Wealth management in Canada has grown into a sophisticated industry serving high-net-worth (HNW) and ultra-high-net-worth (UHNW) individuals. Whether you're a business owner, professional, or inheritor of family wealth, understanding how wealth management works in Canada is essential for protecting and growing what you've built.
This guide covers the full landscape: who qualifies for private wealth services, how advisors are compensated, the key tax strategies available to Canadians, and how to coordinate all of it effectively.
Wealth management is an integrated approach to financial services that combines investment management, tax planning, estate planning, insurance, and financial planning into one coordinated strategy. Rather than seeing these as separate disciplines, wealth managers treat your entire financial picture holistically.
In Canada, wealth management typically begins to make sense for individuals and families with investable assets of $500,000 or more — though the most comprehensive private wealth services generally require $1 million to $5 million in investable assets minimum.
Canada's wealth management industry is served by several types of institutions and practitioners:
RBC Dominion Securities, TD Wealth, BMO Nesbitt Burns, CIBC Wood Gundy, and Scotia McLeod all offer private banking and wealth management divisions. These are typically available to clients with $500,000 to $1 million or more in investable assets. Services include dedicated advisors, priority banking, and integrated investment-tax-estate planning.
Boutique firms such as Richardson Wealth, Canaccord Genuity Wealth Management, and Raymond James Canada offer independent advisory services, often with greater flexibility on product selection and fewer institutional conflicts of interest.
For families with $10 million or more in assets, multi-family offices provide the most comprehensive service. These firms handle investment management, tax preparation, estate administration, philanthropy, and family governance — everything under one roof.
An emerging segment in Canada, fee-only planners charge flat fees or hourly rates rather than earning commissions. They provide objective advice without conflicts related to product sales. The FP Canada designation (Certified Financial Planner or CFP) is the gold standard.
Canada's tax system offers several powerful strategies for high-net-worth individuals. A comprehensive wealth plan should incorporate as many of these as appropriate:
The RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan), TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account), and RESP (Registered Education Savings Plan) form the foundation. In 2025, TFSA contribution room is $7,000 annually, with cumulative room now exceeding $95,000 for those who have been eligible since 2009.
Business owners have significant advantages through incorporation. Retaining earnings inside a corporation at the small business tax rate (generally 9% to 12.2% federally and provincially combined) versus personal marginal rates of up to 53.5% creates substantial tax deferral. However, passive income earned inside a corporation above $50,000 per year reduces the small business deduction dollar-for-dollar, eliminating it entirely at $150,000 of passive income.
Following the 2024 federal budget, the capital gains inclusion rate increased from 50% to 66.67% for gains above $250,000 per year for individuals (and for all gains in corporations and trusts). This makes capital gains timing, crystallization strategies, and use of the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (LCGE) even more important.
The Tax on Split Income (TOSI) rules enacted in 2018 significantly curtailed income splitting with family members through corporations. However, legitimate strategies remain available, including spousal RRSPs, prescribed rate loans to lower-income spouses, and pension income splitting for those over 65.
Canada's deemed disposition rules mean that at death, all assets are considered sold at fair market value, triggering capital gains tax. Strategic estate planning tools include estate freezes, family trusts, charitable giving, and insurance to fund tax liabilities.
A financial advisor typically focuses on investment recommendations and basic financial planning. A wealth manager does all of that plus coordinates your tax accountant, estate lawyer, insurance advisor, and corporate counsel. The distinction matters: real wealth preservation requires coordination across all disciplines simultaneously.
When evaluating a wealth manager, ask:
Permanent life insurance — particularly whole life and universal life — serves multiple wealth management functions in Canada. Corporate-owned life insurance (COLI) allows corporations to fund buy-sell agreements, key person coverage, and create tax-preferred investment accounts. The capital dividend account (CDA) allows certain insurance proceeds to be paid out tax-free from a corporation to shareholders.
High-net-worth Canadians have access to sophisticated giving vehicles. Donating appreciated publicly-traded securities directly to a registered charity eliminates capital gains tax entirely — a significant advantage compared to selling securities and donating cash. Donor-advised funds and private foundations offer additional flexibility for those with philanthropic goals.
Intergenerational wealth transfer is increasingly complex in Canada. The TOSI rules, combined with the capital gains inclusion rate increase, make planning essential. Tools include family trusts, estate freezes, prescribed rate loans, gifts of capital, and strategic use of RRSPs and TFSAs for younger family members.
If you're approaching wealth management for the first time, a practical starting point is working with a fee-only CFP who can create a comprehensive financial plan. This plan should integrate your investments, taxes, insurance, estate wishes, and business interests. From that foundation, you can engage specialists in each area.
The most common mistake high-net-worth Canadians make is working with multiple advisors who don't communicate with each other, leading to strategies that conflict. A coordinated approach consistently outperforms siloed advice.
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