Canadian Transit Numbers > SK > Saskatoon > Bank Of Montreal

Routing Numbers & Transit Numbers for Bank Of Montreal Branches in Saskatoon City

Routing Number Transit Number State City Address
000100348 00348-001 SK Saskatoon P.O. Box 290, Saskatoon
000105548 05548-001 SK Saskatoon P.O. Box 290, Saskatoon
000105578 05578-001 SK Saskatoon 2325 Preston Ave., Saskatoon
000106028 06028-001 SK Saskatoon 409 Ludlow Street, Saskatoon
000106068 06068-001 SK Saskatoon 101 2nd Ave North, Saskatoon
000106188 06188-001 SK Saskatoon 300 Confederation Dr., Saskatoon
000106528 06528-001 SK Saskatoon 134 Primrose Dr, Saskatoon
000126808 26808-001 SK Saskatoon 2122 8th Street East, Saskatoon
000126918 26918-001 SK Saskatoon 134 Primrose Dr, Saskatoon
000134658 34658-001 SK Saskatoon 111 Slimmon Road, Saskatoon
000137398 37398-001 SK Saskatoon 101 Second Ave. N., Saskatoon
Search Bank / Trust / Credit Union
What is Transit number and a Routing number in Canada?
In Canada, banks and other financial institutions identify their branches with a unique transit number (also known as branch numbers). A transit number is made up of five-digits and together with the institution number they form a routing number.
The transit number - five digits - shows which branch you opened your account at. The institution number - three digits - identifies your bank. The account number - seven to twelve digits - identifies your individual account. Bank routing numbers are used to process cheque and electronic transactions such as funds transfers, direct deposits, digital cheques, recurring loan and bill payments.

There are two different formats for routing numbers:
Electronic Transactions Routing Numbers (ETF): 0XXXYYYYY
Paper Transactions Transit Numbers (MICR): YYYYY-XXX
where XXX is the institution number and YYYYY is the transit number.