CAD/INR seasonality: Tax, festival, and wedding season effects
The Canadian Dollar–Indian Rupee pair climbed roughly 10% between early 2025 and late January 2026 — from ₹59 to peaks near ₹68. Traders watching India's festival calendar or Canada's tax deadlines might expect repeatable patterns in the pair.
Data from the past fourteen months, however, paints a different picture (and one worth understanding before placing calendar-based bets).
Our analysis examines whether CAD/INR shows genuine seasonality around five key periods:
- Canada's tax deadline (April 30).
- Wedding season peak (November–December).
- Year-end portfolio rebalancing (December–January).
- India's tax filing deadlines (September for AY 2025–26).
- Diwali and festive spending season (October–November).
What does 2025–2026 CAD/INR data actually show?
The pair moved from around ₹59.38 in early January 2025 to a 52-week high of ₹68.02 on January 29, 2026. The trajectory was a steady upward grind (not a pattern of predictable spikes around cultural or fiscal events). Forex traders expecting clean seasonal signals found little to work with.
Period | Avg CAD/INR | Low | High | Market context |
Jan–Feb 2025 | ₹60.40 | ₹59.38 | ₹61.40 | Steady post-holiday climb |
Jul–Sep 2025 (Tax prep) | ₹63.40 | ₹62.58 | ₹64.19 | Gradual uptrend — no tax-linked spike |
Oct 2025 (Diwali: Oct 21) | ₹63.15 | ₹62.53 | ₹63.63 | Minor dip pre-festive |
Nov–Dec 2025 (Weddings) | ₹64.25 | ₹62.79 | ₹66.13 | Late December peak tied to year-end flows |
Jan–Feb 2026 | ₹66.10 | ₹64.84 | ₹68.02 | New highs — no India-specific event driver |
The December 2025 high (₹66.13 on December 16) aligns more closely with global year-end portfolio adjustments than with Indian wedding demand. Similarly, the January 2026 peak (₹68.02) arrived amid no major Indian calendar event — suggesting macro forces at work rather than seasonal patterns.
Does India's tax season influence CAD/INR?
India's Assessment Year 2025–26 tax filing deadline fell on September 16, 2025. During that month, CAD to INR averaged ₹63.83 (high: ₹64.19, low: ₹63.52). The pair then dipped slightly into October — contradicting any theory of tax-driven INR strength (or weakness, for that matter).
NRI tax filings and repatriation flows do occur around March–April (India's fiscal year-end), but these movements represent a tiny fraction of daily forex volume. Institutional flows, central bank policy, and commodity prices dwarf individual remittance activity.
A Reuters report from March 2025 noted that INR saw "seasonally supportive inflows" heading into the fiscal year-end. The effect on CAD/INR, however, remained indirect at best. Price direction stayed tied to broader USD strength and Bank of Canada (BoC) policy signals rather than NRI tax calendar events.
What about Diwali and festive spending?
Diwali 2025 fell on October 21. Conventional wisdom suggests that gold imports, electronics purchases, and diaspora remittances during the festive season weaken INR (and push CAD/INR higher). The 2025 data tells a different story.
- CAD/INR averaged ₹63.15.
- The month's low (₹62.53) came on October 15 — before Diwali.
- Rates rose into November, but the climb was gradual (no spike)
Gold demand and import spikes can pressure INR, but RBI intervention and portfolio flows absorb these effects quickly. The festive season creates noise in the data — not a reliable, tradeable trend.
Additionally, increased gold purchases often occur through official channels that the RBI monitors and manages, smoothing out potential currency pressure.
Does the wedding season move the needle?
India's peak wedding season runs from late November through mid-December (and again in January–February).
Wedding-related spending — jewellery, travel, family gifts — often prompts Canadian NRIs to send money to India in larger amounts. The question is…does aggregate remittance volume move exchange rates?
Now, despite the intuitive appeal (families do send more during wedding season), no published study quantifies a CAD/INR wedding-season effect. The November–December 2025 price action (average ₹64.25; high ₹66.13) reflects broader year-end portfolio rebalancing rather than wedding remittances.
Wedding-related transfers matter to individual families. They do not, however, move exchange rates in a measurable, tradeable way. Remittance clusters lack the volume to compete with institutional flows (which run in the billions daily).
How do macro factors compare to seasonal patterns?
Interest rate differentials, commodity prices, and capital flows dominate the CAD/INR direction. Calendar events play a supporting role (at best) — and often serve as convenient post-hoc explanations for price moves driven by other factors entirely.
BoC policy
The Bank of Canada cut rates seven times between June 2024 and October 2025, landing at 2.25%. The BoC held at that level through January 2026, with RBC Economics forecasting no further cuts during 2026. CAD weakness during the cutting cycle pushed CAD/INR higher — a macro-driven move unrelated to Indian seasons.
The January 2026 rate hold, as noted by Governor Tiff Macklem, reflected concerns about trade policy uncertainty (particularly around CUSMA renegotiations) rather than domestic demand. CAD traders focused on these policy signals while seasonal narratives remained background noise.
Commodity linkage
Canada's economy is tied closely to energy exports. Oil price swings move CAD against most currencies (including INR). Winter energy demand (December–February) can support CAD, but the effect flows through commodity markets — not calendar superstition or cultural events.
Remittance volumes
India received a record $136 billion in remittances in FY 2025 (up 14% YoY), with Canada contributing a growing share. The RBI's 2025 Remittance Survey noted that over 50% of India's inflows now originate from advanced economies:
- Canada.
- Australia.
- Singapore.
- United States.
- United Kingdom.
Yet despite record volumes, remittance flows did not create discernible CAD/INR spikes during any specific season. The flows matter for India's balance of payments — they just don't move the exchange rate predictably.
Which periods are worth monitoring?
Despite weak seasonality, certain windows merit attention — not as trading triggers, but as context for understanding price action when moves coincide with these dates.
Period | Reasoning | 2025–2026 behaviour |
Late March–April | India fiscal year-end (NRI repatriation flows) | Potential INR support (indirect only) |
October–November | Diwali — festive import demand | Higher volatility, no reliable direction |
November–December | Wedding season; year-end rebalancing | Late December saw yearly highs |
December–February | CAD commodity seasonality (energy) | Can support CAD broadly |
January | Portfolio reallocation globally | January 2026 saw new highs at ₹68.02 |
None of the above periods create deterministic patterns. They offer probabilistic context for interpreting price moves — nothing more (and certainly not a trading strategy on their own).
What should CAD/INR traders take away?
CAD/INR does not exhibit strong, repeatable seasonality tied to Indian tax deadlines, festivals, or wedding seasons. The 2025–2026 data confirms that macro and policy drivers shape the pair's trajectory far more than cultural calendar events. Here’s what the takeaways are, from our analysis:
- Track commodity prices (particularly oil) for CAD bias.
- Avoid assuming cultural events create tradable forex patterns.
- Watch India's fiscal year-end (late March) for potential INR strength.
- Use seasonal insights as supplementary context, not primary signals.
- Monitor BoC announcements (eight fixed dates annually) for CAD direction.
The emotional pull of "wedding season demand" or "Diwali gold imports" makes for compelling narratives. The exchange rate, however, answers to larger forces. For those tracking CAD/INR, macro discipline beats calendar mysticism — and the data from 2025–2026 reinforces that hierarchy decisively.
Author

Muhammad Uddin
RemitBee
Muhammad Uddin is a financial content writer with a focus on global markets, foreign exchange, and digital payments. He creates clear, research-driven content aimed at helping readers better understand market trends and financial topics.


















