Updated March 2026 · 10 min read
An NSF fee (Non-Sufficient Funds fee) — also called a returned payment fee — is charged when your bank account doesn't have enough money to cover a payment. In Canada, these fees typically run $45–$48 per occurrence, making them one of the most punishing banking fees Canadians face. Here's everything you need to know about NSF fees and how to avoid them.
KOHO doesn't charge NSF fees. Transactions decline instead of triggering a returned payment fee. Switch from a bank that charges $47 per mistake.
Open KOHO — Code 45ET55JSYA| Bank | NSF Fee (per occurrence) |
|---|---|
| TD Canada Trust | $48.00 |
| RBC Royal Bank | $45.00 |
| Scotiabank | $48.00 |
| BMO Bank of Montreal | $48.00 |
| CIBC | $45.00 |
| National Bank | $45.00 |
| Tangerine | $45.00 |
| Simplii Financial | $45.00 |
| EQ Bank | $45.00 |
| KOHO | $0 (transactions decline) |
| Wealthsimple Cash | $0 (transactions decline) |
Most common trigger: a pre-authorized debit (like monthly rent or insurance) on a day when your account balance is lower than expected — often because another payment cleared earlier than anticipated.
NSF fees are disproportionately expensive. A $47 fee on a $15 returned Netflix charge represents a 313% "penalty rate." More significantly, people who face NSF fees are often those least able to absorb the unexpected cost — the fee itself can trigger further shortfalls as the account balance goes deeper into the negative, potentially causing a cascade of additional NSF fees on subsequent payments.
KOHO is a prepaid Visa spending account. Transactions are declined — not returned — when funds are insufficient. No NSF fee is ever charged because there is no "returned payment" mechanic. This is the single most reliable way to eliminate NSF fees.
Standard overdraft protection ($5/month at most Big 5 banks) covers your account for up to $250–$5,000. The $5 monthly fee is far cheaper than even one NSF fee per year. Full overdraft protection guide →
Keep a minimum "float" of $500–$1,000 in your chequing account that you treat as unavailable for spending. This creates a cushion for timing mismatches between deposits and payments.
All major Canadian bank apps allow you to set balance alerts — you receive a push notification or email when your account drops below a threshold (e.g., $200). This gives you time to transfer funds before a pre-authorized payment processes.
List every pre-authorized payment from your account (rent date, insurance renewal date, phone bill, gym membership) and the amount. Match these to your payday and ensure funds are available before each payment. Many NSF fees happen because people forget a quarterly or annual charge.
Moving recurring bills to a credit card (Netflix, Spotify, insurance, utilities) removes them from your chequing account — eliminating the NSF risk. Pay the credit card balance monthly to avoid interest charges.
Yes — Canadian banks will often waive a first-time NSF fee as a courtesy. Call your bank's customer service line immediately after an NSF fee is charged, explain that it was an unusual occurrence, and politely ask for a one-time waiver. This works approximately 50–70% of the time for first offences. Banks are less likely to waive repeat NSF fees.
An NSF (Non-Sufficient Funds) event means a payment was returned — the bank didn't cover it. An overdraft means the bank covered the payment by temporarily lending you money. NSF results in a $45–$48 fee plus the payment bouncing back (with potential secondary fees from the payee). Overdraft means the payment goes through, you owe the bank the overdrawn amount, and you pay an overdraft fee or interest.
NSF fees themselves don't directly affect your credit score — they aren't reported to Equifax or TransUnion. However, if an NSF causes a missed loan payment, mortgage payment, or credit card minimum payment, those missed payments are reported to credit bureaus and will damage your credit score. Keep an eye on pre-authorized payments linked to loans or credit cards especially.
As of 2024, the federal government announced plans to cap NSF fees at Canadian federally regulated banks. The proposed cap and implementation timeline was under review — check the federal budget updates for 2025/2026 for the current status. For now, the $45–$48 rate remains in effect at most banks.
KOHO charges $0 in NSF fees by design. Transactions decline when funds aren't available. Open your free account today.
Open KOHO — Code 45ET55JSYA