The benchmark no-fee card. 2% everywhere for free is the number every paid card has to beat.
Best for: Anyone's default no-fee card — and specifically for US-dollar spending, where it effectively erases FX fees.
Skip if: You can't meet World Elite spend requirements, or you want points rather than cash.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $360 · Cash back
The most flexible free cash-back card in Canada: you build your own earn categories. Modest ongoing value, but there's no fee to justify.
Best for: No-fee shoppers who want to pick their own 2% categories and never think about a renewal fee.
Skip if: Your spend doesn't concentrate in 2-3 categories — a flat-rate card like the Rogers World Elite beats it on unchosen spend.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $340 · Cash back
A solid no-fee grocery earner. Straightforward and fee-free, with an upgrade path once spend outgrows the cap.
Best for: Free-card shoppers whose grocery bill is the biggest line item in the budget.
Skip if: Your grocery spend already exceeds $12,000/year — the World Elite version's higher cap and bill-payment rate pay for its fee.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $340 · Cash back
A genuinely good free card for its first year, then a merely average one. Worth opening for the promo; worth pairing with a stronger permanent earner after.
Best for: New-to-Simplii households who want a strong first-year rate on gas and groceries with zero fee.
Skip if: You're looking past year one — the CIBC Dividend's 4% is permanent, not a promo.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $420 · Cash back
An excellent free card for the right household, and an unremarkable 1% card for everyone else. Know your banners before applying.
Best for: Loblaws/Shoppers/No Frills shoppers who want a free World Elite card layered onto grocery spend they're already doing.
Skip if: You don't shop Loblaw banners — the earn rate collapses to 1% elsewhere.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $90 · PC Optimum
A well-targeted no-fee co-brand for Amazon-heavy households, especially Prime members, thanks to the FX cash-back offset most no-fee cards don't offer.
Best for: Amazon Prime households who want a free card that earns real cash back on Amazon.ca and Whole Foods spend, with a partial FX-fee offset.
Skip if: You're not a Prime member — the non-Prime 1.5% rate is good but not exceptional, and other free cards earn more broadly.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $300 · Cash back
The default card for Costco members in Canada: free, simple, and well-matched to gas and warehouse spend, though the annual payout and membership requirement are real friction points.
Best for: Costco members who fill up at Costco gas stations and want a free card that pairs naturally with warehouse shopping.
Skip if: You're not a Costco member, or your spend is mostly outside Costco categories — a flat cash-back card earns more elsewhere.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $260 · Cash back
A capable no-fee entry into Scene+. Fine on its own, and a natural stepping stone toward the Passport once travel and lounge access matter.
Best for: Free-card users who want simple points on food and entertainment spend with an easy upgrade path to the Passport later.
Skip if: You want cash back with no redemption thinking at all — a flat cash-back card is simpler for the same $0 fee.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $130 · Scene+
A genuinely strong no-fee card for Canadian Tire loyalists — 4% at Triangle banners and 3% on groceries rival paid cash-back cards — but the income requirement and CT Money's redemption ceiling keep it a specialist's pick rather than an everyday-carry default.
Best for: Canadian Tire, Sport Chek, and Mark's shoppers with real grocery spend who clear the income threshold and want a free World Elite card.
Skip if: You don't shop Triangle-family banners regularly, or you don't clear the $80K/$150K income bar — the fee-free base Triangle Mastercard earns the same rates without the income gate.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $250 · CT Money
The free, simplified sibling of the SimplyCash Preferred. Fine as a background card; the paid version is the one worth actively using.
Best for: People who want the simplest possible free Amex — one flat rate, zero tracking.
Skip if: You spend heavily on gas and groceries — the paid SimplyCash Preferred's 4% categories outearn this quickly.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $180 · Cash back
A narrow but real niche winner: the only genuinely free, no-FX card in Canada. Skip it for domestic spend, keep it in the wallet for anything priced in USD.
Best for: Frequent US/international spenders who want to skip both the annual fee and the 2.5% FX markup on a simple card.
Skip if: You spend mostly in CAD — a category cash-back card earns more for the same $0 fee.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $180 · Cash back
The cleanest free on-ramp to RBC Avion. Upgrade to the ION+ once your spend justifies the fee.
Best for: Anyone who wants to start earning transferable Avion points with zero annual fee.
