually, at maturity, or compounded.
  4. At maturity, principal plus accrued interest is returned. The GIC either matures to cash or rolls over (with notice).

Cashable vs non-cashable

Type Liquidity Typical rate (2026) Use case
Non-cashable (locked-in) Locked until maturity. Early redemption is rare and penalized heavily. 4.0-4.5% Money you genuinely don’t need for the term
Cashable after 30/90 days Redeemable in 30-day or 90-day windows after the lock-in period 3.5-4.0% Emergency fund tier 2, flexible savings
Redeemable / Premium Rate Cashable any time after 7-14 days 3.0-3.5% Very flexible, low-yield parking
Market-linked / Index GIC Locked term, return tied to TSX or other index 0-8% (variable) Conservative equity exposure, principal-protected

Each level of liquidity costs you yield. A 5-year non-cashable GIC at 4.5% versus a 1-year cashable at 3.5% trades 1% extra annual yield for 4 years of locked principal.

CDIC protection (how it actually works)

Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC) is a federal Crown corporation that insures deposits at member institutions. The 2026 coverage limits:

  • Up to $100,000 per eligible deposit category per member institution.
  • Eligible categories: personal deposits, joint deposits, RRSP, RRIF, TFSA, FHSA, trust deposits, mortgage tax accounts.
  • Each category is separately insured. A single person could hold $100K personal, $100K TFSA, $100K RRSP, $100K FHSA — all separately covered — at the same bank.
  • Joint accounts have a separate $100K limit shared across all joint holders.

Practical effect: a couple can effectively protect $1M+ by spreading across categories and institutions. CDIC covers principal and accrued interest. Mutual funds, ETFs, and stocks are not CDIC-insured (even when held at a CDIC member bank).

Typical 2026 GIC rate ranges by institution

Indicative ranges only. GIC rates change frequently — check each institution’s current rate sheet before depositing.

Institution 1-year 3-year 5-year
RBC / TD / Scotiabank / BMO / CIBC (Big Five) 3.85-4.05% 3.85-4.15% 3.95-4.25%
National Bank / Desjardins 3.95-4.15% 4.05-4.25% 4.10-4.30%
EQ Bank / Tangerine / Simplii 4.10-4.40% 4.20-4.45% 4.25-4.50%
Wealthsimple Cash / Trade 3.75-4.50% (HISA-style) N/A N/A
Hubert / Outlook / Oaken 4.30-4.70% 4.40-4.65% 4.40-4.60%

Rates change frequently. Always confirm directly with the institution before depositing.

Registered vs non-registered GICs

  • TFSA GIC: Interest is tax-free. The GIC counts against TFSA contribution room.
  • RRSP GIC: Interest grows tax-deferred until withdrawal. Counts as an RRSP investment.
  • RRIF GIC: Used by retirees who don’t want their RRIF withdrawals exposed to market volatility.
  • FHSA GIC: Counts toward FHSA contributions. Tax-free withdrawal for qualifying home purchase.
  • Non-registered GIC: Interest taxed annually at your marginal rate, regardless of whether you withdraw the interest. T5 slip issued by the bank.

For taxable cash you plan to hold for 1+ years, a TFSA GIC almost always wins over a non-registered GIC because the interest is tax-free.

GIC laddering

Laddering means dividing your GIC money across multiple terms (e.g., 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 years) so one matures every year. Each matured GIC rolls into a new 5-year term. The result:

  • Average yield closer to the 5-year rate (typically the highest)
  • One-fifth of your GIC money becomes liquid each year
  • You always have a GIC maturing within 12 months
  • You avoid the trap of locking the entire amount at a rate that turns out to be a low

Example: $50,000 split into five $10,000 GICs at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 year terms. After year 1, the 1-year matures and is re-invested in a new 5-year. Repeat. After 5 years, all $50,000 is in 5-year GICs but one matures every year.

Worked example

$25,000 deposited into a 5-year non-cashable GIC at 4.25%, interest compounded annually.

End of year Balance
0 (initial) $25,000.00
1 $26,062.50
2 $27,170.16
3 $28,324.89
4 $29,528.70
5 $30,783.67

Total interest earned: $5,783.67. If held in a non-registered account, this interest is taxable at your marginal rate each year. Held in a TFSA, it’s fully tax-free.

Frequently asked questions

What is a GIC in Canada?
A Guaranteed Investment Certificate — a fixed-term deposit at a Canadian bank or credit union that returns the principal plus a guaranteed interest rate. CDIC insures up to $100,000 per category per member institution.
What are 2026 GIC rates in Canada?
Roughly 4.0-4.5% for 1-5 year terms at the Big Five banks. Online banks and credit unions (EQ, Tangerine, Hubert, Oaken) often offer 0.25-0.5% more.
Is a GIC safer than a savings account?
Both are CDIC-insured at member institutions up to $100,000 per category. The main difference is liquidity: GICs are locked in, savings accounts are not.
Are GIC returns taxable?
Yes in non-registered accounts (taxed annually at marginal rate, T5 slip issued). Tax-free in a TFSA. Tax-deferred in an RRSP, RRIF, FHSA.
What is GIC laddering?
Splitting your investment across multiple terms (e.g., 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 years) so one GIC matures each year, providing regular liquidity while capturing longer-term rates on average.
Can I redeem a GIC early?
Only if it’s cashable or redeemable. Non-cashable GICs are locked for the full term. Some banks allow early redemption in hardship cases, often with all accrued interest forfeited.
How does CDIC protect joint accounts?
Joint deposits share a single $100,000 coverage limit, separate from individual deposits at the same institution. A couple can protect $300,000 by holding $100K each individually and $100K jointly.