Non-Profit Bank Account Canada 2026

Updated March 2026 · 10 min read

Non-profit organizations (NPOs) and registered charities in Canada need dedicated bank accounts separate from any founders' personal accounts. Proper NPO banking ensures governance accountability, simplifies CRA compliance, and enables grant reporting. Here's the full guide for 2026.

Personal Banking for NPO Leaders — KOHO

Keep your personal finances separate from your NPO. KOHO is Canada's best no-fee personal account for executives and volunteers.

Open KOHO — Code 45ET55JSYA

Documents Required to Open an NPO Bank Account

Unincorporated community groups (parent associations, neighbourhood clubs) can also open bank accounts. Requirements vary by bank — bring your governing documents, a resolution, and ID for signatories.

Best Banks for Non-Profit Organizations in Canada

InstitutionNPO/Charity Specialized?Monthly FeeNotes
Credit Unions (province-by-province)YesOften $0–$10Best rates, community focus, member governance
RBC Non-Profit BankingYes (basic support)$10–$40/moDedicated NPO relationships at large branches
TD Non-Profit/CharitableLimited$10–$40/moStandard business account; some fee waivers for charities
BMO Non-ProfitLimited$10–$40/moBMO Community Builder Program for qualifying NPOs
Scotiabank NPOLimited$10–$40/moScotiaNPO program for registered charities
Libro Credit Union (ON)Yes$0–$5Certified B Corp, community focus
Vancity (BC)Yes$0–$10Strong NPO and co-op banking expertise

Credit Unions — Often the Best Choice for NPOs

Credit unions are cooperatively owned financial institutions, making them ideologically aligned with non-profit organizations. Many Canadian credit unions offer:

Vancity (BC), Libro Credit Union (Ontario), and Desjardins (Quebec) are particularly well-regarded for non-profit banking.

Dual Signing Authority for NPOs

Most NPO governance best practices (and many grant funders) require dual signing authority for disbursements over a certain threshold (commonly $500–$5,000). This means two authorized signatories must approve each large payment, protecting against fraud and unauthorized expenditure. Canadian banks can configure accounts to require dual signatures for cheques and wire transfers.

CRA Compliance for NPO Banking

Registered charities must file an annual T3010 return with CRA. Your bank account statements are used to complete financial schedules in this return. CRA expects charities to:

Online Banking for NPOs

Non-profits benefit from strong online banking features including multi-user access (board treasurer + executive director), payment approval workflows, and accounting software integration (QuickBooks, Sage, Wave). TD, RBC, and Scotiabank all offer multi-user online banking for NPO accounts. Credit unions vary by region in their online platform quality — Vancity and Libro both offer solid digital banking.

Fee Waivers and Discounts for Charities

Many banks offer reduced fees for registered charities (those with a CRA charity number). Scotiabank, RBC, and BMO all have formal NPO or charity programs with discounted account packages. Credit unions frequently waive fees entirely for small local charities. Always ask about NPO discounts before signing up for a standard business account at full rates.

Opening a Bank Account for an Unincorporated NPO

Unincorporated associations (sports clubs, parent councils, neighbourhood groups) can open bank accounts at most banks and credit unions. Requirements are generally simpler: a copy of your constitution or terms of reference, a resolution from your organizing body, and ID from signatories. Credit unions are typically more flexible than Big 5 banks for unincorporated groups.

NPO Leaders — Keep Personal Finances Separate with KOHO

Your NPO has its own account — your personal banking should too. KOHO is free, unlimited, and takes 5 minutes to open.

Open KOHO — Code 45ET55JSYA