Stock and postage are the visible tenth of the iceberg. Here’s the staff time, controls, and exception handling hiding underneath — and a formula to count them honestly.
Ask a bookkeeper what a cheque actually costs and you will hear the price of the cheque stock and the stamp — somewhere around two dollars. Ask a CFO who has traced the workflow end to end and the answer is usually somewhere between $15 and $25 per cheque. Neither of them is wrong. They are just counting different things.
This guide breaks down the full cost of issuing a business cheque in Canada: the visible supplies, the labour hiding in plain sight, the exception handling nobody budgets for, and a simple formula you can run on your own volume this afternoon.
These are the line items that show up on invoices, so they are the ones everyone quotes:
| Item | Typical cost per cheque |
|---|---|
| Laser cheque stock (security features, MICR-ready) | $0.25 – $0.55 |
| MICR toner & printer wear | $0.05 – $0.12 |
| Window envelope | $0.06 – $0.10 |
| Canada Post lettermail postage | $1.24 – $1.44 |
| Visible total | $1.60 – $2.20 |
If cheques really cost two dollars, nobody would outsource them and banks would not publish white papers about payment modernization. The real money is in what happens around the paper.
Walk one cheque run through your office and time each step. A typical mid-sized Canadian business touches every cheque at least seven times:
At a loaded labour rate of $35–$45/hour for AP staff — more when a controller or owner is the one signing — 10–15 minutes of combined touch time is $6–$11 per cheque before anything goes wrong.
Plan for 2–5% of cheques to misbehave: returned for a bad address, lost in the mail, stale-dated, or disputed. Each exception triggers a stop payment ($12–$25 in bank fees), a reissue (the full cost again), and 20–45 minutes of investigation. Spread across a run, exceptions quietly add $0.75–$2.00 to every cheque you send.
Cheque fraud remains the most common payment fraud in Canada. Proper controls — positive pay, dual approvals, secure stock storage, segregation of duties — cost real administrative time. Skipping them costs more: the average attempted cheque fraud incident runs into five figures, and recovery is never certain.
A dedicated MICR printer ($800–$3,000 plus maintenance), locked storage for blank stock, void/spoil handling, and the audit overhead of proving all of it works. Amortized, call it $0.30–$0.80 per cheque at typical volumes.
Worked example — 200 cheques a month, 12 minutes touch time, $40/hr loaded rate, 3% exceptions at $45 each, $2,400/yr infrastructure:
Total: $12.25 per cheque — about $29,400 a year, of which only $4,560 is the part most businesses count. And that is a clean-run estimate at a healthy volume; smaller volumes and messier sign-off chains push it past $20.
An outsourced fulfillment service prints, stuffs, mails, tracks, and reconciles for a flat per-item rate. PaymentsNow charges a flat $2.60 CAD per cheque — printing, secure stock, envelope, standard Canada Post delivery, tracking, and reporting all inside the one rate. Your remaining internal cost is the few seconds it takes to upload a file and click approve — the approval workflow, live cheque register, and delivery tracking are part of the rate.
| Cost component | In-house | Outsourced |
|---|---|---|
| Supplies, print, stuff, mail | $1.60 – $2.20 | Inside the flat $2.60 rate |
| Staff touch time | $6 – $11 | ≈ $0.20 (upload & approve) |
| Exception handling | $0.75 – $2.00 | Largely handled by provider |
| Equipment & controls | $0.30 – $0.80 | $0 |
| Typical all-in | $12 – $25 | ≈ $2.80 ($2.60 rate + minutes of staff time) |
Often, yes — low-volume issuers carry the worst per-cheque economics because equipment and setup time amortize over so few items. With no monthly fee and pay-as-you-go pricing, the break-even is usually immediate.
EFT removes postage and stock but keeps most of the approval and reconciliation labour, and many counterparties — landlords, trades, refund recipients — still require or prefer cheques. The right answer is usually a mix, issued from one workflow.
The signature chase. Digital approval rules with signature images applied at print time remove days of calendar lag and the most expensive labour in the chain — see how approvals and security features work.
Upload a file, approve the run, and we print, mail, track, and reconcile every cheque. Your first five are free.