The decade that determines your financial future — here's what to prioritize and what to ignore.
Your 30s are the most consequential decade for building wealth in Canada. You likely have meaningful income for the first time, possibly a mortgage, perhaps children, and 30+ years of compounding ahead. The decisions you make between 30 and 40 — especially around how much you invest and in what vehicles — will compound for three decades before you need the money.
Here's the priority-ordered playbook for wealth building in your 30s.
With children, a mortgage, or career transition risk, your emergency fund needs to be robust. Keep 3-6 months of essential expenses in a HISA earning 4-5%. Do not invest your emergency fund in equities — you may need it when markets are down 30%.
If you're in a marginal tax rate below 40%, the TFSA is your primary wealth vehicle. Invest inside your TFSA in low-cost equity ETFs. The cumulative contribution room by 2025 is $95,000 — many Canadians in their 30s have significant unclaimed room. Fill it with investments, not cash.
At a 40%+ marginal rate, RRSP contributions save you $0.40+ per dollar contributed. Put the tax refund straight back into your RRSP to maximize compounding. If you have a child and are in a high bracket, spousal RRSP contributions can also reduce family tax burden in retirement.
If you haven't bought a home yet, open an FHSA immediately. $8,000/year deductible, grows tax-free, withdraws tax-free for a first home. The FHSA is one of the best financial tools ever introduced in Canada.
The Canada Education Savings Grant gives 20% on the first $2,500 contributed annually — a guaranteed $500/year. Start contributing the year your child is born. Time is the biggest RESP asset.
The simplest, most effective investment strategy for Canadians in their 30s:
This strategy has historically returned 7-10% annually over long periods. The fee (0.20% MER) is trivially low. You don't need to be a stock picker. You need to be consistent.
In your 30s, you have career capital to deploy. This is the decade to negotiate hard, take calculated career risks, and develop high-value skills. The compounding effect of an income increase in your 30s is enormous: a $20,000/year salary increase, with half invested at 7%, compounds to over $400,000 extra by age 65.
The median net worth of 35-44 year old Canadians is $348,000, largely driven by home equity. If you own a home in a major market, your net worth has likely grown significantly. But don't mistake home equity for liquid wealth — you can't spend it without selling or borrowing against it. Build investment assets alongside home equity.
If you have a mortgage and dependents, term life insurance is not optional. A 30-year-old male in good health can get $1M of 20-year term coverage for under $50/month. This protects everything you're building.
Your most valuable asset in your 30s is your earning capacity. If employer group benefits don't include adequate disability coverage, purchase your own. The odds of a disability lasting 90+ days at some point in your career are higher than most people realize.
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