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First TFSA Guide Canada 2026 | How to Open and Use Your TFSA

Updated

The TFSA is one of the best savings and investing tools available to Canadians. This guide explains everything you need to know to open yours and use it effectively.

What Is a TFSA?

A Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) is a registered account where:

  • All investment growth (interest, dividends, capital gains) is 100% tax-free
  • Withdrawals are tax-free and penalty-free at any time
  • Contribution room grows every year and unused room carries forward
Feature Detail
Annual contribution limit $7,000 (2026)
Cumulative room (if 18+ since 2009) $102,000
Minimum age 18 years old
Residency requirement Must be a Canadian resident
Tax on growth None
Tax on withdrawals None
Withdrawal restrictions None

How Contribution Room Works

Your room accumulates every January 1. If you have never contributed, you have significant room built up.

Cumulative TFSA Room by Year Turned 18

Year Turned 18 Total Room in 2026
2009 or earlier $102,000
2010 $95,000
2015 $60,000
2018 $39,500
2020 $25,500
2022 $17,500
2023 $13,500
2024 $7,000
Turns 18 in 2026 $7,000

Check your exact room: Log into CRA My Account → “TFSA room.”

Re-Contribution Rules

When you withdraw from your TFSA, that room is not immediately restored. It returns on January 1 of the following year.

Example:

  • January: Contribute $7,000 (full 2026 room used)
  • July: Withdraw $5,000
  • December: Remaining 2026 room = $0 (cannot re-contribute until January 1, 2027)
  • January 1, 2027: Room restored = $5,000 withdrawal + $7,000 new annual limit

What Kind of Account to Open

There are two main types of TFSA:

Type Best For Where
TFSA Savings Account (HISA) Short-term goals (under 3 years), emergency fund EQ Bank, Wealthsimple Cash, Tangerine
TFSA Investment Account Long-term wealth building, retirement Wealthsimple, Questrade

For most Canadians, a TFSA investment account at an online brokerage is ideal. Use a TFSA HISA for money you need within 1–3 years.

Where to Open Your TFSA

Best TFSA Investment Accounts

Institution Annual Fee Commissions Why Choose It
Wealthsimple $0 $0 Best for beginners, fractional shares
Questrade $0 $0 buy / $4.95 sell Good for regular investors
Interactive Brokers $0 $0 Advanced users

Best TFSA Savings Rates (2026)

Institution Rate Notes
EQ Bank 3.00–4.00% Consistently top rates
Wealthsimple Cash 3.00–4.00% Easy to use
Tangerine 2.50–3.25% Big bank alternative

See best TFSA accounts for current rates.

What to Invest in Your TFSA

For Long-Term Growth (10+ years): All-in-One ETFs

ETF Allocation MER Annual Cost on $10K
XEQT 100% global stocks 0.20% $20
XGRO 80% stocks / 20% bonds 0.20% $20
XBAL 60% stocks / 40% bonds 0.20% $20
VEQT 100% global stocks 0.24% $24

Buy XEQT if you are investing for 10+ years and can handle market swings. It holds over 9,000 stocks from Canada, the US, and internationally with a 0.20% annual fee.

For Short-Term Goals (Under 3 years): HISA

Keep money you will need soon in a high-interest savings account:

  • EQ Bank TFSA Savings (~3.5%): Best simple rate
  • Wealthsimple Cash TFSA: Convenient if already using Wealthsimple

Opening Your TFSA: Step by Step

  1. Go to Wealthsimple.com
  2. Click “Get Started” → choose “Self-directed investing”
  3. Select “Open TFSA”
  4. Enter your SIN, date of birth, address, employment info
  5. Complete identity verification (takes 2–5 minutes)
  6. Fund by connecting your bank account
  7. Buy an ETF (search XEQT, press Buy)

Option B: Your Bank

  1. Log into online banking or visit a branch
  2. Navigate to “Open Account” → “TFSA”
  3. Provide SIN and consent to open
  4. Select investment (choose index funds over actively managed)
  5. Set up automatic contributions

Caution: Bank TFSAs often default to low-interest savings or push high-fee mutual funds. If using a bank, explicitly request an index fund or ETF option.

TFSA vs RRSP: The Quick Answer

You Are… Better Account
Earning under $55,000 TFSA
Earning $55,000–$75,000 Both, lean TFSA
Earning over $75,000 RRSP first
Saving for a home FHSA → TFSA → RRSP
Need flexible access to money TFSA
Peak earning years RRSP to reduce tax now

See our TFSA vs RRSP for beginners article for detailed scenarios.

Common TFSA Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake What Happens How to Avoid
Over-contributing 1%/month penalty on excess Check your room in CRA My Account first
Re-contributing same year after withdrawal Over-contribution penalty Wait until January 1
Leaving money in a savings account forever Missing investment growth Invest in ETFs for 5+ year money
Not contributing each year Lost compounding time Automate yearly contribution on January 1
Using a bank TFSA with 0.5% savings rate Inflation erodes purchasing power Move to EQ Bank or invest via brokerage
Non-residents contributing Penalty tax of 1%/month TFSA is for Canadian residents only

TFSA Over-Contribution Penalty

If you contribute more than your room allows:

  • CRA charges a 1% per month penalty on the excess
  • Must file a T1OVS form to report and resolve it
  • Penalties are waived in some first-time cases if corrected promptly

Always check your room before contributing. Learn more about TFSA over-contributions.