RTR

Real-Time Rail (Canada)

RTR

Infrastructure

Real-Time Rail (Canada)

Definition

The Real-Time Rail (RTR) is Canada's forthcoming instant payments infrastructure, managed by Payments Canada. Budget 2025 targeted its launch in Q3 2026; some industry observers expect it to slip to late 2026 or early 2027. The RTR is a dependency for Phase 2 of Canada's open banking framework: Phase 2 is targeted for mid-2027 and is explicitly contingent on the RTR being live and in widespread use. Phase 2 introduces write access—allowing accredited third parties to initiate actions on behalf of consumers, such as making payments, switching accounts, opening new accounts, and triggering lending flows. Canada's five largest banks (Big Six) account for the majority of financial services, holding around 93% of banking assets; write access is where competitive dynamics could shift materially. Payment initiation alone removes interchange costs for merchants; account switching lowers the practical barrier to changing providers. A 2024 Abacus Data poll found that two-thirds of Canadians had no intention of considering switching financial providers in the next two years—inertia that reflects structural friction as much as preference. Write access follows once the RTR is operational at scale, so any delay in the RTR pushes Phase 2 accordingly.

Related Terms

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Real-Time Rail (Canada)?

The Real-Time Rail (RTR) is Canada's forthcoming instant payments infrastructure, managed by Payments Canada. Budget 2025 targeted its launch in Q3 2026; some industry observers expect it to slip to late 2026 or early 2027. The RTR is a dependency for Phase 2 of Canada's open banking framework: Phase 2 is targeted for mid-2027 and is explicitly contingent on the RTR being live and in widespread use. Phase 2 introduces write access—allowing accredited third parties to initiate actions on behalf of consumers, such as making payments, switching accounts, opening new accounts, and triggering lending flows. Canada's five largest banks (Big Six) account for the majority of financial services, holding around 93% of banking assets; write access is where competitive dynamics could shift materially. Payment initiation alone removes interchange costs for merchants; account switching lowers the practical barrier to changing providers. A 2024 Abacus Data poll found that two-thirds of Canadians had no intention of considering switching financial providers in the next two years—inertia that reflects structural friction as much as preference. Write access follows once the RTR is operational at scale, so any delay in the RTR pushes Phase 2 accordingly.

What does RTR stand for in Open Banking?

RTR stands for Real-Time Rail (Canada). It is a fundamental concept in Open Banking and PSD2 regulations. The Real-Time Rail (RTR) is Canada's forthcoming instant payments infrastructure, managed by Payments Canada. Budget 2025 targeted its launch in Q3 2026; some industry observers expect it to slip to late 2026 or early 2027. The RTR is a dependency for Phase 2 of Canada's open banking framework: Phase 2 is targeted for mid-2027 and is explicitly contingent on the RTR being live and in widespread use. Phase 2 introduces write access—allowing accredited third parties to initiate actions on behalf of consumers, such as making payments, switching accounts, opening new accounts, and triggering lending flows. Canada's five largest banks (Big Six) account for the majority of financial services, holding around 93% of banking assets; write access is where competitive dynamics could shift materially. Payment initiation alone removes interchange costs for merchants; account switching lowers the practical barrier to changing providers. A 2024 Abacus Data poll found that two-thirds of Canadians had no intention of considering switching financial providers in the next two years—inertia that reflects structural friction as much as preference. Write access follows once the RTR is operational at scale, so any delay in the RTR pushes Phase 2 accordingly.

More Infrastructure Terms

Explore More Open Banking Resources

Dive deeper into the Open Banking ecosystem with our comprehensive directories.

Want to integrate Accounting & ERP data?

Connect to 30+ accounting platforms and ERPs through a single unified API with Apideck.