Skip to main content

Bank of Canada Overnight Rate Explained: A Complete Guide

Updated

The Bank of Canada overnight rate is the most important number in Canadian lending. It directly controls what you pay on your variable mortgage, HELOC, and line of credit — and indirectly shapes the entire interest rate landscape. Here’s everything you need to know.

What is the overnight rate?

The overnight rate (officially the “target for the overnight rate”) is the interest rate at which major financial institutions borrow and lend money to each other for one-day (overnight) periods. The Bank of Canada sets this rate as its primary tool for controlling inflation and managing the economy.

TermDefinition
Overnight rateThe BoC’s target for the rate at which banks lend to each other overnight
Operating bandThe overnight rate ± 0.25% — the range within which overnight lending occurs
Bank rateThe top of the operating band (overnight rate + 0.25%) — the rate the BoC charges for emergency lending to banks
Deposit rateThe bottom of the operating band (overnight rate − 0.25%) — the rate the BoC pays on bank deposits

How it works in practice

  1. Every day, banks settle millions of transactions among themselves
  2. At the end of the day, some banks have surplus funds and some have shortfalls
  3. Banks with shortfalls borrow from banks with surpluses — at approximately the overnight rate
  4. If no bank will lend, the BoC steps in as lender of last resort at the bank rate
  5. This system ensures the overnight rate stays near the BoC’s target

How the overnight rate reaches your mortgage

The chain from the BoC to your mortgage payment is short and direct for variable rates:

StepWhat HappensCurrent Value (early 2026)
1. BoC sets overnight rateThe policy rate decision2.75%
2. Banks set prime rateOvernight rate + 2.20% (by convention)4.95%
3. Your variable ratePrime rate minus your discounte.g., 4.95% − 0.80% = 4.15%
4. Your HELOC ratePrime rate plus your premiume.g., 4.95% + 0.50% = 5.45%

When the BoC changes the overnight rate by 0.25%:

ProductRate ChangeTiming
Variable mortgageChanges by 0.25%1–2 business days
HELOCChanges by 0.25%1–2 business days
Personal line of creditChanges by 0.25%1–2 business days
High-interest savings accountChanges by ~0.25%Days to weeks
Fixed mortgage (existing)No changeRate locked until renewal
GICs (existing)No changeRate locked until maturity

The 8 scheduled rate decisions

The Bank of Canada announces its rate decisions 8 times per year, on pre-determined dates spaced approximately 6 weeks apart. Four of these announcements coincide with the release of the Monetary Policy Report (MPR), which provides detailed economic analysis and forecasts.

What the BoC considers when setting the rate

FactorRaising the RateLowering the Rate
InflationAbove 2% targetBelow 2% target
GDP growthStrong growth, risk of overheatingWeak growth, risk of recession
EmploymentLow unemployment, wage pressureRising unemployment
Consumer spendingRobust, driving inflationWeak, economy slowing
Housing marketOverheatingCorrecting or frozen
Global conditionsGlobal growth strong, commodity prices highGlobal slowdown, trade disruption
Canadian dollarCAD too weak (importing inflation)CAD too strong (hurting exports)

The BoC’s primary mandate is price stability — keeping inflation at the 2% target (within a 1%–3% control range). Employment and growth are secondary considerations that influence how aggressively the BoC pursues the inflation target.

Overnight rate history

The overnight rate has moved dramatically over the decades:

PeriodRate RangeContext
1990s3.00%–8.00%Fighting high inflation, gradually declining
2000–20015.75% → 2.00%Dot-com bust, 9/11 recession
2002–20072.00% → 4.50%Economic expansion, housing boom
2008–20094.50% → 0.25%Global financial crisis — emergency cuts
2010–20140.25% → 1.00%Slow recovery, tentative hikes
2015–20160.50%Oil price crash, cuts to support economy
2017–20180.50% → 1.75%Gradual hiking cycle
20201.75% → 0.25%COVID-19 emergency cuts (three cuts in March)
2022–20230.25% → 5.00%Fastest hiking cycle in BoC history — fighting inflation
2024–20265.00% → 2.75%Easing cycle as inflation returned toward target

Key observations

  • The overnight rate has been below 1% for only 10 of the past 35 years — always during crises
  • The fastest hike: 0.25% to 5.00% in just 16 months (March 2022 – July 2023)
  • The BoC has never hesitated to make large emergency cuts during crises (100+ bps in one meeting)
  • The current 2.75% rate is approximately at the Bank’s neutral rate estimate

How the overnight rate differs from other Canadian rates

RateWhat It IsWho Sets ItCurrent (early 2026)
Overnight rateBoC policy rateBank of Canada2.75%
Prime rateBase rate for variable lendingIndividual banks4.95%
5-year GoC bond yieldGovernment borrowing costBond markets~2.80%
5-year fixed mortgageRate borrowers payLenders (based on bonds)~4.30%
Variable mortgageRate borrowers payLenders (based on prime)~4.15%

The overnight rate directly controls the prime rate and variable rates. It indirectly influences bond yields and fixed rates through expectations about future policy.

What happens when the BoC changes the overnight rate

A 0.25% cut — impact on a $500,000 variable mortgage

ImpactAdjustable Payment MortgageStatic Payment Mortgage
Rate change4.15% → 3.90%4.15% → 3.90%
Monthly payment change~$2,690 → ~$2,622 (−$68/month)No change
Annual interest savings~$1,250~$1,250 (redirected to principal)
5-year savings if rate stays lower~$6,250~$6,250 (in faster principal paydown)

A 0.25% hike — impact on a $500,000 variable mortgage

ImpactAdjustable Payment MortgageStatic Payment Mortgage
Rate change4.15% → 4.40%4.15% → 4.40%
Monthly payment change~$2,690 → ~$2,758 (+$68/month)No change
Annual interest cost increase~$1,250~$1,250 (less goes to principal)
RiskHigher payments strain budgetMay approach trigger rate if rates keep rising

How to track the overnight rate

  1. Bank of Canada website — official source for rate decisions, meeting dates, and Monetary Policy Reports (bankofcanada.ca)
  2. Rate decision dates — published annually, always on a Wednesday at 10:00 AM ET
  3. Overnight Index Swap (OIS) market — financial markets price in expected BoC moves before announcements. If OIS implies a 0.25% cut with 80%+ probability, the cut is largely priced in
  4. WealthNorth rate updates — we publish analysis after every BoC announcement

How to use this in your mortgage planning

If you have a variable mortgage

Your rate moves with every BoC decision. Know when the next announcement is and whether markets expect a change. Budget for the possibility of +/- 1.00% over any 12-month period.

If you’re choosing between fixed and variable

When the overnight rate is well above the neutral rate (~2.75%), there’s room for cuts — making variable attractive. When it’s at or below neutral, fixed offers protection if hikes come.

If you’re renewing

Check where the overnight rate is relative to neutral. If it’s at neutral, current variable rates are roughly the long-run baseline. If it’s above neutral, you may benefit from variable rates declining.


🏠

Get the best mortgage rate in Canada — in minutes

Homewise negotiates with 30+ banks and lenders for you. Free, 5 minutes, no credit check.

Get Started →