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TFSA vs RRSP Canada 2025 — Which Is Better?

A head-to-head comparison of Canada's two main tax-sheltered accounts. Find out which one wins for your situation in 2025.

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Quick Comparison: TFSA vs RRSP

FeatureTFSARRSP
Contribution tax deductionNoYes
Tax on growth inside accountNoneNone (deferred)
Tax on withdrawalsNoneYes — taxed as income
2025 annual limit$7,00018% of prior year earned income, max $32,490
Withdrawal room restoredYes — Jan 1 next yearNo — room is gone permanently
Age limitNo upper limitMust convert to RRIF by Dec 31 of year you turn 71
Impact on income-tested benefitsNone — withdrawals not counted as incomeYes — withdrawals increase income, may reduce OAS/GIS
Spousal contribution optionNo (each person contributes to their own)Yes — spousal RRSP allowed
Home Buyers' PlanNot applicableYes — up to $35,000 first home withdrawal
Lifelong Learning PlanNot applicableYes — up to $100/year for education

How Each Account Works

TFSA: You contribute after-tax dollars. The money grows tax-free. When you withdraw, you pay no tax. The room you withdraw comes back on January 1 of the following year.

RRSP: You contribute pre-tax dollars (or get a deduction for after-tax contributions). The money grows tax-deferred. When you withdraw — whether in retirement or earlier — the withdrawal is added to your taxable income for that year.

When the TFSA Wins

When the RRSP Wins

The Tax Bracket Rule of Thumb

The single most important factor in choosing TFSA vs RRSP is the difference between your current marginal tax rate and your expected rate at withdrawal:

2025 Verdict for Most Canadians: If you earn under $57,375 (the top of the 20.5% federal bracket), prioritize the TFSA first. If you earn over $111,733 (26%+ federal bracket), the RRSP deduction is valuable. Many financial planners recommend maxing the TFSA first, then RRSP, for most middle-income earners.

Can You Use Both?

Absolutely — and most Canadians should. The TFSA and RRSP are not mutually exclusive. Using both allows you to diversify your tax exposure: some money growing tax-free (TFSA), some money growing tax-deferred (RRSP). In retirement, you can draw from your TFSA in years where RRSP withdrawals would push you into a higher bracket.

What About the FHSA?

As of 2023, Canadians can also open a First Home Savings Account (FHSA), which combines features of both the TFSA and RRSP for first-time home buyers. Contributions are tax-deductible (like an RRSP) and withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase are tax-free (like a TFSA). The FHSA has a $8,000 annual limit and $40,000 lifetime cap.

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