Skip to main content

Pre-Authorized Debit Limits in Canada (2026) — What You Need to Know

Updated

What Is a Pre-Authorized Debit (PAD)?

A pre-authorized debit is a scheduled, recurring (or one-time) withdrawal from your bank account initiated by a payee — a company or individual you have authorized to pull funds. Common examples:

TypeExamples
Recurring bill paymentsUtilities, rent, mortgage, insurance premiums
Loan/credit repaymentsCar loan, personal loan, student loan, credit card minimum
Subscription servicesStreaming, gym memberships, software subscriptions
Government paymentsCRA installment payments
Charitable donationsMonthly donor programs
Business PADsSupplier invoices, payroll funded via PAD

PADs are governed by Payments Canada Rule H1, which sets out rights for both payers and payees.


PAD Amounts and Limits

There is no legislated maximum amount for individual PAD transactions in Canada. Limits depend on:

  1. Your PAD agreement — specifies the amount, frequency, and any maximum
  2. Your account balance — an NSF PAD will be returned; NSF fees apply
  3. Your bank’s internal fraud controls — unusually large or unexpected PADs may be flagged

Variable vs. fixed PADs

PAD TypeAmountExample
Fixed (sporadic)Same each timeMonthly mortgage payment
Variable (fixed)Changes each cycleMonthly utility bill
One-timeSingle transactionOne-time payment authorization

For variable-amount PADs, the payee must notify you of the amount 10 calendar days before the debit date, unless you have waived this notice period in the PAD agreement.


Your Rights Under Payments Canada Rule H1

Right to cancel

You can cancel a PAD agreement at any time by providing written notice to the payee at least 30 days before the next scheduled debit. Cancelling the PAD agreement does not cancel the underlying debt — you still owe the money; you’ve just changed how it’s collected.

Right to reimbursement

You are entitled to reimbursement if a PAD was:

  • Processed without a valid PAD agreement
  • For an amount different from what was agreed (for fixed-amount PADs)
  • Processed before the agreed date
  • Processed after you gave proper written cancellation notice

Claim deadline:

  • Personal PADs: 90 calendar days from the debit date
  • Business PADs: 10 business days from the statement date showing the debit

How to file: Contact your bank’s customer service and state you are making a “PAD reimbursement claim.” Your bank must reimburse you within 10 business days of receiving a valid claim, and then recover the funds from the payee.


How to Set Up a PAD Agreement

A valid PAD agreement must include:

  • Your name and account information
  • The payee’s name
  • The amount (or how the amount will be determined)
  • The payment frequency and start date
  • A statement of your cancellation rights
  • Contact information for the payee

PAD agreements can be paper, digital, or verbal (if properly recorded). Online subscription sign-ups with credit card or banking information constitute a PAD agreement.


How to Cancel a PAD

Step 1: Notify the payee in writing

Send written notice to the company (email is generally sufficient, keep a record):

“I hereby cancel my pre-authorized debit agreement effective [date]. My last debit authorized under this agreement is [date, or ’none’ if past]. SIN/Account: [your account number with them].”

Retain a copy and any delivery confirmation.

Step 2: If the payee ignores cancellation

Contact your bank and instruct them to stop the PAD. Under Rule H1, your bank must stop future PADs upon your written or verbal request, citing the cancelled agreement. Bring or email proof of your cancellation notice to the payee.

Step 3: Monitor your account

Check your account for 2–3 cycles after cancellation to confirm no further debits appear.


NSF Fees for Returned PADs

If a PAD processes but your account lacks funds, the PAD is returned “NSF” (non-sufficient funds):

BankNSF Fee (per returned item)
RBC$48
TD$48
Scotiabank$48
BMO$48
CIBC$48
Tangerine$25
EQ Bank$0 (no NSF fee)
Simplii Financial$25

The payee may also charge their own NSF fee (commonly $20–$50). An NSF on a loan or mortgage PAD may also trigger a late payment penalty.

To avoid NSF fees, maintain a buffer in your account or set up overdraft protection.


PAD vs. Bill Payment vs. e-Transfer

FeaturePADOnline Bill PaymentInterac e-Transfer
Initiated byPayeeYouYou
Typical usesRecurring bills, loansOne-time or recurring billsPerson-to-person, business
Governed byPayments Canada H1VariesInterac e-Transfer rules
Right to cancelYes (30 days notice)Cancel via your bankCancel before recipient accepts
Reimbursement if unauthorizedYes (90 days for personal)LimitedLimited