RRSP vs TFSA — Which Account Should Hold Your Mutual Funds & ETFs?

This question deserves more than a two-sentence answer. The right choice depends on your tax bracket, retirement plan, withdrawal needs, and what you're investing in. Here's the full picture.

On This Page

  1. The Basics — What Each Account Actually Does
  2. 2026 Contribution Limits
  3. RRSP vs TFSA: Who Wins in Each Scenario
  4. What to Hold in Which Account
  5. The US Withholding Tax Issue (Most Sites Miss This)
  6. 5 Common Mistakes
  7. Withdrawal Strategy in Retirement

The Basics — What Each Account Actually Does

Both RRSP and TFSA let your investments grow without being taxed each year on dividends, capital gains, or interest. The difference is when you get the tax benefit:

🏦 RRSP — Tax Deferred

  • Contributions reduce your taxable income this year
  • Investments grow tax-free inside the account
  • You pay income tax when you withdraw
  • Ideally withdraw in retirement at a lower tax rate
  • Room is 18% of prior year earned income (up to annual max)
  • Unused room carries forward indefinitely
  • Must convert to RRIF by Dec 31 of the year you turn 71

💳 TFSA — Tax Free

  • Contributions are not tax-deductible
  • Investments grow tax-free inside the account
  • Withdrawals are completely tax-free, always
  • Withdrawals don't count as income for any government benefit calculation
  • Room accumulates from the year you turned 18 (if Canadian resident)
  • Withdrawn amounts restore your room January 1 of the following year
  • No age limit or forced conversion

2026 Contribution Limits

$32,490
RRSP 2026 annual limit (18% of 2025 earned income, capped here). Check your Notice of Assessment for your personal limit.
$7,000
TFSA 2026 annual limit. Cumulative room for someone 18+ in 2009 who has never contributed: $95,000.

TFSA Cumulative Room History

Your total TFSA room depends on when you turned 18 and became a Canadian resident. Here's the annual limit history for reference:

Total cumulative room as of January 1, 2026 if eligible since 2009: $102,000. (Verify your personal room at CRA My Account — it tracks your actual contributions and withdrawals.)

TFSA over-contribution warning: Unlike RRSP, which has a $2,000 lifetime over-contribution buffer, TFSA over-contributions are penalized at 1% per month on the excess. Re-contributing within the same calendar year a withdrawal was made is the most common mistake. Always check your room at CRA before contributing.

RRSP vs TFSA: Who Wins in Each Scenario

The classic advice — "RRSP if you're in a high bracket, TFSA if you're in a low bracket" — is correct but incomplete. Here's the fuller picture:

Scenario 1: You Expect a Lower Tax Rate in Retirement Than Today

→ RRSP wins. This is the ideal RRSP use case. If you're in the 40%+ marginal bracket now and expect to be in the 20–25% bracket in retirement, the math strongly favours RRSP. You get a 40% refund today and pay 20% on the way out — a genuine 20% spread on every dollar.

Scenario 2: You Expect the Same or Higher Tax Rate in Retirement

→ TFSA wins. If you're a government employee with a defined benefit pension, or expect significant RRIF withdrawals plus CPP plus OAS, your retirement income might be higher than your working income. TFSA growth is tax-free regardless of withdrawal rate.

Scenario 3: You're a Low-to-Moderate Income Earner

→ TFSA first, usually. The RRSP deduction is worth less when you're in a lower bracket today. TFSA room is more valuable for people who may qualify for income-tested benefits in retirement (GIS, GST/HST credit, provincial top-ups). RRSP withdrawals count as income; TFSA withdrawals do not.

Scenario 4: You Need the Money Before Retirement

→ TFSA, no contest. RRSP withdrawals are taxed immediately and you lose the room permanently (with two exceptions: Home Buyers' Plan and Lifelong Learning Plan). TFSA withdrawals restore room the following January 1. If there's any chance you'll need the money in the next 5–10 years, TFSA is safer.

Scenario 5: First Home Purchase

→ FHSA first, then consider both RRSP and TFSA. The First Home Savings Account (FHSA), introduced in 2023, gives you tax-deductible contributions AND tax-free withdrawals for a qualifying first home purchase — the best of both worlds. Max $40,000 lifetime contribution. If you're a first-time buyer, max this before contributing to either RRSP or TFSA.