Skip if: You spend enough to justify the ION+'s $48 fee — its higher earn rate and added perks pay for themselves quickly.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $260 · RBC Avion
A genuinely flexible free card following Neo's June 2026 relaunch. The plan-switching mechanic rewards attentive spenders more than passive ones.
Best for: Digitally-native spenders who want a free, flexible cash-back card and don't mind picking a reward plan every quarter.
Skip if: You want simple flat-rate cash back with no plan-switching — a flat 2% card is less effort for a similar return.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $140 · Cash back
A well-targeted student card: modest earn, but on exactly the categories a student budget hits, with a redemption a 19-year-old will actually use.
Best for: Students who go to the movies and want simple, immediately-usable points on food and entertainment spend.
Skip if: You'd rather build travel points — Scene+ doesn't transfer anywhere.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $80 · Scene+
Not a rewards play — a credit-building tool with a retail-discount bonus attached. Good for its intended purpose, nothing more.
Best for: Students building first-time credit who want a $0 card plus real retail discounts through SPC.
Skip if: You're not a student, or you already have an established credit history — a standard no-fee cash-back card earns more.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $90 · Cash back
A solid, unglamorous free cash-back card. The 2% grocery rate is its best feature; everything else is average.
Best for: Grocery-heavy households who want a simple, genuinely free cash-back card.
Skip if: You spend heavily outside groceries/gas/dining — a flat-rate card likely earns more overall.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $120 · Cash back
A serviceable free on-ramp to Aeroplan. Most frequent flyers should graduate to the Visa Infinite tier.
Best for: Occasional Air Canada flyers who want to start earning Aeroplan points without an annual fee.
Skip if: You check bags on Air Canada often — the Visa Infinite's bag perk alone covers its $139 fee.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $270 · Aeroplan
Not a serious earner on its own, but a legitimate zero-cost way to start accumulating transferable MR points, especially for applicants who don't yet qualify for the paid Amex cards.
Best for: Anyone who wants a free foot in the door to Amex Membership Rewards — including eventual Aeroplan transfers — without any income bar or fee.
Skip if: You already qualify for the Cobalt or Gold Rewards — those cards earn dramatically more MR points for a modest monthly or annual cost.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $260 · Amex Membership Rewards
A fine no-cost way to dabble in Aventura points. Serious travellers should graduate to the Visa Infinite.
Best for: Occasional travellers who want free, flexible travel points without an annual fee.
Skip if: You spend enough to clear the Aventura Visa Infinite's fee — its bonus categories and insurance pay for themselves.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $190 · CIBC Aventura
The accessible on-ramp to Triangle Rewards. Upgrade to the World Elite tier the moment your income qualifies — same fee, better grocery rate.
Best for: Canadian Tire, Sport Chek, and Mark's shoppers who don't clear the World Elite tier's income requirement.
Skip if: You clear the $80K/$150K income bar — the World Elite version earns double on groceries for the same $0 fee.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $150 · CT Money
A plain, dependable free card whose Costco acceptance is its one real edge over other no-fee options.
Best for: National Bank clients who want a genuinely free, no-fuss card that's also accepted at Costco.
Skip if: You want a higher flat rate — Tangerine or BMO CashBack earn more in their bonus categories.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $70 · Cash back
An unremarkable but genuinely free card. Its low intro interest rate is the real draw, not the cash-back rate.
Best for: Scotiabank clients who want a simple free cash-back card and may carry an introductory-rate balance.
Skip if: You want the best possible free cash-back rate — Tangerine, BMO CashBack, or CIBC Dividend all out-earn this card in their bonus categories.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $90 · Cash back
A cause-driven niche card. The rewards are secondary to its charitable angle.
Best for: Cardholders who want a no-fee card tied to a charitable cause and don't prioritize maximizing cash back.
Skip if: You're optimizing purely for rewards value — nearly every other no-fee card on this list earns more.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $50 · National Bank Rewards
A bare-bones card with no upside over National Bank's other no-fee options. Only worth it if it's genuinely your only approval option.
Best for: Applicants who want the simplest possible National Bank card, e.g. for credit-building purposes.
Skip if: You qualify for the mycredit Mastercard or Platinum Mastercard — both earn rewards at the same or a low fee.
No annual fee · First-year net value ≈ $20 · None (no rewards program)