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How to Start Investing in Your 20s in Canada 2026

Updated

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 AgeMonthly InvestmentTotal ContributedValue at Age 65 (7% Return)Growth Multiplier
22$200$103,200$634,0006.1x
25$200$96,000$497,0005.2x
30$200$84,000$340,0004.0x
35$200$72,000$228,0003.2x
40$200$60,000$152,0002.5x

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

StepActionTime Needed
1Open a free Wealthsimple account5 minutes
2Open a TFSA (first priority)During signup
3Link your bank account2 minutes
4Set up automatic deposits ($100-$500/biweekly)2 minutes
5Enable auto-invest in XEQT or VEQT2 minutes
6Turn on DRIP (dividend reinvestment)1 minute
7Forget about it and let it growOngoing

Total setup time: ~15 minutes. That’s it. You’re now investing.

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Account Priority in Your 20s

PriorityAccountWhyContribution Room
1stEmergency fund (HISA)3-6 months of expenses before investingN/A
2ndTFSATax-free growth, flexible withdrawals, no income needed$7,000/year (2024+)
3rdFHSA (if planning to buy a home)Tax deduction + tax-free for first home$8,000/year ($40K lifetime)
4thRRSP (only if income > ~$55K)Tax deduction, but locked until retirement18% of income
5thNon-registeredAfter maxing TFSANo limit

Why TFSA First (Not RRSP) in Your 20s

FactorTFSARRSP
Tax benefit timingNo tax on withdrawals everTax deduction now, but taxed on withdrawal
At low income (~$40–$50K)Better β€” you don’t need the deduction nowWorse β€” deduction worth less at low tax bracket
FlexibilityCan withdraw anytime, room comes back next yearWithdrawal permanently lost (except HBP)
Best forIncome under $55–$60KIncome above $60K

How Much to Invest in Your 20s

By Income Level

Gross Income10% Target15% TargetRealistic Starting Point
$35,000$292/month$438/month$100–$200/month
$45,000$375/month$563/month$200–$300/month
$55,000$458/month$688/month$300–$400/month
$65,000$542/month$813/month$400–$500/month
$80,000$667/month$1,000/month$500–$750/month

If You Have Student Debt

Loan Interest RateStrategy
0% (provincial loan, no interest)Invest β€” guaranteed positive return vs. 0% debt cost
0–4%Split: pay minimums on loan, invest the rest
4–6%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 ToleranceETFWhat It ContainsMER
Aggressive (recommended in 20s)XEQT or VEQT100% global stocks (9,000–13,000 companies)0.20–0.24%
GrowthXGRO or VGRO80% stocks / 20% bonds0.20–0.24%
BalancedXBAL or VBAL60% stocks / 40% bonds0.20–0.24%

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

ApproachNumber of ETFsAnnual Return (Historical)Complexity
One all-in-one ETF (XEQT)1~9-10%Minimal
DIY 3-fund portfolio3-4~9-10%Moderate (rebalancing needed)
Stock picking10-30+Varies wildly (usually worse)Very high

Money Milestones in Your 20s

AgeTargetHow
22-23$1,000 emergency fundSave from first job
23-24Start investing ($50-$100/month)Automate through Wealthsimple
24-25$5,000 investedConsistent contributions
25-26Full 3-month emergency fundHISA (EQ Bank, Wealthsimple Cash)
26-27$15,000-$20,000 investedIncreased contributions
28-29$30,000-$50,000 investedCompound growth accelerating
30$50,000+ net worthYou’re ahead of 80% of 30-year-olds

Common Mistakes in Your 20s

MistakeRealityWhat to Do Instead
“I’ll invest when I make more money”Waiting costs tens of thousands in lost compound growthStart with $50/month now
Trying to pick individual stocks90% of stock pickers underperform index fundsBuy XEQT/VEQT and forget about it
Checking your portfolio dailyCauses panic selling during normal dipsCheck quarterly at most
Investing in crypto onlyExtremely volatile, not a diversified portfolioCrypto should be <5% of portfolio, if any
Waiting to “learn more” before startingYou learn by doing; a one-fund portfolio is simple enoughOpen an account today
Saving in a regular savings account0.05-0.5% interest loses to inflationInvest β€” even a HISA is better at 3-4%

Investing vs. Other 20s Priorities

PriorityApproach
Student loan repaymentPay minimums, invest the rest (if loan < 5% interest)
Saving for a home (FHSA)Max FHSA ($8K/year) alongside TFSA investing
TravelBudget for it β€” don’t sacrifice investing entirely, but living is important too
Career developmentInvest in skills and certifications β€” higher income = more to invest
Wedding/life eventsSave 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)

AlexJordan
Starts investingAge 23Age 30
Monthly amount$300$500
Annual return7%7%
Invests untilAge 65Age 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.