Updated March 2025 · 9 min read

Non-Registered Investing in Canada 2025: Tax Implications

When to Use Non-Registered Accounts: After maximizing your TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA, a non-registered account is your next investment vehicle. It offers no contribution limits and no restrictions — but all income and gains are taxable.

A non-registered account (also called a taxable account, open account, or personal investment account) is simply a regular brokerage account with no special tax status. Unlike registered accounts, there are no contribution limits — but investment income is taxed each year. Understanding how different types of investment income are taxed is essential for maximizing after-tax returns in a non-registered account.

Three Types of Investment Income — Tax Treatment

Income TypeHow It's TaxedRelative Tax EfficiencyExamples
Interest income100% included in income — taxed at full marginal rateLeast tax-efficientGIC interest, bond coupons, HISA interest
Capital gains50% inclusion rate — only half is taxedTax-efficientStock/ETF appreciation on sale
Canadian eligible dividendsGrossed up and eligible for dividend tax creditMost tax-efficientDividends from Canadian corporations

Effective Tax Rates by Income Type (Ontario, ~$100K income)

Income TypeMarginal RateEffective Rate After Credits/Inclusion
Interest income~43.41%~43.41%
Capital gains~43.41%~21.71% (50% inclusion)
Eligible Canadian dividends~43.41%~25.38% (after dividend tax credit)
Foreign dividends~43.41%~43.41% (no dividend tax credit)

Capital Gains Tax in Canada 2025

Capital gains arise when you sell an investment for more than your adjusted cost base (ACB). In Canada, only 50% of capital gains are included in income (the "inclusion rate"). The remaining 50% is tax-free.

Example: Buy 100 shares of a stock at $20 ($2,000 ACB). Sell at $30 ($3,000 proceeds). Capital gain = $1,000. Taxable inclusion = $500 (50%). If marginal rate is 43%, tax owed = $215. Effective tax rate on the gain: 21.5%.

2024 Capital Gains Inclusion Rate Proposal: The federal government proposed increasing the inclusion rate to 2/3 for capital gains over $250,000/year for individuals (and all gains for corporations). As of early 2025, this remains a legislative proposal — confirm the current rules with a tax professional before making large decisions based on this.

The Dividend Tax Credit

Canadian eligible dividends receive preferential tax treatment through the dividend tax credit. The process: dividends are "grossed up" (multiplied by 138%), then a federal tax credit of 15.02% of the grossed-up amount is applied, along with provincial credits. The net result is that eligible Canadian dividends are taxed at a significantly lower effective rate than ordinary income.

This makes Canadian dividend stocks particularly tax-efficient in non-registered accounts — especially for investors in lower-to-middle tax brackets where effective dividend tax rates can approach zero.

Foreign Income in Non-Registered Accounts

Foreign dividends (e.g., from U.S. stocks) are taxed as ordinary income in Canada — no dividend tax credit. U.S. withholding tax (15%) is deducted at source, but you can claim a foreign tax credit on your Canadian return to avoid double taxation.

Capital gains on foreign stocks are treated the same as Canadian capital gains (50% inclusion), but any gains/losses must be calculated in Canadian dollars at the exchange rate on the acquisition and disposition dates.

Adjusted Cost Base (ACB) Tracking

The ACB is your cost in an investment for tax purposes. Tracking it correctly is critical — getting it wrong means paying too much or too little capital gains tax. ACB increases with purchases and DRIP reinvestments, and decreases with return of capital distributions.

Tools for tracking ACB: adjustedcostbase.ca (free Canadian ACB tracker), or your broker's cost tracking (note: broker data may not always be accurate, especially after transfers).

Asset Location: What Belongs in Non-Registered?

InvestmentBest AccountReason
Canadian dividend stocksNon-registered or TFSADividend tax credit effective in non-reg; TFSA also excellent
Capital-gains-oriented ETFsNon-registered or TFSA50% inclusion makes gains relatively tax-efficient
Bond ETFs / GICsRRSP or TFSA (not non-reg)Interest taxed at full rate — shelter it
U.S. dividend stocksRRSP (not TFSA or non-reg)No withholding tax in RRSP; full withholding in TFSA/non-reg
REITsTFSA or RRSPREIT distributions taxed as income — shelter them

Capital Losses: Using Them Strategically

Capital losses in a non-registered account can be used to offset capital gains in the same year, the prior 3 years, or any future year. This "tax-loss harvesting" strategy can meaningfully reduce your tax bill.

Key rules:

When to Invest in a Non-Registered Account

Invest in non-registered accounts when:

Priority Order: Always maximize registered accounts (TFSA, RRSP, FHSA) before investing in non-registered. The tax advantages of registered accounts are too significant to leave unused while investing in a taxable account.

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