TFSA vs RRSP Canada 2025 — Which Is Better?
Both the TFSA and RRSP are powerful Canadian savings tools, but they work differently and suit different situations. The short answer: use both if you can. But if you must choose, the right account depends on your current tax rate versus your expected retirement tax rate.
TFSA vs. RRSP — Side-by-Side Comparison
TFSA
- After-tax contributions
- Tax-free growth
- Tax-free withdrawals
- Withdrawals restore room next year
- No income required
- No effect on OAS/GIS/CCB
- Room: $102,000 since 2009 (at age 18+ in 2009)
- Any age can contribute (no upper limit)
RRSP
- Tax-deductible contributions
- Tax-sheltered growth
- Fully taxable withdrawals
- Withdrawals do NOT restore room
- Requires earned income
- Withdrawals count as income (may affect benefits)
- Room: 18% of prior year income, max $31,560
- Must convert to RRIF by age 71
When RRSP Wins
The RRSP is better when your tax rate in retirement will be lower than your current rate. This typically applies to:
- High-income earners (top marginal brackets) with modest retirement income expectations
- Defined benefit pension plan members who will have predictable but moderate retirement income
- People wanting to reduce current-year income (e.g., large bonus year)
When TFSA Wins
The TFSA is better when your tax rate in retirement will be equal or higher than today. This applies to:
- Young people early in their careers (low income now, higher later)
- Low-income earners where RRSP deductions provide minimal benefit
- Retirees who already have substantial taxable income (CPP, OAS, pension) and want tax-free supplemental withdrawals
- Anyone concerned about OAS clawback (TFSA withdrawals don't count as income)
Best strategy for most Canadians: Maximize your TFSA first, then contribute to your RRSP when you're in a higher tax bracket. The tax refund from RRSP contributions can be re-invested in your TFSA — effectively giving you a double benefit.
Both Accounts: The Ideal Approach
For most Canadians earning a moderate to high income, the optimal strategy is to use both accounts strategically:
- Maximize TFSA room (especially in early career at lower rates)
- In higher-earning years, maximize RRSP to defer taxes
- Invest RRSP refund in your TFSA
- Consider a spousal RRSP for income splitting
- In retirement, draw down RRSP/RRIF first if OAS clawback is a concern
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