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TFSA Income Splitting Canada — Strategy Guide 2025

How Canadian couples use TFSAs to legally split income, reduce household taxes, and maximize retirement income across two tax brackets.

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Why Income Splitting Matters in Canada

Canada's progressive tax system taxes higher incomes at higher rates. A household where one spouse earns $200,000 pays far more total tax than a household where two spouses each earn $100,000 — even though the total income is identical. Income splitting strategies shift investment income from the high-earner to the lower-earner, reducing the household's total tax bill legally and permanently.

The TFSA Attribution Rule Exception

The Income Tax Act contains "attribution rules" that prevent simple income splitting: if you give money to your spouse to invest in a non-registered account, the investment income is "attributed back" to you and taxed in your hands. However, TFSAs are explicitly exempt from attribution rules. When you give money to your spouse to contribute to their TFSA, all income and growth in that TFSA belongs permanently to your spouse — there is no attribution back to you, ever.

The simplest income splitting strategy in Canada: The higher-income spouse gives the lower-income spouse money to max out their TFSA. Zero tax consequences. Zero attribution. Zero complexity.

How the Strategy Works in Practice

ScenarioWithout TFSA SplittingWith TFSA Splitting
Spouse A income$150,000 — top bracket$150,000 — top bracket
Spouse B income$30,000 — low bracket$30,000 + TFSA income
Investment income generatedAll taxed in Spouse A's hands (non-reg)All tax-free in Spouse B's TFSA
Tax on investment income40%+ marginal rate0% — completely tax-free

Retirement Income Splitting via TFSA

In retirement, TFSA withdrawals are not counted as income for any purpose. This means:

Maximizing the Couples TFSA Approach

The full income splitting power comes from building two fully-funded TFSAs over a working lifetime:

TFSA vs Spousal RRSP for Income Splitting

Both the TFSA spousal strategy and the spousal RRSP achieve income splitting, but differently:

For most couples, the best approach uses both: spousal RRSP for the deduction (if high earner is in a significantly higher bracket), plus TFSA funding for the lower-income spouse for maximum tax-free retirement flexibility.

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