Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Market-Linked GICs in Canada 2025 — How They Work and Are They Worth It?

A market-linked GIC (also called an equity-linked GIC or index-linked GIC) promises the safety of a traditional GIC — your principal is 100% guaranteed — while offering the potential to earn returns tied to stock market performance. It sounds like the best of both worlds. But the reality is more nuanced.

How Market-Linked GICs Work

When you purchase a market-linked GIC, your principal is fully guaranteed. The interest you earn, however, depends on the performance of a reference index — typically the S&P 500, the TSX, or a basket of indices — over the term of the GIC (usually 3–5 years).

Key variables to understand:

Important: A "0% minimum return" means in a flat or down market, you earn nothing. Your $100 returns as exactly $100 after 3–5 years — a loss in real (inflation-adjusted) terms.

Market-Linked GIC vs. Regular GIC

A regular 3-year GIC at 4% guaranteed gives you $100 × (1.04)^3 = $11,249 with certainty. A market-linked GIC at 70% participation capped at 30% might give you anywhere from $100 (if markets are flat or negative) to $13,000 (if markets surge), with most scenarios producing returns somewhere between a regular GIC and a full stock market participation.

When Market-Linked GICs Make Sense

When to Avoid Market-Linked GICs

Tax Treatment

Interest earned on market-linked GICs is still taxed as interest income — not at the preferential capital gains rate — even though returns are linked to equity performance. This is another reason they're often better held inside a TFSA or RRSP.

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