1935 The
Bank of Canada was created in 1934 and given responsibility, through an Act of Parliament, to regulate the country's money supply and to "promote the economic and financial welfare of Canada." Accordingly, it was given the exclusive right to issue bank notes in Canada. On 11 March 1935, the
Bank of Canada issued its first series of bank notes.
1937 The creation of a second series of bank notes, only two years after the first issue, was prompted by changes in Canadian government legislation requiring the Bank of Canada to produce bilingual bank notes. Another contributing factor was the death of
King George V on 20 January 1936, and the subsequent abdication of
Edward VIII.
1954 Canadian Landscape The third series of banknotes of the Canadian dollar issued by the
Bank of Canada was the Canadian Landscape series. The banknotes were designed in 1952 following the
accession of
Elizabeth II to the throne after the death of her father
George VI. Her portrait appeared on all denominations in the series. The banknote designs differed significantly from the 1937 series, though the denomination colours and
bilingual printing were retained. The design changes were made to portray themes more typical of Canada. This was the first series to include the
Canadian coat of arms, which appeared centrally in the background of the obverse. The banknote series became known as the "Devil's Head" series, because the hair behind the Queen's head looked somewhat like a grinning demon. This led to design modifications for all denominations. The second variant of the series was issued in 1956.
1969 Scenes of Canada Because of a growing concern over counterfeiting, the Bank of Canada began to release a new series of bank notes in 1969. This series represented another complete departure in design from earlier issues: • colourful, wavy patterns were introduced; • a new series of Canadian scenic vignettes was created; • portraits of former
Canadian prime ministers were re-introduced. Both Laurier and Macdonald were on the 1935 and 1937 series, but now joined by
King and
Borden. This was the last series to feature a $1 banknote, with the banknote replaced by a dollar coinknown as a
loonie for its design of a loon on the reversein 1987; printing of the $1 banknote ceased in 1989. However, there was a 21-month period where both the $1 bill and coin were produced concurrently, from June 1987 to April 1989.
1986 Birds of Canada In 1986 the Bank of Canada introduced new banknotes called the Birds of Canada series. The design on the back of each note features a bird indigenous to Canada with a background representing the typical landscape for that bird. The portraits on the front of the note were made larger than those of previous series, and a metallic patch was introduced on the larger notes. Each banknote weighs . This series was the first to include a bar code with the serial number. This allows the visually impaired to distinguish notes with the use of a hand-held device that tells the note's denomination. This was also the last series that the $2 and $1,000 notes were issued. The $2 note was withdrawn in 1996 and replaced by the $2 coin, known as the
toonie. The $1,000 note was withdrawn by the Bank of Canada on 12 May 2000, at the request of the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) as part of a program to reduce organized crime. At the time, 2,827,702 of the $1,000 bills were in
circulation; by 2011, fewer than 1million were in circulation, most held by organized crime.
2001 Canadian Journey Beginning in 2001, the Bank of Canada introduced a new series of notes called "Canadian Journey", featuring images of Canadian heritage and excerpts from
Canadian literature. The $10 was first issued on 17 January 2001; the $5 on 27 March 2002; the $100 note on 17 March 2004, the $20 on 29 September 2004, and the $50 on 17 November 2004. The $20, $50, and $100 notes introduce
watermark security features for the first time on Canadian currency since the four-dollar Dominion notes; they also boast significantly expanded
holographic security features. Also among the new features are a windowed colour-shifting thread woven into the paper, a see-through number, and enhanced fluorescence under ultraviolet lighting. These features are designed to help Canadians protect themselves by detecting counterfeit notes. All post-2001 series notes also include the
EURion constellation, on both sides of the note. The new notes have a
tactile feature, which is a series of raised dots (but not
Braille) in the upper left corner on the face of each note to aid the visually impaired in identifying currency denominations. The newer security features on the $20, $50, and $100 notes were added to an updated version of the $10 note released on 18 May 2005, and the Bank of Canada began issuing a $5 note with upgraded security features on 15 November 2006, as part of its ongoing effort to improve the security of Canadian bank notes. The illustrations on the front and back of the upgraded notes are the same as those on the $5 and $10 notes issued in 2001 and 2002. The "Canadian Journey" literary excerpts are printed in English and French, with the English versions being: • $5: The winters of my childhood were long, long seasons. We lived in three places—the school, the church, and the skating-rink—but our real life was on the skating-rink. (
Roch Carrier (born 1937) from his short story
Le chandail de hockey (
The Hockey Sweater)) • $10: In Flanders Fields the poppies blow / Between the crosses, row on row, / That mark our place, and in the sky / The larks, still bravely singing, fly / Scarce heard amid the guns below. (
John McCrae (1872–1918), from his poem
In Flanders Fields) • $20: Could we ever know each other in the slightest without the arts? (
Gabrielle Roy (1909–1983) from her novel
La Montagne secrète (
The Hidden Mountain)) • $50: All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights (from Article 1 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948) • $100: Do we ever remember that somewhere above the sky in some child's dream perhaps
Jacques Cartier is still sailing, always on his way always about to discover a new Canada? (
Miriam Waddington (1917–2004) from her poem
Jacques Cartier in Toronto) Canadian Journey banknotes (2004 style) incorporates background colour and consists of series years 2001, 2003, 2003A, 2004, 2004A and 2006. All the notes except the $100 note have additional series years 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2009A (some banknotes only). The $100 2009 series began issuing to the public in early 2010 and was printed in 2009 before they were issued. The 2004 to 2009 series of the $100 note was withdrawn from the circulation in November 2011. The $50 note was withdrawn on 26 March 2012, and $5–$20 notes would be withdrawn in the next 2 years before it will be officially announced.
2011 Frontier Beginning in 2011, the Bank of Canada introduced a new series of
polymer banknotes. The $100 note was issued on 14 November 2011; the $50 was issued on 26 March 2012; the $20 banknote was issued on 7 November 2012, and the $10 and $5 denominations were issued on 7 November 2013. These are the first Canadian notes produced on polymer. In place of a watermark are two visual features: a translucent maple leaf and a transparent window. The leaf includes a security feature that, when viewed close to the eye with a single-point light source behind, produces a circular image displaying the note's denomination. The window is fringed by maple leaves; at its top is a smaller version of the portrait, and at its bottom a light-refracting metallic likeness of an architectural feature from the parliament buildings. The portraits on the face are more centred on the note. The backs of the notes introduce new cultural and thematic imagery, but the literary quotation is not continued. The polymer notes continue the
tactile feature, from the Canadian Journey series.
2018 Vertical On
International Women's Day 2016, Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau announced that an iconic Canadian woman would be featured on one of the upcoming notes. On 8 December 2016, the
Government of Canada and the
Bank of Canada announced that civil rights activist
Viola Desmond would replace
John A. Macdonald (who had been on the face of the $10 note since 1971) as the first non-royal woman to appear alone on a regularly circulated Bank of Canada note. This note was released to the public on 19 November 2018. Beginning in 2018, newly designed Canadian banknotes (initially the $10 note) were
vertical in orientation.
Commemorative issues ‡ Withdrawn from circulation. Most currency withdrawn from circulation is still
legal tender. As of 1 January 2021, the $1, $2, $25, $500 and $1,000 bills from every Bank of Canada series are no longer legal tender. Despite the introduction of new notes, older notes are still in use. + Two varieties were printed, the first with conventional
serial numbers, the second with the double date "1867–1967" appearing twice instead. Neither type is scarce. Both varieties also have on the obverse a stylized
maple leaf with the double date below it. All notes of the 1954 series or later measure by . See also
Withdrawn Canadian banknotes. ==Myths==