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How to Invest $5,000 in Canada 2026 | Best Strategies

Updated

How to Invest $5,000 in Canada

Step 1: Check Your Financial Foundation

Checklist Status Needed
Emergency fund (1-3 months expenses) ✅ Funded
High-interest debt (credit cards) ✅ Paid off
Employer RRSP match ✅ Claiming full match

If any of these are incomplete, address them first before investing.

Step 2: Choose Your Account

Account Best For Tax Benefit
TFSA Most Canadians Growth and income tax-free forever
FHSA First-time home buyers Tax deduction + tax-free growth
RRSP High-income earners (>$55K) Tax deduction now, taxed on withdrawal
Non-registered TFSA/RRSP maxed out No special tax treatment

Best choice for most people: TFSA first.

Step 3: Pick Your Strategy

Investment Options for $5,000

Option 1: All-in-One ETF (Best for Most People)

ETF Risk Level Best For MER
XEQT Growth 15+ year horizon 0.20%
XGRO Balanced growth 10-15 year horizon 0.20%
XBAL Balanced 5-10 year horizon 0.20%

Cost: $0 to buy on Wealthsimple or Questrade Time needed: 15 minutes to set up

$5,000 in XEQT could grow to:

Time Value (7% avg return)
5 years ~$7,000
10 years ~$9,800
20 years ~$19,300
30 years ~$38,000

Option 2: Robo-Advisor (Easiest)

Robo-Advisor Fee Minimum Features
Wealthsimple Invest 0.40-0.50% $1 Auto-rebalancing, tax-loss harvesting
Questwealth 0.20-0.25% $1,000 Lower fees
CI Direct 0.35-0.60% $100 Multiple portfolio options

Total cost on $5,000: $20-25/year (Wealthsimple) vs $10-13/year (Questwealth)

Option 3: High-Interest Savings (Short-Term)

Provider Rate CDIC Insured
EQ Bank 4.00%
Wealthsimple Cash 3.50%
Neo Financial 4.00%

$5,000 earns: ~$175-200/year, tax-free if in TFSA

Best for: Money needed within 1-2 years.

Option 4: GIC (Guaranteed Return)

Term Rate (approx) $5K Earns
1 year 4.0-4.5% $200-225
2 year 3.8-4.2% $380-420
3 year 3.7-4.0% $555-600

Best for: Money needed at a specific future date (e.g., down payment in 2 years).

Option 5: Individual Stocks (More Risk)

Building a small stock portfolio with $5,000:

Approach Example Risk
Canadian banks RY, TD, BNS Moderate
Canadian dividends ENB, BCE, FTS Moderate
US tech exposure Via XEQT or QQQ Higher
Individual stock picks Your research Highest

Warning: With $5,000, diversification is limited. An ETF gives you hundreds of stocks at once.

What NOT to Do with $5,000

Mistake Why
Day trading or options You’ll likely lose money
Crypto as first investment Too volatile for beginners
Penny stocks Extremely high risk
Letting it sit in a chequing account Earning 0% while inflation erodes value
Waiting for the “right time” Time in market beats timing the market
Buying mutual funds with 2%+ MER ETFs cost 0.20% — 10x cheaper

Sample $5,000 Portfolios by Goal

Growth (20+ Years)

Investment Amount Expected Return
XEQT (all-in-one equity) $5,000 ~7-8%/yr

Balanced (10-20 Years)

Investment Amount Expected Return
XGRO (80/20) $5,000 ~6-7%/yr

Conservative (5-10 Years)

Investment Amount Expected Return
XBAL (60/40) $3,000 ~5-6%/yr
GIC (2-year) $2,000 ~4%

Short-Term (Under 3 Years)

Investment Amount Expected Return
HISA (EQ Bank) $3,000 ~4%
GIC (1-year) $2,000 ~4.5%

Next Steps After Investing $5,000

Action Details
Set up automatic contributions Even $100/month adds $1,200/year
Increase as income grows Aim to max TFSA ($7,000/year)
Don’t check daily Set and forget for best results
Learn as you go Read about investing basics
Reinvest dividends Turn on DRIP for compounding