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Interac Summer Spending Snapshot Reveals How Global Pressures Are Reshaping Canadians’ Purchase Habits

Local spending shift: SMBs recorded 15 million more Interac Debit transactions from April to July 2025 compared to the same period in 2024 

Global pressures are reshaping how Canadians shop — and the shift is showing up on their receipts. New survey data from Interac Corp. (Interac) reveals that nearly eight in ten Canadians (78 per cent) have redirected at least one monthly purchase from a big-box or international retailer to a local Canadian business since tariffs were first announced, with a quarter of Canadians shifting three to five purchases a month, and a fifth of Canadians pivoting six or more.

Interac Debit transaction data reflects the purchase pivot: for the first time in recent years, small and medium sized businesses (SMBs) consistently outpaced larger merchants in year-over-year volume growth between April-July 2025. During this period, SMBs saw an incremental 15 million Interac Debit transactions, compared with the same months in 2024.

“Earlier this year, consumers told us they intended to shop more locally in light of tariffs — and they’ve followed through. While larger merchants have traditionally led in Interac Debit volume growth, small and medium businesses are now growing their volume at a faster rate,” said Debbie Gamble, Group Head, Chief Strategy & Marketing Officer, Interac. “Our summer data snapshot shows Canadians are using their spending power with great intention — responding to global pressures through where they shop, what they buy and how they choose to pay.”

The new Interac data reveals five standout ways Canadians are spending this summer:

“How we choose to pay can make a meaningful difference for small businesses. Using Interac Debit helps keep more money with Canadian entrepreneurs — assisting them to reinvest in their businesses, hire locally and contribute to their communities,” added Gamble.

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