RRSP vs TFSA: Which Is Better for You?

2026 break-even calculator — high income favours RRSP, low income favours TFSA

RRSP vs TFSA Break-Even Calculator

RRSP Wins

The Core Rule: It Depends on Your Tax Rate

The RRSP vs. TFSA debate comes down to one fundamental principle: if your marginal tax rate when contributing is higher than when withdrawing, RRSP wins. If it's the same or lower, TFSA wins. In theory, if your tax rate is identical at contribution and withdrawal, both accounts produce the exact same after-tax outcome — the math is equivalent.

In practice, the RRSP tends to win for high-income earners who expect lower income in retirement. The TFSA tends to win for low-to-middle income earners, students, and anyone who might need flexible access to funds without affecting income-tested benefits.

When the RRSP Is Better

When the TFSA Is Better

The GIS Factor: Often Overlooked

For lower-income Canadians, the TFSA advantage over RRSP can be enormous due to the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS). GIS is a monthly non-taxable benefit for low-income OAS recipients. In 2026, single seniors with income below about $22,000 may qualify for up to $1,100+/month in GIS. RRSP/RRIF withdrawals count as taxable income and can reduce or eliminate GIS eligibility. TFSA withdrawals do not. For a low-income senior, a $100 RRIF withdrawal could cost $5,000+ in lost GIS — effectively a 50% tax rate.

RRSP vs TFSA Comparison Table 2026

FeatureRRSPTFSA
2026 Contribution Limit18% of income, max $32,490$7,000 flat
Cumulative Room (since inception)Varies by income history$102,000 (if 18+ since 2009)
Contribution Deductible?Yes — reduces taxable incomeNo
Growth Taxable?No (tax-deferred)No (tax-free)
Withdrawals Taxable?Yes — fully taxable incomeNo
Withdrawal Affects Benefits?Yes (OAS, GIS, credits)No
Re-contribution After Withdrawal?No — room is gone foreverYes — adds back next January
Mandatory Conversion Age71 (to RRIF)None
Over-contribution Buffer$2,000 lifetime$0
Foreign Withholding Tax (US divs)Exempt (treaty applies)Not exempt — 15% withheld

The "Same Rate" Myth: RRSP and TFSA Are Not Always Equal

Many financial writers claim that if your tax rate is the same today and in retirement, RRSP and TFSA produce identical outcomes. While mathematically true in isolation, several real-world factors break this equivalence:

These factors generally tilt the scales toward TFSA being slightly better even at identical tax rates, especially for those who want flexibility and benefit preservation.

The ideal strategy for most middle-income Canadians: Max TFSA first if income is under $50K. Once income exceeds $60K, prioritize RRSP contributions. After maxing both, use a non-registered account. See our non-registered account guide.

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