bank of canada interest rate

What to expect from next week's Bank of Canada interest rate announcement

The Bank of Canada (BoC) will issue its third interest rate update of the year at 10 a.m. ET on Wednesday, April 10.

Canada's central bank held the key interest rate at 5 per cent in January and March.

"Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation eased to 2.9 per cent in January, as goods price inflation moderated further. Shelter price inflation remains elevated and is the biggest contributor to inflation," the BoC shared in its March update.

"Underlying inflationary pressures persist: year-over-year and three-month measures of core inflation are in the 3 per cent to 3.5 per cent range, and the share of CPI components growing above 3 per cent declined but is still above the historical average. The Bank continues to expect inflation to remain close to 3 per cent during the first half of this year before gradually easing."

Canadians saw seven interest rate hikes in 2022. In January 2023, another increase followed, bringing the key rate to 4.5 per cent.

The Bank held its key rate at 4.5 per cent—precisely as experts predicted—until June 7, when it was raised to 4.75 per cent. On July 12, the BoC raised the key rate to 5 per cent, with the bank rate at 5.25 per cent, and on September 6, it announced that it was holding those rates.

This year's two rate holds came after three consecutive ones in 2023. In a report published in January, Oxford Economics researchers said they believe the 5 per cent key rate will be held until mid-2024 when the BoC will trigger a cycle that lowers the rate.

With this in mind, industry experts are almost sure another rate hold is coming.

Ratehub.ca Co-CEO and president of CanWise mortgage lender James Laird shared his thoughts and expectations for the upcoming BoC announcement with Daily Hive.

"We are expecting a rate hold from the Bank of Canada next week and will look to the accompanying statement to try to figure out if rate cuts are on the near-term or long-term horizon or if the Bank is going to continue playing its cards close to its chest," he told us in an email.

This year, much of Laird's forecasts have focused on BoC commentary rather than interest rate numbers, which aren't expected to move yet.

What should homeowners do depending on the interest rate announcement?

Laird advises anyone with a variable-rate mortgage or home equity line of credit (HELOC) to, once again, study the Bank's statement for any indication of when they might see rate relief.

"Any indication of rate cuts coming sooner will cause bond yields to drop and fixed rates to follow suit and will put upward pressure on home values," he said.

The expert believes this solid start for the housing market could cause the Bank to be more cautious in indicating when the first rate cut might happen so as not to "add more fuel to the fire."

"It will be interesting to see if the Bank comments specifically on concern for the hot start of the housing market that we have seen this year, which was notably absent in the last announcement."

Lead photo by

Lester Balajadia/Shutterstock


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Doug Ford just got even tougher on Ontario bike lanes with new measures

Toronto's $27 billion Ontario Line just crossed its biggest construction milestone so far

Rare Canadian gold coin sells for over $1.5 million

Toronto ranked among the top 100 best cities in the world for 2025

A full list of all the items included in Canada's holiday GST cut

Liquid soap sold at stores across Canada recalled due to contamination

Canadians to get GST cut on groceries and new $250 rebate ahead of holidays

Snow is finally coming to southern Ontario and here's when it will hit