As of Nov 2009 it's almost back up to 1 Canadian Dollar = 1 USD, but that probably won't last. Back in 2002 .70 cents of Canadian Dollar would get your a dollar USD. Our Federal Reserve has been quite the bad boys with with Greenspan and Bernanke keeping interest rates too low causing a flood of easy money to cause worldwide risky speculation and thus economic shocks.
Get an exact spot check go here:
www.xe.com
Or to see a graph of USD to CAD the last 60 years see here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_dollar#Value
1 US dollar is equal to .9843 Canadian dollar.
60 Canadian dollars are not equal to 60 US dollars. The current rate of conversion is one Canadian dollar is equal to 0. 92 US dollars which means that 60 Canadian dollars will be equal to 55. 04 US dollars as of August 2014.
1 and one third
If you go to Mexico, you can spend Canadian dollars at a 10x1 conversion rate (ten Pesos equal one Canadian dollar). The actual conversion rate is about 12x1, but it changes fairly frequently. You can look it up on a site like xe.com.
The Euro is the currency of the European Union and the Canadian dollar is the currency of Canada. On March 6, 2015, one Euro was equal to $1.37 in Canadian currency. The conversion varies, so to get the latest conversion it's best to use a currency converter, which are available online.
As of today (18 July 2014); 1 US dollar = 1.0763 Canadian dollar
One Canadian dollar is equal to 0.92 United States dollars. One United States dollar is equal to 1.08 Canadian dollars.
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Today - 18 July 2009 - 1 Canadian Dollar will get you 1.12 Australian Dollars.... but remember to allow for bank/currency conversion charges.
Rates change every day. For the latest conversion factors go to a site such as www.xe.com.
If you exchanged one Canadian dollar for US currency, you would receive one US dollar.
According to the exchange rate for August 19, 2009: 1 US Dollar = 1.09 Canadian Dollars 1 Canadian Dollar = 0.91 US Dollars