Scenario 6: You're Worried About Government Benefits Clawbacks

→ TFSA strongly preferred. OAS begins clawback at net income over ~$90,997 (2025 threshold — confirm current figure at canada.ca). GIS reduces for any income. RRIF withdrawals push both thresholds. TFSA withdrawals are invisible to these calculations. For people who'll be near the clawback thresholds, this is a massive advantage.

💡 Real-World Example: The Pension Earner

A teacher (age 50) contributing the max to both accounts: her defined benefit pension will pay $55,000/year in retirement. Combined with CPP ($12,000) and OAS ($8,000), she'll have $75,000 baseline income — already in a decent bracket before any savings withdrawals.

Withdrawing from her RRIF on top of that pushes her toward OAS clawback territory and causes higher taxes on her pension income. Her TFSA withdrawals are invisible to all of this — no OAS clawback risk, no additional tax on other income.

Lesson: If your employer pension or CPP + OAS is already going to cover your basic needs, TFSA may be the more valuable account — even in high-earning working years.

What to Hold in Which Account (Asset Location)

Beyond the "which account to fill first" question, there's a secondary optimization: which specific investments should live in each account? This matters more as your portfolio grows.

In your RRSP:

In your TFSA:

In a non-registered account (if you've maxed both):

The US Withholding Tax Issue — What Most Sites Miss

This is the single biggest optimization most Canadian investors overlook:

The US charges a 15% withholding tax on dividends paid to Canadian investors on US stocks. However:

What this means practically: if you hold XEQT, VEQT, or a US equity ETF, your RRSP is the better home — especially for the US-equity portion. The impact depends on the dividend yield of your fund (typically 1–2% on equity ETFs), but over decades it adds up.

Note: All-in-one ETFs like XEQT and VEQT hold other iShares ETFs inside them, not the US stocks directly. There's an additional layer of withholding that happens at the "fund of funds" level that isn't fully recovered even in an RRSP. The optimal approach (holding individual component ETFs directly) is more complex but more efficient. For most investors, XEQT in an RRSP is close enough.

Important nuance: The withholding tax discussion gets complicated quickly, and the rules differ for direct US-listed ETFs (e.g., VTI) versus Canadian-listed wrappers (e.g., XUU). Justin Bender at PWL Capital has published detailed analysis on this — search "Canadian portfolio manager withholding taxes" for the definitive breakdown.

5 Common RRSP/TFSA Mistakes

Withdrawal Strategy in Retirement

Most retirement planning content focuses on accumulation. The decumulation side — which accounts to draw from and when — is equally important and much harder to generalize.

The basic framework:

  1. Years 65–71: If you have a pension or other income sources, consider delaying RRIF conversions and drawing down TFSA selectively. The goal is keeping income low enough to preserve OAS and avoid clawback.
  2. Age 71 required RRIF conversion: Your RRSP must convert to an RRIF and minimum withdrawals begin. The minimums increase with age — by 80+, you're forced to withdraw 6–7%+ annually regardless of market conditions. Plan for this.
  3. TFSA withdrawals later: Because TFSA doesn't affect income calculations, you can withdraw in any amount in any year without tax consequences. It's a powerful flexibility tool in retirement.
  4. Spousal RRSP considerations: If one partner earns significantly more, a spousal RRSP allows the higher earner to contribute to an account in the lower earner's name, splitting retirement income and potentially saving thousands in taxes annually.

This is an area where paying for a fee-only financial planner (not a commission-based advisor) can genuinely pay for itself many times over. A proper decumulation plan that avoids OAS clawback and smooths tax brackets is worth the cost.

→ For current contribution limits and your personal room, log in to CRA My Account at canada.ca — it tracks everything automatically.

This guide is for educational purposes — it's not tax advice or financial planning advice. RRSP/TFSA rules, contribution limits, and OAS thresholds change annually. Verify all figures at canada.ca or with a registered financial planner. The withholding tax discussion is a simplification; specific treatment varies by fund structure. For complex situations (high net worth, defined benefit pension, business owner), work with a fee-only certified financial planner (CFP).