Why Starting in Your 20s Is So Powerful
The single greatest advantage you have in your 20s is time. Compound growth does most of the heavy lifting.
$200/Month Starting at Different Ages
| Start Age | Monthly Investment | Total Contributed | Value at Age 65 (7% Return) | Growth Multiplier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22 | $200 | $103,200 | $634,000 | 6.1x |
| 25 | $200 | $96,000 | $497,000 | 5.2x |
| 30 | $200 | $84,000 | $340,000 | 4.0x |
| 35 | $200 | $72,000 | $228,000 | 3.2x |
| 40 | $200 | $60,000 | $152,000 | 2.5x |
Starting at 22 vs. 30 means $294,000 more at retirement β from just 8 extra years of the same $200/month.
Step-by-Step Guide: Getting Started
| Step | Action | Time Needed |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Open a free Wealthsimple account | 5 minutes |
| 2 | Open a TFSA (first priority) | During signup |
| 3 | Link your bank account | 2 minutes |
| 4 | Set up automatic deposits ($100-$500/biweekly) | 2 minutes |
| 5 | Enable auto-invest in XEQT or VEQT | 2 minutes |
| 6 | Turn on DRIP (dividend reinvestment) | 1 minute |
| 7 | Forget about it and let it grow | Ongoing |
Total setup time: ~15 minutes. That’s it. You’re now investing.
Account Priority in Your 20s
| Priority | Account | Why | Contribution Room |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Emergency fund (HISA) | 3-6 months of expenses before investing | N/A |
| 2nd | TFSA | Tax-free growth, flexible withdrawals, no income needed | $7,000/year (2024+) |
| 3rd | FHSA (if planning to buy a home) | Tax deduction + tax-free for first home | $8,000/year ($40K lifetime) |
| 4th | RRSP (only if income > ~$55K) | Tax deduction, but locked until retirement | 18% of income |
| 5th | Non-registered | After maxing TFSA | No limit |
Why TFSA First (Not RRSP) in Your 20s
| Factor | TFSA | RRSP |
|---|---|---|
| Tax benefit timing | No tax on withdrawals ever | Tax deduction now, but taxed on withdrawal |
| At low income (~$40β$50K) | Better β you don’t need the deduction now | Worse β deduction worth less at low tax bracket |
| Flexibility | Can withdraw anytime, room comes back next year | Withdrawal permanently lost (except HBP) |
| Best for | Income under $55β$60K | Income above $60K |
How Much to Invest in Your 20s
By Income Level
| Gross Income | 10% Target | 15% Target | Realistic Starting Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| $35,000 | $292/month | $438/month | $100β$200/month |
| $45,000 | $375/month | $563/month | $200β$300/month |
| $55,000 | $458/month | $688/month | $300β$400/month |
| $65,000 | $542/month | $813/month | $400β$500/month |
| $80,000 | $667/month | $1,000/month | $500β$750/month |
If You Have Student Debt
| Loan Interest Rate | Strategy |
|---|---|
| 0% (provincial loan, no interest) | Invest β guaranteed positive return vs. 0% debt cost |
| 0β4% | Split: pay minimums on loan, invest the rest |
| 4β6% | Debatable β consider splitting 50/50 |
| 6%+ | Pay off debt first β guaranteed “return” matches or beats market |
What to Invest In (Keep It Simple)
The One-Fund Solution
| Risk Tolerance | ETF | What It Contains | MER |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aggressive (recommended in 20s) | XEQT or VEQT | 100% global stocks (9,000β13,000 companies) | 0.20β0.24% |
| Growth | XGRO or VGRO | 80% stocks / 20% bonds | 0.20β0.24% |
| Balanced | XBAL or VBAL | 60% stocks / 40% bonds | 0.20β0.24% |
For most 20-somethings, XEQT or VEQT is the best choice. You have 35-45 years until retirement β you can handle short-term volatility for maximum long-term growth.
Why One ETF Is Enough
| Approach | Number of ETFs | Annual Return (Historical) | Complexity |
|---|---|---|---|
| One all-in-one ETF (XEQT) | 1 | ~9-10% | Minimal |
| DIY 3-fund portfolio | 3-4 | ~9-10% | Moderate (rebalancing needed) |
| Stock picking | 10-30+ | Varies wildly (usually worse) | Very high |
Money Milestones in Your 20s
| Age | Target | How |
|---|---|---|
| 22-23 | $1,000 emergency fund | Save from first job |
| 23-24 | Start investing ($50-$100/month) | Automate through Wealthsimple |
| 24-25 | $5,000 invested | Consistent contributions |
| 25-26 | Full 3-month emergency fund | HISA (EQ Bank, Wealthsimple Cash) |
| 26-27 | $15,000-$20,000 invested | Increased contributions |
| 28-29 | $30,000-$50,000 invested | Compound growth accelerating |
| 30 | $50,000+ net worth | You’re ahead of 80% of 30-year-olds |
Common Mistakes in Your 20s
| Mistake | Reality | What to Do Instead |
|---|---|---|
| “I’ll invest when I make more money” | Waiting costs tens of thousands in lost compound growth | Start with $50/month now |
| Trying to pick individual stocks | 90% of stock pickers underperform index funds | Buy XEQT/VEQT and forget about it |
| Checking your portfolio daily | Causes panic selling during normal dips | Check quarterly at most |
| Investing in crypto only | Extremely volatile, not a diversified portfolio | Crypto should be <5% of portfolio, if any |
| Waiting to “learn more” before starting | You learn by doing; a one-fund portfolio is simple enough | Open an account today |
| Saving in a regular savings account | 0.05-0.5% interest loses to inflation | Invest β even a HISA is better at 3-4% |
Investing vs. Other 20s Priorities
| Priority | Approach |
|---|---|
| Student loan repayment | Pay minimums, invest the rest (if loan < 5% interest) |
| Saving for a home (FHSA) | Max FHSA ($8K/year) alongside TFSA investing |
| Travel | Budget for it β don’t sacrifice investing entirely, but living is important too |
| Career development | Invest in skills and certifications β higher income = more to invest |
| Wedding/life events | Save in HISA for short-term goals (< 5 years), invest for long-term |
The Power of Starting Now: Real Scenario
Alex (Starts at 23) vs. Jordan (Starts at 30)
| Alex | Jordan | |
|---|---|---|
| Starts investing | Age 23 | Age 30 |
| Monthly amount | $300 | $500 |
| Annual return | 7% | 7% |
| Invests until | Age 65 | Age 65 |
| Total contributed | $151,200 | $210,000 |
| Portfolio at 65 | $951,000 | $680,000 |
Alex invests $59,000 less but ends up with $271,000 more β entirely due to 7 extra years of compound growth.