TFSA 2026 Room
$7,000
Lifetime Max (30)
$102,000
XEQT MER
0.20%
TFSA vs RRSPTAX-FREE GROWTH IN TFSATAX-DEFERRED IN RRSP2026 TFSA ROOM: $7,000RRSP DEADLINE: MARCH 1XEQT IN ANY REGISTERED ACCOUNTNO COMMISSION ON WEALTHSIMPLETFSA vs RRSPTAX-FREE GROWTH IN TFSATAX-DEFERRED IN RRSP2026 TFSA ROOM: $7,000RRSP DEADLINE: MARCH 1XEQT IN ANY REGISTERED ACCOUNT
Account Strategy

TFSA vs RRSP: Where Should You Hold XEQT?

Both accounts shelter your XEQT from tax. But the way they shelter it is completely different. Getting this right is worth tens of thousands of dollars over a career.

2026 TFSA Room$7,000
RRSP Limit18% of income
TFSA WithdrawalsTax-free
RRSP WithdrawalsTaxed as income
$7,0002026 TFSA Room
18%RRSP Limit of Income
$32,4902026 RRSP Dollar Cap
$102KTFSA Lifetime (age 30)

The one-line summary

If you are choosing between the two: use the TFSA first if you have room. Move to the RRSP once your TFSA is maxed, or if you are in a high tax bracket today and expect to be in a lower one in retirement. Hold XEQT in whichever account you open.

The TFSA and RRSP are not competitors. They are a team. The question is not which one is better; it is which one you should fill first given your income, your timeline, and your plans.

How a TFSA works

A Tax-Free Savings Account lets you invest after-tax dollars. Every dollar of growth, every dividend, every capital gain inside the account is yours to keep entirely tax-free. When you withdraw, nothing is owed to the CRA.

You earn TFSA contribution room every year starting from the later of 2009 or the year you turn 18. The annual room amount is set by the federal government. For 2026, it is $7,000. Unused room carries forward indefinitely, so if you have never contributed, you may have accumulated significant room. Find your exact TFSA room here.

When you withdraw from a TFSA, that room is returned to you on January 1 of the following year. This means you can take money out and put it back later without permanently losing the contribution space. This flexibility has no equivalent in any other Canadian registered account.

TFSA Annual Contribution Limits : Recent History
2019
$6,000
2020
$6,000
2021
$6,000
2022
$6,000
2023
$6,500
2024
$7,000
2025
$7,000
2026
$7,000
Lifetime cumulative room for someone who turned 18 in 2009 or earlier and has never contributed: $102,000 as of 2026.

How an RRSP works

A Registered Retirement Savings Plan lets you invest pre-tax dollars. Contributions are deducted from your taxable income in the year you contribute, generating a tax refund. Growth inside the account is sheltered until you withdraw, at which point withdrawals are taxed as regular income.

Your annual RRSP contribution limit is 18% of your previous year's earned income, up to a dollar cap. For 2026, that cap is $32,490. Unused room also carries forward, so if you have never maximized your RRSP, you likely have significant accumulated room visible in your CRA My Account or on your Notice of Assessment.

Unlike the TFSA, RRSP withdrawals are permanent. When you take money out, you do not get that contribution room back. The one exception is specific programs: the Home Buyers Plan (up to $60,000) and the Lifelong Learning Plan, both of which allow temporary withdrawals with repayment rules. If you are saving for a first home, the FHSA combines the best of both accounts and is worth understanding before choosing between them.

Most investors convert their RRSP to a RRIF (Registered Retirement Income Fund) by age 71, at which point mandatory minimum withdrawals begin. Those withdrawals are taxed at your marginal rate in retirement, which is ideally lower than the rate at which you made the contributions.

Key differences side by side

FeatureTFSARRSP
Contribution with After-tax dollars Pre-tax dollars
Tax on growth None, ever Deferred until withdrawal
Tax on withdrawal None Taxed as income
Withdrawal room Returns Jan 1 next year Lost permanently
Annual room (2026) $7,000 18% of income, max $32,490
Eligibility age 18+ (Canadian resident) Any age with earned income
Deadline to contribute No deadline March 1 of following year
Mandatory conversion None RRIF by age 71
Impact on benefits None May affect OAS/GIS in retirement
Best for Flexibility, any goal High-income earners, retirement

XEQT in a TFSA

This is the most common setup for Canadian XEQT investors, and for good reason. Every dollar of growth is truly yours to keep. Distributions are received tax-free. You can withdraw any amount at any time without triggering a tax bill.

The math is clean: if your XEQT position grows from $50,000 to $200,000 over twenty years inside a TFSA, you pay zero tax on that $150,000 gain. Take it all out at once to put a down payment on a house, pay for a child's education, or simply enjoy in retirement. The CRA sees none of it.

