Investment in Canada’s fintech sector moderated to more historical levels in 2025 following a record high the previous year, according to KPMG International’s Pulse of Fintech H2’25 and FY25 report. Total investment across venture capital, private equity and mergers and acquisitions hit US$2.4 billion across 113 deals in 2025, according to data collected by PitchBook.
Despite the year-over-year drop in headline value – US$9.9 billion was invested across 161 deals in 2024, thanks to two large transactions – the report points to a more measured and disciplined investment environment, with sustained interest in later stage companies, platform acquisitions and strategically important fintech subsectors such as artificial intelligence and digital assets.
Investment accelerated in the second half of 2025, with US$327 million invested in Q3 across 26 deals, and US$662 million across 16 deals in Q4. While deal counts declined quarter over quarter, average deal values increased, reflecting growing investor selectivity and a preference for scale, profitability and proven technology capabilities.
The three largest investments in Canadian fintechs last year included:
A US$898 million private equity buyout of Converge Technology Solutions by H.I.G. Capital
Wealthsimple’s US$536 million equity raise, co-led by Dragoneer Investment Group and GIC, with participation from CPP Investments and existing shareholders
Ripple’s US$200 million acquisition of Rail, strengthening its stablecoin payments platform
Dubie Cunningham, a partner in KPMG Canada’s Banking and Capital Markets Practice specializing in fintech says last year’s investment activity shows investors are seeking mature and stable Canadian fintechs with strong customer penetration and scalable platforms – a trend she expects to continue in 2026.
“The investment appetite for Canadian fintechs will continue to grow in 2026, as investors prioritize quality, scale and strategic fit, signalling a market that is maturing and aligning more closely with longterm value creation,” she says.
One area of the fintech market Ms. Cunningham is keeping an eye on in 2026 is challenger banks, where funding and scale are maturing, enabling growth and more innovative product offerings.
“Canada’s challengerbank market is poised for momentum in 2026 as newer entrants launch more competitive products, improve customer experiences and strike new partnerships. The roll out of Canada’s open banking framework – expected this year – will also serve as a catalyst for more investment in the sector,” she adds.