We read business bank statements for a living. Every funding application that crosses our desk comes with six to twelve months of them, and after ten years we can tell you something no bank comparison site will: the account you choose matters far less than how it makes your business look to the next lender you meet.
That’s the lens for this guide. Yes, we’ll compare fees, because paying $125 a month for banking you could get for free is daft. But we’ll also cover the part everyone skips: which banking setup makes your business easier to fund.
The quick answer
Lowest cost, digital-first business: a no-fee fintech account (Venn, Float, Loop or EQ Bank’s business offering) will save you $500 to $2,000 a year against a big-five plan, and several pay interest on balances.
Cash-handling business: you need a big-five branch network. TD’s is the largest, and for shops, restaurants and trades taking cash, branch access beats every fee saving.
Planning to borrow within two years: hold your operating account where you’ll want the credit. A big-five or credit union relationship, with clean statements, is quietly one of your strongest lending assets.
Most growing businesses end up with a hybrid: a big-five anchor account plus a fintech for FX and day-to-day spend. More on that below.
What the big five actually charge
The traditional banks (RBC, TD, BMO, Scotiabank, CIBC) all run the same playbook: tiered monthly plans that trade a fee for a bundle of included transactions.
At the entry level, plans start from a few dollars a month with a handful of included transactions. TD’s entry plan, for example, runs under $4 monthly with five transactions included, with the fee waived if you hold a few thousand dollars in the account. At the top end, unlimited plans run to $125 a month, typically waived only with large minimum balances ($65,000 in TD’s case).
The fees that actually hurt aren’t the headline ones:
- Per-transaction overages of roughly $1 to $1.50 once you pass your included count. A “cheap” plan with 20 included transactions becomes expensive the month you process 60.
- Cash deposit fees of around 22 to 25 cents per $100 deposited. Deposit $5,000 in cash a month and that’s another $130 to $150 a year, on top of your plan.
- Wire fees of $30 and up per transfer, plus FX spreads of 2.5 to 3 percent on US dollar transactions. For anyone paying US suppliers, the FX spread is usually the biggest hidden cost in their banking, dwarfing the monthly fee.
None of this makes the big five bad value. It makes them bad value for the wrong business. What you’re really buying is branch access, cash handling, and a lending relationship.
The no-fee challengers
A wave of Canadian fintechs now offers business accounts with no monthly fee, and for digital businesses they’re genuinely hard to argue against. Deposits sit with CDIC-protected partner institutions, onboarding takes a day rather than a branch appointment, and FX spreads run 1 to 2 percent cheaper than the banks, which is real money for anyone invoicing or paying in USD.
The trade-offs are consistent across the category: no branches, limited or no cash handling, and, crucially for our world, no lending products. Your fintech account can’t extend you a line of credit when a slow quarter hits. Some are also restricted to incorporated businesses, leaving sole proprietors out.
If your business never touches cash and you’re not planning to borrow from your bank, there’s no compelling reason to pay big-five fees. Pocket the savings.
The part nobody tells you: your account is your loan application
Here’s what we see from the funding side.
When any lender assesses your business, traditional or alternative, your bank statements are the evidence. Not your projections. Not your pitch. Your deposits, your balance pattern, your NSF history. Which means your banking setup is quietly shaping your future borrowing power every single month.
Three practical rules fall out of that:
Keep it clean. One account for business, full stop. Statements muddied with personal spending are the single most common reason applications slow down. It’s also a CRA headache you don’t need.
Keep it consolidated. Revenue split across four platforms looks thinner than the same revenue in one place. If you use multiple accounts, keep one as the clear primary where revenue lands.
Mind the NSFs. Non-sufficient-funds incidents on your statements are red flags to every lender who will ever read them. A small line of credit as overdraft protection is cheaper than what an NSF history costs you in declined applications and worse pricing later. We’ve written about how lines of credit work in Canada if that’s a gap in your setup.
And one more, for those eyeing bank credit: banks favour their own customers. If you’ll want a government-backed CSBFP loan or a bank line within two years, holding your operating account at that institution gives their credit team direct sight of your cash flow and measurably smooths approval. It’s not fair, but it is how it works.
Our recommended setups
Sole trader or freelancer, all digital: one no-fee fintech account. Done. Revisit when you incorporate.
Incorporated, growing, no cash: fintech primary account for operations and FX, plus consider where your future lending relationship should live before you need it.
Retail, hospitality, trades: big-five account sized honestly to your transaction volume, on the branch network nearest your operations. Add a fintech account purely for USD if you buy stock from the States.
Established and borrowing: big-five or credit union anchor where your credit facilities live, fintech satellite for FX savings. This hybrid is what most of our funded clients over $1M revenue actually run.
Frequently asked questions
Do I legally need a business bank account in Canada? Corporations do, in practice, since the business is a separate legal entity. Sole proprietors operating under their own name can legally use a personal account, but mixing funds creates tax-time pain and weakens future funding applications. Open the separate account either way.
Which Canadian bank is cheapest for small business? For genuinely low transaction volumes, entry-level big-five plans cost a few dollars a month. But for most digital businesses, the honest answer is that a no-fee fintech beats every big-five plan on price. Cheapest and best aren’t always the same thing, though; see the lending section above.
Can I get business funding through a fintech bank account? Generally no, not directly. Most Canadian fintech accounts don’t offer credit facilities. That doesn’t lock you out of funding: alternative lenders assess you on your revenue regardless of where you bank, and often move faster than the banks will.
Should I switch banks to get a better business account? If you’re paying $50+ monthly for features you don’t use, yes, the saving is worth an afternoon of admin. If you have an active or planned lending relationship, weigh the switch carefully. The relationship has value that a fee comparison doesn’t capture.
Wherever you bank, the funding question is the same: what will your statements say about you when you need capital? If the answer is “steady revenue, clean account, no drama”, you’re in good shape, and if you need funding before the banks will look at you, that’s exactly what we do.
BizFund is an established, fast growing, alternative business funding solution for small to mid-size businesses, bringing over 10 years of business funding expertise to the Canadian market.
