How to Save $100,000 in Canada 2025

The most important financial milestone for Canadians — and how to reach it faster than you think.

Saving $100,000 is the single most important financial milestone for Canadians. Not because $100K will make you rich on its own, but because of what happens after you hit it: compounding begins to work meaningfully in your favour, your investment returns start generating real dollars, and the psychological shift from saver to investor fundamentally changes how you think about money.

How Long Will It Take?

Monthly SavingsAt 5% ReturnAt 7% Return
$500/month13.5 years11.7 years
$1,000/month7.8 years7.0 years
$1,500/month5.5 years5.0 years
$2,000/month4.3 years3.9 years
$3,000/month2.9 years2.7 years

The investment return matters, but the savings rate matters more. Getting to $1,000-1,500/month in savings is the primary lever. The investment return is secondary when the balance is still small.

Why $100K is the Hardest

Charlie Munger famously said the first $100,000 is the hardest. Here's why he was right:

In the early stages, almost all your progress comes from your savings contributions. Compounding hasn't kicked in yet. The grind is real. But once you pass $100K, returns start adding meaningfully to your balance, and the snowball effect begins.

The inflection point: At $100,000 at 7%, your money earns $7,000/year by itself. That's roughly equivalent to an extra $583/month of savings — for free. This is why reaching $100K changes everything.

Step 1: Know Your Current Savings Rate

Savings rate = (amount saved per month) ÷ (gross monthly income) × 100. The average Canadian saves about 5-8% of their income. To reach $100K meaningfully fast, you need 15-25%+ savings rate. Calculate yours now. If it's below 15%, identify what's preventing you from getting there.

Step 2: Open the Right Accounts

TFSA First

Your first $100K should primarily live in a TFSA invested in low-cost ETFs. Every dollar of growth is tax-free. The compounding effect on tax-free gains is enormous over decades. If you have TFSA room (check your CRA MyAccount), use it.

FHSA if Homeownership is Your Goal

If you're saving toward a first home, the FHSA gives you both a tax deduction (like an RRSP) and tax-free withdrawal (like a TFSA). You can contribute $8,000/year to a maximum of $40,000 lifetime — meaning a significant portion of your $100K can be in this highly tax-advantaged vehicle.

RRSP if Your Income is High

If you're in a marginal tax rate of 33%+, RRSP contributions generate substantial tax refunds. The refund, reinvested immediately into your RRSP, dramatically accelerates your path to $100K.

Step 3: Automate Everything

Set up automatic transfers from your chequing account to your savings/investment account the day after payday. Choose an amount that feels slightly uncomfortable — if it's easy, you're not saving enough. The automation removes willpower from the equation entirely.

Step 4: Invest, Don't Just Save

A common mistake: Canadians hit $30K, $50K in a savings account and congratulate themselves without investing it. In a savings account, your $100K journey is purely a function of your contributions. Invested in a diversified ETF, your returns add momentum. Even in the early stages, put money to work.

Simple Canadian ETF Strategy for the First $100K

Step 5: Increase Income, Not Just Cut Expenses

Cutting expenses is important but limited. The fastest path to $100K for most Canadians combines both expense reduction and income growth. Even one well-negotiated job change — typically yielding a 15-20% salary increase — can cut years off your $100K timeline.

Common Pitfalls on the Way to $100K

Milestones to Celebrate

The journey to $100K is long enough that you need interim milestones. Celebrate: $10K saved, $25K saved, $50K saved, $75K saved. These checkpoints keep you motivated and let you assess whether you're on pace. At $50K, run the compounding numbers again — you'll likely find that doubling to $100K takes much less time than the first $50K did.

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