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
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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
- Bank branch counter: ~$25–30 cost (2.5–3% spread)
- Airport kiosk: ~$50–100 cost (5–10% spread)
- Independent storefront: ~$15–25 cost (1.5–2.5% spread)
- Wise online: ~$5–8 cost (0.5–0.8% all-in)
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
- Use the online option (Wise/OFX/KnightsbridgeFX) when: you have a Canadian bank account and 1–3 business days. Almost always the cheapest and operationally clean. Best for any amount above CA$500.
- Use an independent storefront when: you need physical cash today, have flexibility on which neighbourhood to visit, and are converting CA$500–5,000. Calforex, ICE, and similar shops in Toronto typically beat bank counter rates significantly.
- Use a bank branch when: you have a banking relationship and want the conversion to settle into your existing account today. Operational simplicity outweighs the 1–2% premium over independent storefronts for small amounts.
- Avoid airport kiosks unless: you've arrived without any other option, need cash immediately, and the amount is small ($20–100). The premium is real but bounded; on small amounts the absolute dollar cost is tolerable.
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.