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Fast facts

  • In 2023, the retail-batch payments system (ACSS) facilitated 9.8 billion transactions
  • In 2023, the high-value payments system (Lynx) facilitated $103 trillion dollars in value

The bottom line

Canada benefits from a secure, efficient and innovative payments system built on the foundation of strong financial institutions. Canadians value and trust the payments system which enables them to make the transactions that are part of their daily life. And those transactions are driving the country’s economy.

The well-functioning payments system in Canada

When making a purchase or paying someone money , Canadians can choose to use cash, cheques, debit and credit cards, as well as other electronic payments services like Interac e-Transfer, online bill payments and mobile payments. Many of these options are available to consumers for in-store or online transactions. Canadians have come to rely on the choice and the overall reliability of their payments system. They assume, with good reason, that the payments they initiate will be processed efficiently, accurately and securely. That confidence is a key part of a healthy and productive Canadian economy and is due to the resilient nature of our banks and underlying payments systems.

The high-value payments system (Lynx) is a system that allows financial institutions to send wire payments on behalf of their customers.1

The retail batch system (ACSS and USBE) clears around 99 per cent of the payments volume in Canada and facilitates the clearing and settlement of both paper-based and electronic payments.2

Innovation in payments technology has increased the country’s productivity and expanded the size of the Canadian economy. In addition to the high-value and retail batch payment systems, banks in Canada are heavily invested in Payment Canada’s payment modernization, which includes the implementation of the to allow Canadians to make payments and receive funds in seconds every hour of every day. This is in addition to investments banks have made in Canada’s high-value payment system, which is the backbone of Canada’s financial market infrastructure.

The expanded range of payment options offers consumers a great deal of choice in how they pay:

  • The range of payment options can include cheque, credit card, debit card, prepaid credit card, cash, online transfers (such as Interac e-Transfer) and electronic funds transfer (such as pre-authorized debits).
  • More than 99 per cent of adult Canadians have an account with a financial institution3, so the accessibility of banking services in Canada is incredibly high.

Safe, secure and convenient payments

With a variety of payment methods to choose from, electronic payments are accelerating in use. This has been catalyzed by the COVID-19 pandemic, where more Canadians are open to the use of payment innovations including use of “tap” and mobile payments.4

Canadians prefer cards

Credit cards continued to be the top payment method of choice for purchases among Canadians in 2022, followed by debit cards.5 Credit cards are an essential part of our payments system. Every day, Canadians rely on their credit cards to buy household supplies, sign up their kids for swimming and soccer, make a hotel reservation and pay for parking. From gifts to necessities to travel, Canadians use their cards and derive a great deal of benefit from the system.

Canada benefits from a well-functioning credit card system that offers many benefits to both consumers and retailers who accept credit cards as payment.

Benefits to consumers

When it comes to credit cards, consumers in Canada have tremendous choice with hundreds of institutions – including banks, credit unions, and retailers – offering credit cards, with a wide range of features that can fit every profile and pocketbook.

Benefits of credit cards for consumers:

  • Access to unsecured credit (no collateral required against amounts charged).
  • Interest-free credit from time of purchase to the end of the billing period. And 70 per cent of Canadians pay their credit card balance in full each month, so for them the interest rate is zero.6
  • Instant certainty of payment for merchants means instant receipt of goods and services for consumers.
  • Other rewards and benefits, such as air travel points, car insurance, damage and loss insurance, extended warranty programs and affinity programs.
  • Ability to make purchases over the Internet.
  • Fraud protection with zero liability to the consumer in cases of fraud.
  • Convenience and safety associated with not having to carry large amounts of cash.
  • Protection from losses for consumers when they pay for something in advance, like travel packages, concert tickets or goods on order that do not arrive.
  • Detailed expenditure tracking.
  • 24/7 access
  • Eight in 10 (84 per cent) consumers are satisfied with their credit cards and roughly the same proportion (86 per cent) say they offer great value.7

Canadians appreciate rewards points programs

Canadians appreciate their rewards points programs and the majority use them to help make a family vacation more attainable with travel points, save money on their grocery bills with cash-back rewards or use their rewards points to donate to a favourite charity.

  • Research has found that 83 per cent of consumers use a credit card that provides them with rewards.8
  • Fifty eight per cent of Canadians who are frequent credit card users listed “receiving discounts/loyalty points/rewards’’ as their main reason for frequently using credit cards for purchases.9
  • Roughly two-thirds of consumers (65 per cent) say credit card purchases are advantageous to merchants and directly help them grow their businesses.10

Benefits to merchants

For merchants, payment cards speed up the checkout line, reduce cash handling time and costs, increase sales and more.

Merchants are not required to accept credit cards but do so in increasing numbers to attract customers by making this convenient payment method available to them. Merchants that do accept credit cards receive many benefits, including:

  • Fast, guaranteed payment, which can reduce line-ups at checkout. If every credit card transaction took an extra 30 seconds, it would use up an additional 27 million hours of staff time each year.
  • The ability to accept credit without worrying about the creditworthiness of customers, insufficient funds or outstanding receivables.
  • Increased sales by offering customers a variety of payment options.
  • Expanded markets; ability to sell to customers throughout Canada and around the world in the currency used by the retailer.
  • The ability to enter into co-branding relationships: merchants can have their own branded credit card to build their brand recognition and encourage cardholders to shop at their establishment.
  • Card payments also mean less cash on hand. Cash is often assumed to be a “free” form of payment for merchants – it is not. In fact, it can be very expensive if you include effort spent on cash count and handling, armoured transport, a higher likelihood of theft and potential mistakes by cashiers.

Canada has a very sophisticated credit card market with a lot of choice and competition for consumers. The system works well for both individuals and retailers, and is a critical element in Canada’s efficient payments system.

Further reading on payments in Canada


1
2
3
4
5
6 Ibid
7Abacus Data survey commissioned by the APP, October 2022
8Ibid
Canadian Payment Methods and Trends Report 2022, pg 27:
10Abacus Data survey commissioned by the APP, October 2022

Canada’s Efficient and Secure Payments System ABM,credit cards,debit card,focus sheet,online banking,payments,statistics

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