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52-Week Savings Challenge Canada (2026): $1,378 in One Year

Updated

The 52-week savings challenge is one of the most effective ways to build a savings habit because the early weeks feel almost effortless. By the time the weekly amounts get large, the habit is already formed. Canadians can run this challenge entirely inside a TFSA so every cent of interest earned is tax-free.

How the standard challenge works

Save an amount equal to the week number. Week 1 = $1. Week 26 = $26. Week 52 = $52.

Total saved: $1,378

Full 52-week tracker

Week Date (2026) Save This Week Running Total
1 Jan 5 $1 $1
2 Jan 12 $2 $3
3 Jan 19 $3 $6
4 Jan 26 $4 $10
5 Feb 2 $5 $15
6 Feb 9 $6 $21
7 Feb 16 $7 $28
8 Feb 23 $8 $36
9 Mar 2 $9 $45
10 Mar 9 $10 $55
11 Mar 16 $11 $66
12 Mar 23 $12 $78
13 Mar 30 $13 $91
14 Apr 6 $14 $105
15 Apr 13 $15 $120
16 Apr 20 $16 $136
17 Apr 27 $17 $153
18 May 4 $18 $171
19 May 11 $19 $190
20 May 18 $20 $210
21 May 25 $21 $231
22 Jun 1 $22 $253
23 Jun 8 $23 $276
24 Jun 15 $24 $300
25 Jun 22 $25 $325
26 Jun 29 $26 $351
27 Jul 6 $27 $378
28 Jul 13 $28 $406
29 Jul 20 $29 $435
30 Jul 27 $30 $465
31 Aug 3 $31 $496
32 Aug 10 $32 $528
33 Aug 17 $33 $561
34 Aug 24 $34 $595
35 Aug 31 $35 $630
36 Sep 7 $36 $666
37 Sep 14 $37 $703
38 Sep 21 $38 $741
39 Sep 28 $39 $780
40 Oct 5 $40 $820
41 Oct 12 $41 $861
42 Oct 19 $42 $903
43 Oct 26 $43 $946
44 Nov 2 $44 $990
45 Nov 9 $45 $1,035
46 Nov 16 $46 $1,081
47 Nov 23 $47 $1,128
48 Nov 30 $48 $1,176
49 Dec 7 $49 $1,225
50 Dec 14 $50 $1,275
51 Dec 21 $51 $1,326
52 Dec 28 $52 $1,378

The reverse challenge: start big when you are motivated

The reverse challenge saves the same $1,378 but front-loads the hard weeks. Many people quit a challenge by the end because the amounts get large — the reverse version solves this.

Month Standard (starts small) Reverse (starts big)
January (weeks 1–4) $10 $202
February (weeks 5–8) $26 $186
March (weeks 9–13) $55 $165
April (weeks 14–17) $62 $130
May (weeks 18–21) $74 $74
June (weeks 22–26) $120 $120
July (weeks 27–31) $145 $155
August (weeks 32–35) $130 $130
September (weeks 36–39) $150 $78
October (weeks 40–43) $166 $62
November (weeks 44–47) $182 $46
December (weeks 48–52) $258 $30
Total $1,378 $1,378

Best for Canadians: The reverse challenge aligns with RRSP season (January–February) when many Canadians feel financially motivated. Your big contributions happen when you have just filed taxes or received a refund.

Scaled versions for different savings goals

Goal Weekly Multiplier Week 1 Week 52 Year-End
Modest ×1 $1 $52 $1,378
Emergency fund starter ×2 $2 $104 $2,756
TFSA boost ×3 $3 $156 $4,134
Down payment helper ×5 $5 $260 $6,890
Max TFSA contribution ×6.5 $6.50 $338 $8,957

The flat weekly approach also works if the scaling feels complicated:

Flat Weekly Savings Annual Total
$10/week $520
$20/week $1,040
$27/week $1,404
$50/week $2,600
$100/week $5,200
$154/week ~$8,000 (TFSA max)

Where to keep your challenge money: TFSA HISA

Account Type Interest Rate Tax on Interest Penalty to Withdraw
Regular savings account 0.01–0.5% Taxable None
High-interest savings account (non-registered) 3.0–4.5% Taxable None
TFSA high-interest savings account 3.0–4.5% Tax-free None
RRSP savings account 3.0–4.5% Tax-deferred Taxable on withdrawal

Recommended: Open a TFSA at EQ Bank, Oaken Financial, or Simplii Financial and set up a weekly automatic transfer from your chequing account. This eliminates willpower from the equation.

Interest earned on $1,378 at 4.0% (approximate): Since deposits are spread over the year, average balance ≈ $689. Interest earned ≈ $28 — small, but tax-free and compounding grows over time if you leave the money invested.

How to automate the challenge

Manually transferring different amounts each week is the most common reason people abandon the challenge. Automate it with one of these approaches:

Option A — Weekly auto-transfer increasing by $1: Most Canadian banks allow recurring transfers but not with escalating amounts. Set up 52 separate scheduled transfers (one per week) in your online banking.

Option B — Flat weekly amount: Calculate your average ($1,378 ÷ 52 = $26.50) and auto-transfer $26.50 every Monday. You’ll end up very close to the target with zero manual effort.

Option C — Monthly rounding: Transfer a fixed monthly amount that matches the challenge average. $1,378 ÷ 12 = $114.83/month — round to $115/month.

Common questions for Canadians

Can I use challenge funds for my RRSP? Yes. If your tax refund or year-end bonus pushes you over the TFSA contribution limit, you can redirect challenge funds to an RRSP instead. Both give you tax-sheltered growth.

Does the TFSA contribution limit cover the challenge? The 2026 TFSA contribution limit is $7,000. The $1,378 challenge is well below this limit — you have plenty of room for both the challenge and other contributions.

Can I start the challenge mid-year? Yes. Start wherever you are in the year (e.g., week 15 if starting in April) and continue through week 52 of your personal year, or run it for a full 52 weeks from your start date.