Canadian Tire stopped printing their own money in 2020. Inside the colourful rise and fall of Canada's unofficial currency

News Room
By News Room 16 Min Read


It was carted around in armoured trucks, protected by gun-toting security guards and secured with alarms and cameras. It was accepted at par with the Canadian dollar at bars and car dealerships and jewelry stores across the country. It became so universal that lawyers worried it would be confused with actual Canadian currency.

For more than 60 years, Canadian Tire money staked a legitimate claim as Canada’s unofficial second currency. At one point, a study showed half the country collected it. The coupons even made the Canadian Oxford dictionary.

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