Is Wealthsimple Safe? What Canadians Need to Know
Over 3 million Canadians use Wealthsimple. Here is what actually protects your money, what does not, and how to think clearly about platform risk.
The short answer
Yes, Wealthsimple is safe in every meaningful sense for a Canadian investor holding XEQT. It is federally regulated, a CIPF member, and holds your securities separately from its own corporate assets. Your XEQT units cannot be used to pay Wealthsimple's corporate debts if the company runs into financial trouble.
The longer answer requires understanding exactly what different types of protection do and do not cover, because most people conflate three different risks: platform insolvency, investment losses, and fraud. These require different conversations.
CIPF protection explained
The Canadian Investor Protection Fund (CIPF) protects client assets held at a member brokerage if that brokerage becomes insolvent. Wealthsimple is a CIPF member. Coverage is up to $1,000,000 per account category.
The account categories are: general accounts (non-registered), registered accounts combined (TFSA, RRSP, RRIF, and similar), and futures accounts. If you hold a $200,000 TFSA and a $300,000 RRSP at Wealthsimple, both fall under the registered accounts category and are covered together up to $1,000,000. If your total registered holdings exceed $1,000,000, the amount above that limit is unprotected under CIPF.
CIPF coverage is not insurance against bad investments. If XEQT drops 40%, CIPF does not compensate you. CIPF only activates if Wealthsimple itself becomes insolvent and client assets are missing or insufficient to cover what clients are owed. This is a very different risk profile from investment performance risk. For a full comparison of Wealthsimple and its main competitor, see Wealthsimple vs Questrade.
CIPF protects against the specific scenario where your brokerage goes bankrupt and your securities or cash have been lost, misappropriated, or are insufficient to satisfy client claims. Historically this has happened extremely rarely in Canada. CIPF has resolved several cases since its founding in 1969 and has always returned protected assets to clients in full.
CIRO regulation: federal oversight
Wealthsimple is regulated by the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization (CIRO), the national self-regulatory organization that oversees investment dealers in Canada. CIRO was formed in 2023 through the amalgamation of IIROC (Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada) and the MFDA (Mutual Fund Dealers Association of Canada).
As a CIRO member, Wealthsimple must meet capital adequacy requirements, maintain detailed records of all client transactions, submit to regular audits and examinations, and comply with conduct standards designed to protect retail investors. This regulatory framework is the same one that governs RBC Direct Investing, TD Direct Investing, and every other Canadian investment dealer.
Wealthsimple is not a bank and is not regulated by OSFI (the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions). This distinction matters in one specific way: cash held in a Wealthsimple account is not covered by CDIC deposit insurance (which protects deposits at banks, credit unions, and trust companies). Cash in your Wealthsimple brokerage account is covered by CIPF up to its limits, not CDIC.
Your assets are held separately
This is the most important structural protection for investors: your XEQT units are legally segregated from Wealthsimple's corporate assets. The company cannot use your securities to fund its own operations or pay its own debts.
Your XEQT units are held in trust by a custodian that Wealthsimple appoints for this purpose. In practice, this means that even if Wealthsimple ceased operations tomorrow, your XEQT units would not evaporate with the company. They would be returned to you through the CIPF resolution process, subject to the coverage limits described above.
This structure is required by CIRO rules and is fundamental to how brokerage accounts work in Canada. It is the same structure used by all regulated Canadian investment dealers, from online platforms like Wealthsimple and Questrade to full-service brokerages at the major banks.
Not a bank: what that actually means
Wealthsimple is not a bank. It does not hold deposits in the traditional sense, and cash in your brokerage account is not protected by CDIC. For XEQT investors, this distinction is almost entirely irrelevant. You are not keeping cash at Wealthsimple. You are holding XEQT units, which are securities covered by CIPF through the brokerage, not bank deposits covered by CDIC through a bank.
Wealthsimple does offer cash accounts through a separate entity, Wealthsimple Payments Inc., which partners with Schedule I Canadian banks for the underlying deposit product. That cash earns interest and has different protection mechanics than brokerage assets. For XEQT investors using the brokerage, this distinction does not apply.
Company background
Wealthsimple was founded in 2014 in Toronto by Michael Katchen, Brett Huneycutt, and Rudy Adler. It is majority-owned by Power Corporation of Canada, one of the largest and most established financial conglomerates in the country, with interests in Great-West Lifeco, IGM Financial, and other major financial institutions. Power Corporation's involvement provides meaningful institutional backing and credibility.
As of early 2026, Wealthsimple serves over 3 million Canadians and manages approximately $50 billion in assets. It has operated through multiple market cycles including the March 2020 crash and the 2022 bear market without any notable operational disruptions for clients. The company is Canada's largest independent online brokerage by account holders.
A platform managing $50 billion in client assets and serving 3 million users has significant financial incentive to maintain its operations and comply with regulatory requirements. Scale does not guarantee safety, but it does reduce the likelihood of the kind of sudden operational collapse that would threaten client assets at a smaller, less established firm. Ready to open an account? The step-by-step buying guide walks through every screen.
What is not covered
Understanding what protections do not cover is as important as understanding what they do.
Practical risk assessment
To put platform risk in perspective: the risk that Wealthsimple becomes insolvent in a way that causes unrecoverable losses to Canadian investors is extremely low. It has never happened to a major CIPF-member Canadian brokerage. The regulatory framework is specifically designed to prevent it, and the asset segregation requirement means your XEQT units exist independently of the company's financial health.
By contrast, the risk that you miss decades of compound growth by leaving money in a savings account because you were worried about platform safety is very real and very costly. The appropriate response to platform risk is awareness and use of the CIPF coverage limits, not avoidance of investing altogether.
The two-platform approach for large portfolios
For investors with registered portfolios exceeding $1,000,000 at a single brokerage, spreading assets across two CIPF-member institutions provides additional protection beyond the per-category limits. This is not a concern for most XEQT investors starting out, but it is worth knowing as your portfolio grows.
A practical split for a large XEQT investor might be holding the TFSA at Wealthsimple (for the zero commissions and ease of use) and the RRSP at Questrade or a bank brokerage. Both positions hold XEQT. Both are CIPF protected up to $1,000,000 per category at each institution, giving you a combined coverage ceiling of $2,000,000 in registered accounts across two platforms.
Wealthsimple is safe. Now start investing.
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