Successor holder vs. beneficiary — the two designations have very different outcomes. Here's what you need to know.
The Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) is one of Canada's most powerful savings tools — and its treatment at death is more favourable than almost any other registered account. But the outcome depends entirely on how you've set up your designation: successor holder or beneficiary.
Unlike an RRSP (which only has a beneficiary designation), a TFSA can have either:
The distinction matters enormously for tax purposes and contribution room.
When you name your spouse or common-law partner as successor holder, they inherit the entire TFSA — including all accumulated contribution room — as their own TFSA. This is the most favourable outcome possible:
When you name a beneficiary who is not your spouse (or if you name your estate), the TFSA is collapsed at death. Here's what happens:
| Feature | Successor Holder | Beneficiary |
|---|---|---|
| Who can be named | Spouse/common-law partner only | Anyone (including estate) |
| Tax on FMV at death | None | None |
| Tax on growth after death | None (account continues) | Yes — taxable to beneficiary |
| Contribution room effect | No impact on spouse's room | Not applicable |
| Probate | No | No (if named beneficiary) |
| Account continues | Yes — becomes their TFSA | No — account collapses |
This is a commonly misunderstood point. The TFSA is tax-sheltered while the account holder is alive. At death:
As long as you have a named beneficiary or successor holder, the TFSA passes outside your estate — no probate fees. If you name your estate as beneficiary (or leave the designation blank), the TFSA becomes part of your probated estate and is subject to provincial probate fees.
Beneficiary designation rules for TFSAs are governed partly by provincial legislation:
Contact your financial institution directly. Most allow updates online, by phone, or through a paper form. For a successor holder designation (spouse only), ensure the institution specifically offers this option — some older accounts may only offer "beneficiary." If in doubt, ask explicitly for the "successor holder" designation.
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAThe FMV of a TFSA at the date of death is tax-free to the beneficiary or successor holder. Growth that occurs after death may be taxable, depending on the designation type and how quickly the account is transferred.
Yes — name them as beneficiaries. They will receive the FMV at death tax-free. However, they cannot continue the TFSA as their own (only a spouse can do that via successor holder). The account will be collapsed and proceeds paid out.
You become the account holder of the TFSA. It merges into your TFSA portfolio, and you can continue using it as your own — contributing, withdrawing, and investing — without any tax consequences and without affecting your own contribution room.
Related guides: RRSP at Death | Beneficiary Designations | Estate Planning Guide