RRSP vs TFSA vs FHSA Comparison 2026

Complete side-by-side: contribution limits, tax treatment, withdrawal rules, and best use cases

Registered Account Comparison Calculator

Complete 2026 RRSP / TFSA / FHSA Comparison

FeatureRRSPTFSAFHSA
2026 Annual Limit$32,490 (18% of income)$7,000$8,000
Lifetime LimitNo cap (annual limits)$102,000 cumulative$40,000
Who Can OpenAny Canadian resident earning income, under 71Any Canadian resident 18+, with SINFirst-time buyers, 18-71, Canadian resident
Contribution Deductible?YesNoYes
Growth Taxed?No (tax-deferred)No (tax-free)No (tax-free)
Withdrawals Taxable?Yes — fully taxable incomeNoNo (qualifying) / Yes (non-qualifying)
Withdrawals Affect Benefits?Yes (OAS, GIS, credits)NoNo (qualifying)
Room Restored on Withdrawal?No — room lost foreverYes — January 1 next yearNo
Mandatory Close Age71 (convert to RRIF)Never15 years after opening or age 71
Home Buyers' PlanUp to $60,000 (repay over 15 yrs)N/AUp to $40,000 (no repayment)
Transfer to RRSP?N/AN/AYes — without using RRSP room
US Dividend WithholdingExempt (treaty)15% withheld — not recoverable15% withheld — not recoverable
Over-contribution Buffer$2,000 lifetimeNoneNone
Over-contribution Penalty1%/month above buffer1%/month1%/month
Best ForHigh earners, retirement savings, income smoothingAll incomes, flexibility, benefit preservationFirst-time buyers, bonus RRSP room if no home

Priority Order: Which Account to Fund First in 2026

Given the three registered accounts plus non-registered options, here is the generally recommended contribution priority for most Canadians:

  1. Employer RRSP/DPSP matching: Always capture free matching first — it is an instant 50–100% return
  2. FHSA (if first-time buyer): $8,000/year, fully deductible, tax-free withdrawal for home, or transfers to RRSP with no room used
  3. TFSA (if income under $50K): Flexible, no impact on benefits, withdrawal room restored
  4. RRSP (if income over $60K): Deduction most valuable in higher brackets; important for retirement accumulation
  5. TFSA (if income over $50K and RRSP is maxed): Continue filling TFSA with after-tax money
  6. Non-registered account: After all registered accounts are maxed — capital gains and eligible dividends taxed preferentially

Key Decision Rules

RRSP vs TFSA

If current marginal rate > expected retirement rate: RRSP wins. If current marginal rate = or less than expected retirement rate: TFSA wins. If income is low and GIS/OAS may apply in retirement: TFSA wins decisively. See our full RRSP vs TFSA guide.

FHSA vs RRSP HBP

FHSA wins for almost all first-time buyers: no repayment, deductible, and transfers to RRSP without room if unused. Stack both for maximum down payment. See our FHSA vs HBP comparison.

TFSA vs Non-Registered

TFSA wins until room is exhausted. After that, non-registered is necessary — see our non-registered account guide for ACB tracking and capital gains management.

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