Getting started with investing in Canada is more accessible than ever. With low-cost ETFs, commission-free brokerages, and powerful tax-sheltered accounts like the TFSA and RRSP, virtually any Canadian can build wealth through investing — regardless of starting amount.
This guide walks you through everything you need to know to start investing in Canada in 2025.
Savings accounts and GICs are excellent for short-term goals and emergency funds, but their returns (3–5% in 2025) barely keep pace with inflation over the long run. Investing in a diversified portfolio of stocks and bonds has historically returned 7–10% annually over long periods — enough to double your money roughly every 7–10 years through compounding.
Before investing a single dollar, ensure you have 3–6 months of essential expenses in a liquid savings account. Investing money you might need in the next 1–2 years exposes you to the risk of having to sell at a market bottom. Emergency fund first, then invest.
The most tax-efficient place to invest in Canada:
For beginners, the main choices are:
For Canadian beginners, the simplest and most evidence-backed approach is a single all-in-one ETF:
Buy one ETF, contribute regularly, and don't check it every day. This approach — low-cost, diversified, consistent — beats most active strategies over the long run.
The most important factor isn't which ETF you pick — it's whether you invest consistently over time. Set up a monthly pre-authorized contribution and automate the process. Dollar-cost averaging (investing a fixed amount regularly) smooths out market volatility and removes the pressure of trying to time the market.
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