In this feature of Rewards Canada's Ultimate Credit Card Portfolios we look at the ultimate one for those who make lots of purchases in currencies other than the Canadian dollar. It looks at credit cards in the Canadian market that do not charge a fee of 2 to 3% on purchases made in foreign currencies.
It is the ideal portfolio for those traveling outside of Canada a lot, those shopping online from the U.S. and other countries and even business owners who are importing items that can be paid for with a credit card.
As we typically recommend, you should carry at least one Visa, one Mastercard and one American Express card, if not more of each in your wallet. This is standard with all of our Ultimate Wallets. The reason why is that there are benefits, promotions and earning potential unique to each brand of credit card.
In this portfolio we outline one card from each brand that will help you build up those travel rewards points all the while saving you a good chunk of change by not having to pay those pesky foreign transaction fees. Ultimately there are various options that could be utilized for such a portfolio but we look at one card from each issuing family that we feel are the best fit for this mission.
What is Rewards Canada's Ultimate No Foreign Transaction Fee Credit Card portfolio? It's the following three cards:
Prior to February 2024, this portfolio used to be a contender for the 'Ultimate' of Ultimate Credit Card Portfolios! It had a trifecta of cards for someone looking to have an amazing travel rewards portfolio. However with RBC's takeover of HSBC we lost the HSBC World Elite Mastercard which held the position for the Mastercard in this portfolio. There is no direct travel rewards replacement for that card so it gets replaced with a very strong cash back card, the Brim World Elite Mastercard.
Recommended reading: Details of the HSBC to RBC transition (Continually updated)
That being said you still have a pretty darn good portfolio if you go with these three cards. You have a card that is one of the strongest points earning cards in Canada (the Scotiabank Gold Amex), the card with the highest cash back earning at Costco (the Brim World Elite Mastercard and without getting technical about the Rogers Mastercard), and a card that provides travel benefits like airport lounge access (the Scotia Passport card).
Related: No Foreign Transaction Fee Credit Cards for Canadians
The first card in the portfolio is the Scotiabank Gold American Express card. This card would be set as the main card in this portfolio and you would want to put all of your possible spending in Canada on the card. The main reason is that the card is very strong for points earning. It earns 6 points per dollar at Sobeys, Safeway and other Empire group stores. Then it earns 5 points per dollar spent at eligible grocery stores, on dining and entertainment (in Canada), 3 points per dollar spent at eligible gas stations, daily transit and select streaming services (in Canada) and 1 point per dollar spent everywhere else. The key wording here is 'in Canada' as all purchases not made in Canadian dollars will earn 1 point per dollar spent. Those numbers translate to a 5%, 3%, and 1% return when redeeming for travel and since this is travel rewards card portfolio that is key.
And when it comes to redeeming for travel this card is as flexible as they come. You book the travel how you want, when you want, with whomever you want and then when that travel charge shows up on your account you redeem your points against that charge. Want to book a flight directly with Air Canada, pay for it on this card and then redeem points for it! On top of that you'll still earn Aeroplan miles on the flight.
The second card in the portfolio is the Brim World Elite Mastercard which is a cash back rewards cards with some good travel benefits. This is the card you will pull out of your wallet for your Costco shopping in Canada and select out of country purchases where the Scotiabank Passport Visa Infinite Card does not have accelerated earn rates.
This card earns 2 points per dollar spent for the first $25,000 of spending on the card. Those 2 points are equal to a 2% cash back return which makes this card one of the the best to use at Costco warehouses in Canada. After $25,000 of spending the earn rate drops to 1 point per dollar (1% cash back).
When travelling outside of Canada (or shopping online outside of Canada) you won't pay any foreign transaction fees with this card and if you are within the $25,000 cap you'll earn 2% cash back on those purchases. This is the same equivelant earn rate the Scotia card offers for grocery, dining, entertainment and daily transit outside of Canada. So it really is up to you which card you want to use for those categories. Outside of those categories you'll earn more rewards on the Brim card if you are still within your $25,000 cap.
