Overdraft Protection Canada 2026 — Is It Worth It?

Updated March 2026 · 10 min read

Overdraft protection prevents your account from going negative when a payment exceeds your balance. Without it, you face a $45–$48 NSF (non-sufficient funds) fee for every returned payment. But overdraft protection has its own costs. Here's a complete analysis to help you decide whether it's worth enrolling.

KOHO — No NSF Fees Ever

KOHO doesn't charge NSF fees. If you don't have enough funds, the transaction simply declines instead of triggering a $47 returned payment fee. It's overdraft protection by design.

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What is Overdraft Protection?

Overdraft protection is a bank service that covers your chequing account when a transaction exceeds your available balance. Instead of returning the payment (triggering an NSF fee on the sender), the bank temporarily advances you money to cover the shortfall. The types of overdraft protection available at Canadian banks:

Overdraft Protection Costs at Major Canadian Banks

BankMonthly FeePer-Use FeeInterest RateOverdraft Limit
TD$5.00/moor $5/use21% per yearUp to $5,000
RBC$5.00/moor $5/use21% per yearUp to $5,000
Scotiabank$5.00/moor $5/use21% per yearUp to $5,000
BMO$5.00/moor $5/use21% per yearUp to $5,000
CIBC$5.00/moor $5/use21% per yearUp to $5,000
TD All-Inclusive PlanIncludedN/A21%Up to $5,000

NSF Fee vs Overdraft Protection — Cost Comparison

ScenarioNSF Fee (no protection)Overdraft FeeBetter Option?
1 returned payment/year$47$60 (monthly fee × 12)No overdraft protection
2 returned payments/year$94$60Overdraft protection
3+ returned payments/year$141+$60Overdraft protection
Overdraft used for 1 week ($500)N/A$5 fee + $2 interest ≈ $7Overdraft protection
If you've had even two NSF fees in the past year, overdraft protection at $5/month likely pays for itself. If you rarely go negative, skip the monthly fee and focus on maintaining a minimum buffer balance instead.

Line of Credit Overdraft — Often the Better Option

If you have a personal line of credit (PLOC) at your bank, linking it as overdraft protection is almost always cheaper than standard overdraft protection:

Ask your bank to set up your PLOC as the overdraft protection source for your chequing account.

KOHO — The Built-In NSF Solution

KOHO works differently from traditional banks: since KOHO is a prepaid Visa account, transactions that exceed your balance are automatically declined at the point of sale. No NSF fee is ever charged. This is the most elegant solution to overdraft risk for many Canadians — if you don't have the money, the transaction doesn't go through. You never face a $47 fee for a declined coffee purchase. The limitation: pre-authorized debits (like a mortgage payment) may not be declined the same way.

How to Avoid NSF Fees Without Overdraft Protection

NSF Fee Basics — What Triggers Them

An NSF fee is charged when a payment is returned due to insufficient funds. This can happen with:

NSF fees in Canada typically run $45–$48 per occurrence. The recipient of the returned payment may also charge their own returned payment fee, effectively doubling your cost. Full NSF fee guide →

Never Pay an NSF Fee Again — Switch to KOHO

KOHO prevents NSF fees by design. Transactions decline if funds aren't available, instead of triggering a $47 fee. Open your account free today.

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