Bonds and Fixed Income Investing in Canada 2025

Updated March 2025 · 11 min read

Bonds and fixed income investments are the stability anchor of a diversified portfolio. While equities provide long-term growth, bonds reduce volatility, provide income, and tend to hold value during stock market downturns. For Canadian investors, understanding bonds — from Government of Canada bonds to corporate bond ETFs — is essential for building a balanced portfolio.

What Is a Bond?

A bond is a loan from an investor to a borrower — typically a government or corporation. When you buy a bond, you're lending money in exchange for regular interest payments (called coupon payments) and the return of your principal at maturity. For example, a 10-year Government of Canada bond with a 4% coupon pays 4% of the face value annually until maturity, at which point you receive your original principal back.

Bond prices and interest rates move in opposite directions. When rates rise, existing bond prices fall (because new bonds offer better yields). When rates fall, existing bond prices rise. This inverse relationship is fundamental to understanding bond risk.

Key Bond Concepts

Types of Bonds Available to Canadians

Government of Canada Bonds

The safest bonds available in Canada, backed by the full faith and credit of the federal government. Interest is fully taxable at marginal rates. Yields are lower than corporate bonds but carry virtually zero default risk. Available in terms from 2 years to 30 years. The Bank of Canada's overnight rate significantly influences shorter-term Government of Canada bond yields.

Provincial Bonds

Issued by provincial governments (Ontario, Quebec, BC, Alberta, etc.). Slightly higher yields than federal bonds due to marginally higher perceived risk. Still considered very safe. Ontario and Quebec are the largest provincial bond issuers.

Corporate Bonds

Issued by Canadian corporations. Higher yields than government bonds, reflecting higher default risk. Investment-grade Canadian corporate bonds from companies like the Big Six banks, Enbridge, and BCE are widely held. High-yield (junk) bonds pay even more but carry significantly more risk.

Canada Savings Bonds (CSBs)

The federal government discontinued Canada Savings Bonds in 2017. Existing CSBs that matured were paid out. They are no longer available for purchase.

Bond ETFs for Canadian Investors

Most individual investors access bonds through bond ETFs rather than buying individual bonds. Bond ETFs provide instant diversification across dozens or hundreds of bonds, daily liquidity, and very low fees.

How Bonds Fit in a Portfolio

Bonds serve multiple purposes in a portfolio:

A common rule of thumb is to hold your age in bonds (e.g., 40% bonds at age 40). Most financial planners now consider this too conservative for many Canadians, given longer life expectancies and lower bond yields. A more modern approach: 20–30% bonds for investors aged 40–55, rising to 40–50% by retirement.

Bonds vs. GICs for Canadian Investors

GICs (Guaranteed Investment Certificates) are a popular alternative to bonds for Canadian investors. Unlike bonds, GICs cannot decline in value and are CDIC-insured up to $100,000 per insured category per member institution. However, GICs typically lock up your money for the term, while bond ETFs are liquid any day the market is open.

In the current rate environment (2025), GIC yields are competitive with bond yields for shorter terms. Many advisors suggest a GIC ladder (1-year through 5-year GICs maturing in sequence) as a low-risk fixed income strategy for the conservative portion of a portfolio.

CDIC coverage reminder: GICs at CDIC member institutions are insured up to $100,000 per depositor per insured category. This includes separate coverage for deposits in a TFSA ($100,000), RRSP ($100,000), RRIF ($100,000), and non-registered accounts ($100,000). Spreading GICs across multiple CDIC member institutions increases your total coverage.

Tax Treatment of Bond Income

Bond interest income is fully taxable at your marginal tax rate — the least tax-efficient form of investment income for Canadians. For this reason, bonds and bond ETFs are best held inside registered accounts (TFSA or RRSP), where the interest compounds tax-free or tax-deferred. In a non-registered account, bond interest is reported annually and taxed as ordinary income.

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