The best cashback credit cards in Canada earn 1–4% back on everyday spending — saving the average household $500–$1,200 per year. Here are the top picks for 2026.

Best Cashback Cards at a Glance

Card Annual Fee Best Rate Best For
Tangerine Money-Back $0 2% (3 categories) No-fee everyday
SimplyCash Card from Amex $0 2% gas/grocery No-fee simplicity
Scotiabank Momentum Visa Infinite $120 4% grocery/recurring Families, high spenders
BMO CashBack Mastercard $0 3% grocery Groceries on a budget
CIBC Dividend Visa Infinite $99 4% grocery/gas Premium cashback
President’s Choice Financial World Elite $0 3% at Loblaws stores PC Optimum users
Rogers World Elite Mastercard $0 1.5% everywhere Flat-rate, foreign purchases

Best No-Fee Cashback Cards

Card Cashback Structure Min. Income
Tangerine Money-Back 2% on 3 chosen categories, 0.5% everything else None
SimplyCash from Amex 2% gas/grocery, 1.25% everything else None
BMO CashBack Mastercard 3% grocery, 1% everything else None
PC Financial World Elite 3% at Shoppers/Loblaws, 1% everywhere $80,000
Rogers World Elite 1.5% everywhere, 3% foreign currency $80,000

Best Premium Cashback Cards

Card Annual Fee Top Categories Break-Even Spend
Scotiabank Momentum Visa Infinite $120 4% grocery/recurring, 2% gas/transit $6,000/yr grocery
CIBC Dividend Visa Infinite $99 4% grocery/gas, 2% dining/telecom $5,000/yr grocery
BMO World Elite Mastercard $150 3% travel/dining, 2% everything else $15,000/yr spend

How Much You’ll Earn

Monthly Spending No-Fee Card (avg 1.5%) Premium Card (avg 2.5%)
$1,500/month $270/year $450/year
$3,000/month $540/year $900/year
$5,000/month $900/year $1,500/year

Bottom Line

For most Canadians, a no-fee card earning 2%+ on key categories is the sweet spot — the Tangerine Money-Back and SimplyCash from Amex are hard to beat. Families spending $500+/month on groceries should consider a premium card like the Scotiabank Momentum to maximize the 4% grocery rate.

See our guide to best credit cards in Canada or how to build credit in Canada for more.

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

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