The card provides really good travel insurance coverage and also has Mastercard TravelPass by DragonPass airport lounge access membership. This is also provided on the Scotiabank Passport Visa Infinte (as Visa Airport Companion by DragonPass) however the Scotia card also includes 6 lounge visits annually so you'll you want to use the Scotia card first for your lounge access.
Finally, the Brim card also comes with free Boingo global Wi-Fi which provides Wi-Fi access on several airlines including WestJet.
Rounding out this portfolio is the Scotiabank Passport Visa Infinite Card. It was the first no foreign transaction fee card in Canada to be issued by a major bank. This card is very similar to its Gold American Express card sibling except for being a Visa card of course!
Its base points earning is the same at 1 point per dollar but then its category bonus rates are lower than the Gold Amex version and there is a good reason why. That higher earn rate of 2 points per dollar on grocery, dining, entertainment and daily transit is not limited to purchases in Canadian dollars. It is awarded on purchases in those categories made in any currency. So, if you are dining at a restaurant in Chicago you'll earn the 2 points per dollar and save your 2.5% thanks to the no foreign transaction fee. On the redemption side this card is exactly the same as the Scotiabank Gold American Express card - 1,000 points = a $10 credit on travel charges.
On the benefits side the key feature this card provides is a Visa Airport Companion Program membership with 6 free lounge visits which has a combined value of US$309 - and this is an annual benefit.
Related: Rewards Canada's Guide to Business Class Lounge Access
All three cards also come with some really good welcome bonus offers that provide you with well over $800 in travel credits and varying travel and purchase insurance benefits.
Here's how you should split up your spending with this credit card portfolio:
Of note, both of the Scotia cards have a $50,000 annual cap on the category bonus spending. Should you reach that cap on one card move your spending to the other.
Here are the details on these three cards
2024 Top Travel Points Credit Card with an annual fee | 2024 Top No Foreign Transaction Fee Credit Card
Earn up to $900* in value in the first 12 months, including up to 45,000 bonus Scene+ points¹ and your first year annual fee waived. Offer ends Jan 2, 2025
Annual Fee: $120 | Additional Cards: $29 | Minimum Income $12,000
*See Card Provider's website and Card Application for complete card details, terms and current offers. Reasonable efforts are made to maintain accuracy of information
Up to $500+ in first time bonuses from Brim merchant partners + no annual fee in the first year
Annual fee: $199 | Additional Cards: $50
Canada's Choice for Top No Foreign Transaction Fee Rewards Credit Card 2023
Earn up to $1,000+ in value in the first 12 months, including up to 35,000 bonus Scene+ points¹ and first year annual fee waived¹. Offer ends Jan 2, 2025
Annual Fee: $150 | Additional Cards: $0 for first card $50 for each additional | Minimum Income $60,000
*See Card Provider's website and Card Application for complete card details, terms and current offers. Reasonable efforts are made to maintain accuracy of information. Rates, fees and other information are effective as of Jan.4, 2024. Subject to change.
You do have several other card options you could look at in this portfolio - not a whole lot though seeing there only around 10 no foreign transaction fee cards in Canada. For the American Express option you could look at using the American Express Cobalt Card, it is very similar to the Scotiabank Gold Amex in that it earns up to 5x points on purchases and provides the utmost flexibility when you redeem for travel and it has no set income requirement. The main difference from the Scotia card is that the Cobalt card still has a 2.5% foreign transaction fee but it's point multipliers do work globally not just in Canada.
For the Mastercard side your best option instead of the Brim World Mastercard would be the no fee Brim Mastercard. It also has No Foreign Transaction fees and the Boingo Wi-Fi but only earns the equivalent of 1% cash back.
Finally on the Visa side your next best option after the Passport Visa Infinite card would be the Home Trust Preferred Visa as it is the only other Visa card in Canada with no foreign transaction fees but you don't earn any rewards on foreign transactions.
This article was first posted on December 6, 2019 and is updated on a regular basis.