ADVISOR

What Is A TFSA?

Tax Free Savings Account TFSA

A TFSA is a registered savings account that allows you to invest your money tax-free. The TFSA is a tax-advantaged investment plan designed to motivate Canadians to invest in their future. With the TFSA, you have the freedom to deposit cash or explore a multitude of investment options including stocks, bonds, and GICs. The best part? In a TFSA, you can enjoy tax-free interest, dividends, and capital gains on your investments, both while they grow and when you withdraw them. So why wait? Start maximizing your savings potential with the TFSA today.

How Can I open a TFSA?

You can open a TFSA at any financial institution in Canada, but at Insurance Wealth Infinite Banking, our advisors use the TFSA as an investment rather than a savings account. This means, we recommend funds that are well-managed and historically perform better than conservative fixed-income funds. We assess your investment risk profile, your investment goals and timeline and build a diverdified portfolio that will bring tax-free gains. You can contribute up to a certain amount each year. The contribution limit for 2023 is $6,500, and any unused contribution room can be carried forward to future years. If you first opened a Tax-Free Savings Account in 2009, your contribution room would be $88,000.

How Does a TFSA work?

A TFSA often thought of as a savings account. And while it is one, it’s better utilized as a place to hold different types of assets like stocks, mutual funds, bonds, Guaranteed Income Certificates (GICs) and Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs). This is because any earnings made on your account holdings—like dividends from your investments or interest from your savings—are tax-free. And you can withdraw anything from the account, included contributions, earnings, dividends and capital gains earned in the account, tax-free as well. Of course, there are exceptions, but this is generally the case.

How Do TFSA Contributions Work?

TFSAs have limits to how much you can contribute. Your “contribution room” is the amount you’re allowed to contribute to your TFSA and it begins accumulating from the time you’re 18 and a resident of Canada— even if you haven’t opened a TFSA or filed taxes. Meaning, if you’ve just opened a TFSA for the first time this year, you’d have $88,000 in contribution room, if you were 18 years or older in 2009. However, had you contributed in the past, you’d have eaten away at the contribution room and you would have a lower amount left.
Total cash contribution limit as of 2023 = $88,000, not including any earnings, interest and dividends that have accumulated in the TFSA.
If you haven’t maximized the yearly contribution limits and have withdrawn from the account, those amounts carry over to the following year, beginning January 1.

What Happens if I Over-contribute To My TFSA?

If you over-contributed, you will have to pay a penalty of 1% per month on the amount you over-contributed (not the whole account value). This is the baseline penalty, but things like the time of the year you contributed and the total excess amount can affect how much you pay in penalties.

For example, say you open an account in February and immediately contribute the maximum of $6,500. However, say you then get a $2,000 bonus from your job in October (congrats!) and you decide to put that in your TFSA, too.

Problem is, you’ve now put in $8,500, which is an overcontribution of $2,000. If you don’t withdraw any money this year, you have to pay penalties. So the math would look like the following:

$2,000 x 1% x 3 months = $60.If you had taken it out as soon as you realized, say in November, you would pay a tax of:

$2,000 x 1% x 1 month = $20.

What Are the Benefits of a TFSA?

There are so many benefits to having a TFSA.

What Are the Downsides of a TFSA?

Like everything that sounds too good to be true, there are some downsides to a TFSA.

How Is a TFSA Different from an RRSP?

The big difference between a TFSA and an RRSP are the taxes and flexibility. You don’t pay taxes on withdrawals from a TFSA but you do with an RRSP (or when it’s converted to an RRIF).

You also don’t get the tax deduction for TFSA contributions (as you would for an RRSP). Essentially, contributions to your RRSP are deducted from your taxable income that year. For example, if you make $50,000 per year pre-tax and contribute $10,000 to your RRSP, your income for that year will be taxed as if you made $40,000. This could mean a bigger tax refund (or that you owe less money in taxes, if it swings that way).

However, the RRSP is way less flexible than a TFSA because it’s meant as a retirement savings plan. It’s not in your best interest to make withdrawals, since they will be subject to a withholding tax. The one exception is that the RRSP can be used with the Home Buyers’ Plan, wherein you can withdraw $35,000 from your RRSP to use toward the purchase of your first home.

Who Can Open a TFSA?

Any Canadian citizen or resident who is at least 18 years old and has a valid social insurance number can open a TFSA account. (You must be the age of majority or an adult in your province to open one.)

If you become a non-resident of Canada, you can keep your TFSA and won’t be taxed in Canada on any earnings in the account or on withdrawals from it. However, if you contribute to it while you are a non-resident, you will be penalized with a 1% tax for each month the contribution stays in your account. Plus, you may have to pay other taxes. Furthermore, contribution room will not build up while you’re a non-resident.

What Is a TFSA Best Used For?

Pretty much anything: Savings, a vacation, a down payment on a house or a car and retirement. Your goals determine your strategy and investments, so plan accordingly.

Bottom Line

The flexibility of the TFSA makes it an appealing tool to have in a financial plan. Partnered with other plans like the RRSP and the FHSA, you’ll have a financial plan that will cover pretty much any big life events.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is the yearly TFSA contribution?
What happens if I over-contribute to my TFSA?
What is considered day trading in a TFSA?
When can I open a TFSA?
What investments can I hold in a TFSA?

More from

Why Are Prices So High In Canada?
By Jordan Lavin Contributor

Why Are Interest Rates So High?
By Aaron Broverman Editor

How RRSP Matching Works In Canada
By Renee Sylvestre-Williams Contributor

Twitter Partners With eToro To Offer Stock and Crypto Trading—Just Not In Canada
By Aaron Broverman Editor

Top 9 Investing Trends For 2023
By E. Napoletano Contributor

Stock Market Outlook For 2023
By Wayne Duggan Contributor

Information provided on Forbes Advisor is for educational purposes only. Your financial situation is unique and the products and services we review may not be right for your circumstances. We do not offer financial advice, advisory or brokerage services, nor do we recommend or advise individuals or to buy or sell particular stocks or securities. Performance information may have changed since the time of publication. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Forbes Advisor adheres to strict editorial integrity standards. To the best of our knowledge, all content is accurate as of the date posted, though offers contained herein may no longer be available. The opinions expressed are the author’s alone and have not been provided, approved, or otherwise endorsed by our partners.
Renee Sylvestre-Williams is a finance and business reporter. In her more than 10 years of journalism, her work has been published in the Globe and Mail, Flare, Canadian Living, Canadian Business, the Toronto Star and Forbes. She also publishes a biweekly newsletter, The Budgette, (now an audiobook) where she provides financial education for single earners.