There is one small asterisk. US-listed stocks pay dividends subject to a 15% US withholding tax at source. Inside a TFSA, this withholding tax is not recoverable by treaty (unlike an RRSP). Because XEQT holds US equities through its underlying ETFs, some withholding drag applies. The estimated annual drag is small: roughly 0.10 to 0.15% of portfolio value. On a $50,000 position, that is about $50 to $75 per year. For most investors, the flexibility of the TFSA far outweighs this cost.

The TFSA advantage in plain English

You pay tax on the $7,000 you earn and contribute. You pay no tax on the $200,000 it might become. The CRA never sees the growth. This is one of the most powerful wealth-building tools ever created for Canadian investors, and most people are significantly underutilizing it.

XEQT in an RRSP

An RRSP is an outstanding home for XEQT, particularly for investors in higher tax brackets who expect their income in retirement to be lower than it is today.

The mechanism works like this: you earn $120,000, you contribute $20,000 to your RRSP, and you pay tax on $100,000 instead. At a 43% marginal rate, that contribution generates roughly $8,600 in tax savings immediately. That money compounds inside the RRSP alongside your XEQT holdings. In retirement, when you withdraw the funds as income, you pay tax at whatever rate applies to your retirement income, ideally something significantly lower than 43%.

An important RRSP advantage for XEQT specifically: US dividends are exempt from the 15% withholding tax inside an RRSP under the Canada-US tax treaty. This means the RRSP is actually slightly more tax-efficient than the TFSA for holding US equities like those inside XEQT's underlying ETFs. The practical difference is small but real.

The withholding tax edge you should know

This is the one technical point that genuinely matters for XEQT investors choosing between accounts. US companies pay dividends subject to a 15% withholding tax. How that is treated depends entirely on your account type:

AccountUS Withholding TaxNet Effect
RRSP Eliminated by Canada-US tax treaty Full US dividend received
TFSA 15% withheld, not recoverable ~0.10 to 0.15% drag per year
Non-registered 15% withheld, but claimable as foreign tax credit Partially recovered at tax time

For most investors with modest portfolios, this distinction does not justify changing your account strategy. The TFSA's flexibility and simplicity usually win. But for investors with very large RRSP and TFSA balances optimizing at the margin, it may make sense to hold more of the international and emerging markets ETFs (XEF, XEC) in the TFSA and heavier US equity exposure in the RRSP.

Which account is right for you?

Start with a TFSA if you...
Are in a low or middle income bracket today
Might need access to the money before retirement
Are saving for a flexible goal (not exclusively retirement)
Have contribution room available
Are a student, early career, or new to investing
Expect your income to rise significantly in future years
Prioritize RRSP if you...
Are in a high tax bracket (40%+ marginal rate)
Will not need the money until retirement
Expect your retirement income to be significantly lower
Have already maxed your TFSA
Want to reduce your current-year tax bill meaningfully
Are using the Home Buyers Plan (up to $60,000 withdrawal)

A practical order of priority

Most financial planners recommend this sequence. Adjust based on your specific income and goals.

1
Emergency fund first (outside any registered account)
Three to six months of expenses in a high-interest savings account. This is not an investment. It is the foundation that prevents you from selling XEQT at the worst possible moment.
2
Max your TFSA contribution room each year
Tax-free growth with full withdrawal flexibility. For most Canadians under 50, this is the first registered account to fill. Buy XEQT inside it and let it compound.
3
Contribute to RRSP, especially if income is high
Once your TFSA is maxed or if you are in a high bracket, RRSP contributions deliver an immediate tax refund. Reinvest that refund into more XEQT for compounding leverage.
4
Consider an FHSA if buying a first home
The First Home Savings Account is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity combining RRSP-style deductibility with TFSA-style tax-free withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase. Use it before contributing extra to an RRSP.
5
Non-registered account for overflow
After all registered room is used, a non-registered account holding XEQT is still highly tax-efficient. Capital gains are taxed at 50% inclusion. Eligible Canadian dividends get the dividend tax credit. It is not tax-free, but it is manageable.

When you hold XEQT in both accounts

Many investors eventually hold XEQT in both a TFSA and an RRSP, especially those who have been investing for a decade or more. This is not complicated. You are simply holding the same ETF in two different tax shelters. The XEQT in each account grows independently, and you withdraw from each account strategically in retirement based on your tax situation that year.

The key distinction in retirement: TFSA withdrawals are invisible to the CRA and do not affect income-tested benefits like Old Age Security (OAS) or the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS). RRSP and RRIF withdrawals count as income and can trigger OAS clawback if they push you above the threshold (approximately $90,997 in 2026). This is worth planning around.

The retirement sequencing insight

In early retirement, when your income may be low, it often makes sense to draw from your RRSP or RRIF first to fill low tax brackets, then supplement with tax-free TFSA withdrawals. This can reduce the total lifetime tax you pay on your XEQT gains. A fee-only financial planner can model this for your specific numbers.

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Disclaimer: This content is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. TFSA and RRSP rules are established by the Canada Revenue Agency and may change. Always verify current limits at canada.ca or consult a qualified tax advisor for advice specific to your situation. This site may receive affiliate compensation for Wealthsimple account referrals at no cost to you.