
Customer satisfaction with banks up slightly from last year: J.D. Power survey
The Bay Street financial district of Toronto is shown on Sunday Set. 8, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Doug Ives
Consumers appear to be slightly more satisfied with the financial advice and guidance they received from their banks compared with last year, a new J.D. Power survey shows.
The findings showed overall customer satisfaction with their bank improved slightly by 13 points to 579 on a 1,000-point scale.
The report, published Thursday, cited several improvements including the frequency, quality and relevance of the advice which helped boost the satisfaction score.
RBC ranked the highest in customer satisfaction for a fifth consecutive year, scoring 595 points. CIBC ranked second with 590 points, followed by Scotiabank with a score of 580 points.
TD ranked last out of the Big Five banks with a score of 563.
The survey said more Canadians turned to their bank for help in navigating day-to-day financial hardships amid growing economic pressures.
'The eroding financial health of customers and their fear that economic conditions may worsen are driving customers — especially younger ones with growing deposits — to seek financial advice from their retail bank at an accelerated pace,' said Jennifer White, senior director for banking and payments intelligence at J.D. Power, in a release.
She said customers are also shifting focus from longer-term goals such as investment and retirement planning to more immediate needs such as paying bills, reducing debt and sticking to a budget.
Among those who turned to their bank for advice, 71 per cent were concerned about the high cost of living while 36 per cent were struggling to manage housing costs such as mortgage payments and electricity bills.
Forty-four per cent of bank customers are considered financially vulnerable, significantly up from 36 per cent five years ago, the study, which surveyed 2,582 retail bank customers between January and March of this year, showed.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 26, 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


National Post
29 minutes ago
- National Post
These groceries cost 45% more from Sobeys' Uber Eats than in-store
Article content Inspired by a La Presse experiment, I learned the cost of convenience. It's not just the expected fees that add to the hefty totals for groceries ordered via food delivery apps, though. Overall, ordering from Sobeys' Uber Eats storefront was 45 per cent more expensive than shopping IRL. My bill jumped from $73.16 at a Toronto brick-and-mortar Sobeys location to $105.88 via the delivery app. Article content Article content Bag, service and delivery fees, tip and taxes notwithstanding, my items cost 16 per cent more in-app, and the on-shelf sales applied only two-thirds of the time. Article content Article content Article content La Presse journalist Marie-Eve Fournier's groceries increased 116 per cent, from $38 in-store to $82 from the same Montreal IGA on Uber Eats. Fournier admits she 'cheated a little' by selecting items from the flyer. My only guiding principle was choosing products I usually buy at Sobeys: chicken thighs, dried beans, yogurt, cheese, arugula, frozen blueberries, sparkling water, tortilla chips and toilet paper. Article content Four of the nine items I bought were Sobeys' house brand, Compliments. Three were on sale in-store, two of which were reduced in-app. Article content I added products to my virtual cart at the same time as my physical one, making sure there was plenty of stock so my Uber Eats shopper wouldn't have any issues fulfilling the order. It occurred to me as I completed my purchase that we were in the store at the same time. As I fumbled at the self-checkout, my shopper was already walking the aisles. They delivered my order a little over an hour after I placed it. Article content Article content Regular-priced items such as arugula, dried beans, sparkling water and tortilla chips were five per cent more expensive in the app than in the Sobeys store. Of the in-store sale items, yogurt and frozen blueberries cost 17 per cent more online, and toilet paper went up 40 per cent. Let that sink in. Article content Article content Call me naive, but I assumed the prices in an online storefront would match those on physical shelves. 'Join the club,' says Sylvain Charlebois, senior director of Dalhousie University's Agri-Food Analytics Lab, a colleague of Fournier's but not involved in her Uber Eats column. 'I used Instacart a few times during COVID, and that's it. So, I wasn't aware of these price discrepancies at all, and I suspect many Canadians aren't either.' Article content According to Keerthana Rang, corporate communications lead at Uber Canada, 'Merchants are responsible for setting their own prices on their Uber Eats storefronts. Prices set by merchants in the Uber Eats app may differ from those in-store. Merchants that do offer in-store pricing on Uber Eats are highlighted with an 'in-store pricing' badge in the app, such as Metro, Food Basics, LCBO and Giant Tiger.'


Globe and Mail
33 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
RBC Global Asset Management Inc. announces RBC Target 2025 Education Fund maturity date, changes to RBC U.S. small-cap equity funds, and risk rating changes
TORONTO, June 26, 2025 /CNW/ - RBC Global Asset Management Inc. ("RBC GAM Inc.") today announced details regarding the maturity of RBC Target 2025 Education Fund, changes to RBC U.S. Small-Cap Core Equity Fund and RBC U.S. Small-Cap Value Equity Fund, and risk rating changes for certain RBC Funds.


CTV News
33 minutes ago
- CTV News
Senate could vote on controversial major projects bill today
Prime Minister Mark Carney is joined by members of his cabinet and caucus as he speaks at a news conference in the Foyer of the House of Commons in Ottawa after Bill C-5 passed in the House. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang OTTAWA — The Senate could vote today on Prime Minister Mark Carney's controversial major projects bill, legislation that would give the federal government the power to fast-track projects it hopes will bolster the economy. The bill, which moved swiftly through the House of Commons, is subject to a programming motion in the Senate — meaning it has to be voted on by tomorrow. Bill C-5 has faced heavy opposition over the speed of its passage through Parliament and the sweeping new powers it would give the government. Carney has said the bill is needed to fast-track 'nation-building projects' in the face of an economic crisis triggered by the trade war with the United States. The government has defended its decision to ram the bill through, pointing to its federal election win as evidence that Canadians support its agenda. But critics calling for a deeper review of the bill have argued there's no need to rush it through because proposed fast-track projects won't start work before Parliament returns from its summer break. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 26, 2025