If you’ve got money sitting in a chequing account earning 0.05% interest, you’re leaving real money on the table. The two safe options for Canadian savers are GICs (Guaranteed Investment Certificates) and HISAs (High-Interest Savings Accounts). Both are protected by CDIC. The difference comes down to one question: how soon do you need this money?
What are the current 2026 rates?
As of early 2026, top Canadian rates look roughly like this. These move with the Bank of Canada overnight rate (currently 3.00%), so check the bank’s current rate before you commit:
| Product | Typical 2026 rate | Access |
|---|---|---|
| HISA (big bank) | 1.5-2.0% | Anytime |
| HISA (online bank — EQ, Tangerine, Simplii) | 3.0-4.0% | Anytime |
| 1-year GIC | 3.8-4.5% | Locked 1 yr |
| 3-year GIC | 3.6-4.2% | Locked 3 yr |
| 5-year GIC | 3.4-4.0% | Locked 5 yr |
The trade-off in one sentence
A HISA gives you full access but a slightly lower rate; a GIC pays a bit more but locks your money for 1-5 years. Breaking a non-cashable GIC early means losing all the interest you’ve earned, so the lock matters.
When to choose a HISA
- Your emergency fund. 3-6 months of expenses you might need overnight. Locking this in a GIC defeats the purpose.
- Short-term saving for an unpredictable expense. If you’re saving for car repairs, vet bills, or a wedding 4 months away.
- You’re comparing rates monthly. Some HISAs offer 5-6% promotional rates for the first 3 months. If you’re willing to move money between banks for the bonus, HISAs win.
When to choose a GIC
- Down-payment money 1-3 years out. You know you won’t touch it. A 2-year GIC ladder locks in today’s rates in case the BoC cuts.
- A defined goal with a known date. Wedding in 18 months. Tuition in 2 years. Buy a 1.5-2 year GIC.
- You catch yourself “raiding” the HISA. Some people need the friction. The lock is a feature, not a bug.
- Inside a TFSA or RRSP. If you don’t need the cash and rates are good, lock it in registered space for tax-free or tax-deferred growth.
Should you build a GIC ladder?
A ladder is when you split your money across multiple GIC terms — say, $5K in a 1-year, $5K in a 2-year, $5K in a 3-year. Every year, one matures and you can either pull the money or roll it into a new 3-year. This gives you partial liquidity every year without losing the rate advantage of longer terms. Useful if you’ve got $20K+ that’s genuinely savings and not your emergency fund.
Are both CDIC-protected?
Yes. Both GICs and HISAs at any CDIC member institution are covered up to $100,000 per category, per insured person, per institution. If you have more than $100K in cash, split it across two CDIC members. (Note: provincial credit unions aren’t CDIC-protected but have their own provincial deposit insurance, which is just as solid.)
Frequently asked questions
Can I lose money in a GIC if the bank fails?
No, as long as you’re at a CDIC member institution and your deposit is under the $100,000 coverage limit per category. CDIC has never lost a penny of insured deposits since it was created in 1967. The real “loss” risk with a GIC is opportunity cost — locking in 4.0% for 5 years and watching HISA rates climb to 5%, or needing the cash early and forfeiting interest on a non-cashable GIC.
What’s the difference between a cashable and non-cashable GIC?
A cashable (or redeemable) GIC lets you pull your money out before maturity, usually after a 30-90 day minimum hold, but pays a noticeably lower rate — often 1-1.5% below the non-cashable equivalent. A non-cashable GIC locks the money for the full term and pays the headline rate you see advertised. For most people, if you genuinely need access, a HISA beats a cashable GIC on both flexibility and often on rate too.
Should I hold GICs in a TFSA or non-registered account?
If you have TFSA room, hold them there. GIC interest is taxed as regular income at your full marginal rate in a non-registered account, so a 4% GIC for someone in a 40% bracket nets you 2.4%. Inside a TFSA, you keep the full 4%. The exception is if your TFSA is already maxed with higher-growth investments like equity ETFs — then GICs go to non-registered or RRSP.
What happens to my GIC rate if the Bank of Canada cuts rates next year?
Your existing GIC rate is locked in for the full term — that’s the whole point. If you bought a 3-year GIC at 4.2% in January 2026 and the BoC drops the overnight rate to 2.0% by mid-2027, you keep earning 4.2% until maturity. This is exactly when locking in pays off. HISA rates, on the other hand, will drift down within weeks of any BoC cut.
How do I actually decide between the two?
Start with the timeline question, then the temptation question. When my mom asked me about this last year — she had about $15K sitting in a TD chequing account doing nothing — we put six months of her expenses in an EQ Bank HISA and laddered the rest across 1-year and 2-year GICs at Oaken. She’s not touching the GIC money, the HISA covers surprises, and she’s earning roughly $500 more per year than before. That’s the framework: liquidity first, then lock the rest.
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