François CharronPowered by Milesopedia
Methodology

Our valuation method

  • Point value: in cents per point, for each program.
  • First-year value: welcome bonus or rebate + rewards across 11 categories (groceries, gas, transit, restaurants, pharmacy, travel, bills, telecom, entertainment & streaming, office supplies, other) − the first-year annual fee. On some cards, accelerated (bonus) rates are capped, and the calculation takes these caps into account.
  • Subsequent-year value: rewards − annual fee.
  • Cards with annual fees: they usually bundle annual credits, lounge access and travel insurance.
Valuation

Financial institutions

ProgramValueKey details
American Express – Membership Rewards1.7 ¢/pt
fixed award chart 2.0¢Aeroplan transfer 2.0¢British Airways 1.7¢Asia Miles 1.5¢Marriott Bonvoy 1.08¢statement credit 1.0¢gift cards 0.7¢merchandise 0.7¢
BMO – BMO Rewards0.67 ¢/pt
travel 0.67¢investment products 0.67¢experiences 0.62¢gift cards 0.54¢merchandise 0.50¢statement credit 0.33¢
NBC – À la carte Rewards0.9 ¢/pt
À la carte plan 1.0¢bookings ≥55K pts 0.91¢bookings 0.83¢investments 0.83¢gift cards 0.78¢merchandise 0.60¢statement credit 0.40¢
CIBC – Aventura1.2 ¢/pt
fixed award chart 2.3¢bookings 1.0¢donations 1.0¢investments 0.83¢gift cards 0.71¢merchandise 0.71¢statement credit 0.63¢
Desjardins – Bonidollars$1/pt
travel $1investments $1donations $1shows $1gift cards $0.96merchandise $0.90
MBNA – MBNA Rewards1 ¢/pt
travel 1¢gift cards 0.92¢merchandise 0.88¢statement credit 0.83¢
RBC – RBC Avion1.6 ¢/pt
fixed award chart 2.3¢British Airways 1.7¢Asia Miles 1.5¢American AAdvantage 1.5¢bookings 1.0¢WestJet 1.0¢donations 1.0¢investments 0.8¢merchandise 0.75¢gift cards 0.7¢statement credit 0.58¢ (non-transfer cards: 1 ¢/pt)
Scotia – Scene+1 ¢/pt
bookings 1¢merchandise/Best Buy/Apple 0.9¢gift cards 0.74¢donations 0.74¢statement credit 0.70¢experiences 0.60¢
TD – TD Rewards0.5 ¢/pt
Expedia For TD 0.5¢bookings 0.4¢education products 0.4¢gift cards 0.25¢statement credit 0.25¢merchandise 0.22¢
Valuation

Airlines

ProgramValueKey details
Air Canada – Aeroplan2 ¢/pt
business/first >6¢short-haul 4¢medium-haul 3¢long-haul 2¢AC gift cards 1¢car rental 0.9¢vacation packages 0.83¢hotels 0.80¢gift cards 0.7¢merchandise 0.7¢
British Airways – Executive Club1.7 ¢/pt
business/first >5¢short-haul 3¢medium-haul 2¢long-haul 1¢car rental 0.8¢hotels 0.7¢gift cards 0.5¢
Cathay Pacific – Asia Miles1.5 ¢/pt
business/first >5¢short-haul 2¢medium-haul 1.5¢long-haul 1¢hotels 0.8¢merchandise 0.5¢
WestJet – WestJet Rewards1 ¢/pt
flights 1¢vacation packages 1¢
Valuation

Hotels

ProgramValueKey details
Best Western Rewards0.8 ¢/pt
hotel nights 0.8¢BW gift cards 0.59¢gift cards 0.55¢Aeroplan transfer 0.5¢
Hilton Honors0.6 ¢/pt
hotel nights 0.6¢Aeroplan transfer 0.25¢car rental 0.2¢
Marriott Bonvoy0.9 ¢/pt
hotel nights 0.9¢airline transfers 0.8¢tickets 0.4¢merchandise 0.35¢gift cards 0.35¢car rental 0.1¢
Valuation

Other programs

ProgramValue
Canadian Tire – Triangle$1/pt (rebate)
President's Choice – PC Optimum0.1 ¢/pt (rebate)
Sources & methodology

Default spending assumptions

Our calculators start from a monthly spending profile representative of a Canadian household, so each card's value can be expressed in dollars. The amounts are grounded in Statistics Canada's Survey of Household Spending (2023, the latest published), projected to 2026 using the Consumer Price Index, and limited to spending realistically chargeable to a credit card.

CategoryMonthly defaultStatistics Canada basis (2023 → 2026)
Groceries$700Food from stores (and convenience stores)
Gas & EV$200Gasoline : average monthly spend (volatile prices ± 5%)
Transit$100Public transit : fares and passes
Restaurants$300Restaurants and food delivery
Pharmacy$50Pharmacy : everyday medication and health items
Travel$150Flights and lodging : lumpy spend, smoothed over the year
Bills & recurring payments$250Card-payable recurring household bills and services
Telecom$150Telecom : mobile, internet, TV
Entertainment & streaming$100Streaming subscriptions and everyday leisure
Office supplies$0Office supplies : nil for a consumer profile
Other$500Clothing, personal & health care, miscellaneous
Monthly total$2,500≈ a typical Canadian household's card spending
  • Card-chargeable : we exclude spending that generally can't be put on a credit card (rent and mortgage, vehicle purchase, insurance, taxes), keeping only what actually gets charged to a card.
  • Indexation 2023 → 2026 : projected with Statistics Canada's CPI: groceries +7.8%, restaurants +8.0%, all-items +5.7%. Gasoline prices are volatile (± 5%).
  • Adjustable : these amounts are only a starting point: anyone can enter their own spending (and point valuation) in the calculator for a tailored result.

Average expenditures are from Statistics Canada; their projection to 2026 and card-spend allocation are estimates established by Milesopedia.

Personas

Spending by persona

Starting from Statistics Canada's actual data (Survey of Household Spending 2023, projected to 2026 via CPI), here is the spending realistically charged to a credit card by persona, grouped into the comparator's 7 broad categories. Monthly amounts in dollars. We exclude rent and mortgage, vehicle purchase, insurance and taxes (not chargeable to a card).

Category (monthly, $)Single / Student / Young pro1Under 302Couple, no childrenFamilyRetirees 65+2
Groceries4145157401,161609
Restaurants169355306412188
Gas and transit220329371577254
Travel (flights and hotels)~60~60~130~160~60
Bills and recurring (telecom, services)~380~540~570~810~455
Entertainment and leisure~212~328~498~603~302
Other (clothing, care, health, misc.)~330~525~570~810~400
Total card-chargeable~1,780~2,650~3,185~4,530~2,270
  • 1 “Single” = one-person household (table 11-10-0224-01, Statistics Canada actuals). Statistics Canada has no “student” or “young professional” segment: proxy values.
  • 2 “Under 30” and “Retirees 65+” = by age of the reference person (table 11-10-0227-01); these brackets cover all household types, not just single people: directional.
Key reading

Our default profile of $2,500/mo matches a typical household, between a single person (~$1,780) and a couple with no children (~$3,185): roughly a young professional or a cautious couple, which fits our points-optimizer audience. In Québec, spending runs about 85% of the national average, but unevenly: housing 72%, groceries 102% (no discount on groceries), restaurants 74%, education 60%.

Estimates established by Milesopedia, not provided or approved by the issuing institutions.