Historical AED to CAD rates for 2025–2026. The current reference rate is approximately 0.3762 CAD per 1 AED. Rates shown are indicative editorial snapshots — verify with your transfer provider before sending.
Indicative monthly snapshots. Not a guaranteed or verified live rate. Source: remit.ae editorial estimate based on open exchange rate references.
| Month | AED to CAD Rate | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Jan 2026 | 0.3721 | CAD/USD 0.720 — trade tension impact |
| Feb 2026 | 0.3740 | CAD recovery after tariff pause |
| Mar 2026 | 0.3755 | Bank of Canada on hold |
| Apr 2026 | 0.3760 | CAD/USD 0.730 range |
| May 2026 | 0.3762 | CAD stable |
| Jun 2026 | 0.3762 | Current reference rate |
Rates are indicative editorial snapshots, not verified live data. Always verify with your provider.
The UAE Dirham (AED) is fixed to the US Dollar at exactly 3.6725 AED per USD — this is the CBUAE official peg rate and does not change. The Canadian Dollar (CAD) rate against AED changes when the CAD moves against USD.
Over the past 30 days (May–June 2026) the AED to CAD rate has been in the 0.375–0.377 range. The CAD has stabilised after earlier 2025 weakness related to US trade tensions.
Corridor note: Canada transfers arrive via Interac e-Transfer (instant for most Canadian banks) or EFT (1–3 days). Most major providers including Wise and Remitly cover UAE to Canada.
Over 90 days (March–June 2026) the rate moved from 0.3755 to 0.3762 — modest CAD stabilisation. The Bank of Canada held rates steady while the Fed began cutting, supporting CAD relative to earlier 2025 lows.
Around mid-March 2026 the AED to CAD rate was approximately 0.3755 CAD per AED. Verify historical rates on xe.com or Bank of Canada data.
Wise offers among the best rates for AED to CAD, typically within 0.3–0.5% of mid-rate. Remitly and Instarem also serve this corridor. Delivery to Canadian banks via Interac e-Transfer or EFT takes 1–3 business days.
Canada is a major crude oil exporter. Higher global oil prices boost Canadian export revenues, increasing demand for CAD from oil trade settlements and supporting CAD against USD. Since AED is pegged to USD, stronger CAD means fewer CAD per AED.