Toronto is Canada's largest city and the country's busiest international gateway through Pearson airport. For people converting USD to CAD in Toronto, the choice comes down to: a Canadian bank branch, an airport kiosk, an independent currency exchange storefront, or an online provider that delivers digitally. This page covers each option's actual cost, the trade-offs, and what an honest comparison looks like for someone living in or visiting Toronto in 2026.

The four ways to convert in Toronto

  1. Canadian bank branch (Toronto). Toronto has the densest concentration of Canadian bank branches in the country — RBC, TD, BMO, Scotia, CIBC main branches throughout downtown, midtown, and every major neighbourhood from Etobicoke to Scarborough. The retail spread on point-of-sale conversion is typically 2.5–3% — meaning on a CA$1,000 conversion you receive roughly $25–30 less than the mid-market value. Fast, low operational effort, available at every branch in the city.
  2. Airport currency exchange kiosk. Pearson Airport (YYZ) Terminal 1 and Terminal 3 both have ICE Currency Exchange and other operators. Billy Bishop (YTZ) has limited options. Convenient but routinely the most expensive option — spreads of 5–10% above mid-market are normal. Use only if you genuinely need cash and have no alternative.
  3. Independent currency exchange storefront. Toronto has several independent FX storefronts (Calforex, ICE, Continental, varying by neighbourhood). Spreads typically run 1.5–2.5%, often better than bank rates and substantially better than airport kiosks. Walk-in cash exchange, no account needed.
  4. Online provider with local delivery or pickup. Wise (online, settles to a bank account, ~0.5% all-in), OFX (online, larger amounts, ~0.5%), or a service like KnightsbridgeFX. Cheapest by a wide margin if you have a few business days and a bank account. Doesn't give you physical cash on the spot.

The math on a CA$1,000 conversion in Toronto

The gap between the most-expensive (airport) and the cheapest (online) is 10–20x. On larger amounts the absolute dollar difference compounds quickly.

When each option makes sense

What to ask before converting in person

Storefronts and banks usually quote you the exchange rate but not the "mid-market" rate. To know your real cost, compare what they're offering against the live mid-market rate from Wise's online calculator or XE.com. The gap between their quote and mid-market is your conversion cost. A 2% gap is reasonable for an independent storefront in Toronto; 5%+ is the airport.

One more thing: credit and debit cards

If you're planning to spend in the other currency rather than exchange to cash, the cheapest option is often a no-foreign-transaction-fee credit card or a Wise/EQ Bank debit card. Toronto has the same card options as the rest of Canada — Scotia Passport Visa Infinite, Home Trust Preferred Visa, Wise card. These convert at near-mid-market rates on every transaction, with no exchange to physical cash required.

Related reading

FAQ

For amounts above CA$500 with 1–3 business days, online providers (Wise at ~0.5%, OFX for larger amounts) beat every in-person option in Toronto by a wide margin. For physical cash today, independent currency exchange storefronts (Calforex, ICE, Continental and similar) in Toronto typically beat bank counters by 0.5–1.5%. Avoid airport kiosks except as a last resort.
Yes, by a wide margin. A typical Canadian bank branch in Toronto converts at roughly 2.5–3% above mid-market; airport kiosks (Pearson, YVR, etc.) routinely run 5–10% above mid-market. For a CA$1,000 conversion the difference is roughly $50.
Yes — major Canadian banks (RBC, TD, BMO, Scotia, CIBC) allow you to order foreign currency for branch pickup, typically 1–3 business days notice. The rate is the same retail rate as walk-in conversion (2.5–3% spread). Useful if you want to know the cost in advance and have specific cash needs.
Established independent FX shops in Toronto (Calforex, ICE, Continental, etc.) are FINTRAC-registered money services businesses and operate under the same anti-money-laundering rules as banks. They're reputable for typical retail conversion. Verify FINTRAC registration if dealing with an unfamiliar storefront.
For Canadians traveling to the US: convert online via Wise or OFX before leaving, or use a no-foreign-transaction-fee credit card and Wise debit card for spending — both are cheaper than any in-person option once you arrive. For travelers arriving in Toronto needing CAD: order from your home bank before the trip if you need a small amount; for anything above $500, online providers or Toronto independent storefronts beat airport conversion.