Short Answer
Yes. Most Canadians will benefit from using both accounts at different life stages. The RRSP and TFSA work completely independently — separate contribution limits, separate CRA tracking, and different tax mechanics.
How They Are Different
| Feature | RRSP | TFSA |
|---|---|---|
| Contribution limit source | 18% of prior year earned income, max $32,490 (2025) | Fixed annual limit ($7,000 in 2025) |
| Tax on contributions | Deductible (reduces taxable income now) | Not deductible |
| Tax on growth | Deferred (taxed on withdrawal) | None (tax-free always) |
| Tax on withdrawals | Fully taxable as income | None |
| Withdrawal room restored | No | Yes, January 1 of the following year |
| Account deadline | Must convert by age 71 | No deadline |
| Best for | High earners deferring income to lower-tax retirement | Flexible savings and tax-free compound growth |
Why Your Marginal Tax Rate Is the Key Variable
The RRSP deduction is worth more the higher your tax bracket. The TFSA advantage is worth more when you expect to be in a similar or higher tax bracket in the future.
2025 Federal marginal tax rates (approximate):
| Taxable income | Federal tax rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $57,375 | 15% |
| $57,376 – $114,750 | 20.5% |
| $114,751 – $158,519 | 26% |
| $158,520 – $220,000 | 29% |
| Over $220,000 | 33% |
Add provincial rates on top (ranges from ~6% to ~21% depending on province and bracket).
Example comparison:
| Scenario | RRSP deduction at $100,000 income | TFSA instead |
|---|---|---|
| Contribute $10,000 | ~$4,300 refund (43% combined rate) | $0 refund now, $0 tax on growth/withdrawals |
| Withdraw $10,000 at age 65 at $50,000 income | ~$2,000 tax (~20% combined rate) | $0 tax |
| Net RRSP benefit | ~$2,300 ($4,300 – $2,000) | $0 direct benefit, but compounded tax-free |
The RRSP wins here because you contributed at a 43% rate and withdrew at 20%.
The Optimal Contribution Sequence
Most financial advisors suggest this priority order:
| Step | Action | Why |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Contribute enough to get full employer RRSP/DPSP match | Immediate 50-100% return |
| 2 | Pay down high-interest debt (over ~6–7%) | Better guaranteed return than most investments |
| 3 | Max TFSA if income is below ~$60,000 | Tax-free withdrawals matter more at lower brackets |
| 4 | Max RRSP if income is above ~$60,000 | Deduction value is high |
| 5 | Use the other account once the first is optimized | Both deserve to be used over time |
This is a general framework. Your specific tax situation, province, debt load, and goals may shift the order.
Practical Example: Using Both at the Same Time
Profile: 34-year-old in Ontario earning $85,000
| Account | Action | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|
| Employer group RRSP | Contribute to get full 3% employer match | Free money — $2,550 matched contribution |
| TFSA | Contribute $7,000 | Tax-free flexible savings for medium-term goals |
| Personal RRSP | Contribute remaining room | Generates ~$3,000 refund at ~43% combined marginal rate |
This person is using both accounts simultaneously for different purposes.
Home Ownership and Both Accounts
If buying a home is a near-term goal, both accounts can contribute:
| Account | Home buying rule | Repayment required |
|---|---|---|
| RRSP (Home Buyers’ Plan) | Withdraw up to $60,000 per person ($120,000 per couple) | Yes, over 15 years |
| FHSA (First Home Savings Account) | Withdraw entire balance tax-free for first home | No |
| TFSA | Withdraw any amount tax-free | No, and room is restored Jan 1 next year |
The FHSA (launched 2023) gives a contribution deduction like an RRSP and withdrawals like a TFSA — exclusively for first-time home buyers. You can hold RRSP, TFSA, and FHSA simultaneously.
Common Mistakes When Using Both
- RRSP for short-term goals: Withdrawing from an RRSP before retirement triggers income tax plus withholding at source (10% on first $5,000, 20% on $5,001–$15,000, 30% over $15,000). Use the TFSA for short to medium-term goals.
- Using RRSP room that never existed: You only accumulate RRSP room from employment/self-employment/rental income. Investment income and government benefits don’t count.
- Ignoring unused room: Many Canadians have years of unused RRSP room. It never expires. A high-income year is a good time to catch up.
Bottom Line
You can and generally should have both an RRSP and TFSA. The question is not which one to pick — it is which to prioritize given your current tax bracket, goals, and timeline. High earners favour the RRSP deduction today; lower and middle earners often get more from the TFSA’s flexibility. Over a lifetime, most Canadians benefit from using both.