Nova Scotia has become one of Atlantic Canada's most active destinations for newcomers. Halifax in particular has seen rapid population growth driven by immigration, with students, skilled workers, and permanent residents arriving from Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean. The Nova Scotia Nominee Program (NSNP) regularly brings hundreds of newcomers annually. This guide explains how to set up banking after arriving in Nova Scotia.
Nova Scotia's banking landscape is smaller than Ontario or BC but fully functional. All five big banks operate in Halifax and some operate in Dartmouth, Truro, and Sydney. Outside these cities, branch availability drops sharply — credit unions fill that gap in rural Nova Scotia. The province has no unique banking institutions comparable to ATB (Alberta) or Desjardins (Quebec), so the big banks and credit unions dominate.
RBC has several Halifax locations and the Newcomer Advantage program works identically in Nova Scotia as elsewhere in Canada — one year of free everyday banking for permanent residents. RBC's Spring Garden Road and Bayers Lake locations serve high volumes of newcomers.
TD's newcomer program and credit card offer are available in Nova Scotia. Their Halifax locations on Barrington Street and in Halifax Shopping Centre are the most accessible for downtown and university-area newcomers.
Scotiabank offers two years of free banking and a credit card for newcomers without Canadian credit history. Their Halifax coverage is solid. Scotiabank is particularly active on the Dalhousie University campus area given the large international student body.
Credit unions are essential for newcomers outside Halifax:
A cooperative financial institution based in Nova Scotia that serves members province-wide. Good for newcomers in rural or smaller-town Nova Scotia.
Serving Cape Breton and eastern Nova Scotia, East Coast Credit Union is often the most accessible financial institution for newcomers settling outside Halifax in places like Sydney, Glace Bay, or Antigonish.
Halifax's rental market has become competitive, and landlords increasingly run credit checks. Newcomers should prioritize getting a credit card as soon as possible after arrival. The fastest path is a secured card or a newcomer card from Scotiabank or TD. Use it for small regular purchases, pay in full every month, and your score will build steadily. After 12 months, most newcomers have a functional credit score.
Halifax has one of the highest ratios of university students to population in Canada. As an international student, you can open a bank account with your study permit and passport. Many banks have student-specific accounts with no monthly fees. If you transition from student to PR, you can often upgrade your account at the same branch without opening a new one.
Halifax has growing communities from Nigeria, the Philippines, India, China, and the Caribbean. Wise and Remitly are both accessible online from anywhere in Nova Scotia. Western Union has agents in pharmacies and convenience stores in Halifax. For less common destinations, online services are typically your best option as specialized remittance operators have limited physical presence in Atlantic Canada.
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