2025 Tax Guide

US Withholding Tax for Canadians 2025: How to Reduce It

The US withholds 15% on dividends paid to Canadians. Here's how to minimize or eliminate this drag depending on where you hold your investments.

What Is US Withholding Tax?

When a US corporation pays a dividend to a non-US investor, the IRS withholds a portion of the payment as withholding tax. For Canadian residents, the Canada-US Tax Convention reduces the standard 30% non-resident withholding rate to 15% on most dividends.

This means if Apple pays you a $100 dividend, the IRS withholds $15 before the money reaches your account. You receive $85.

Withholding Tax by Account Type

AccountWithholding RateRecoverable?
Non-registered (taxable)15%Yes — foreign tax credit (T2209)
RRSP or RRIF0%Not applicable — no withholding
TFSA15%No — permanently lost
RESP15%No — permanently lost
LIRA / LIF / PRPP0%Not applicable — treaty covers these

Why RRSPs Get a Withholding Exemption

The Canada-US Tax Treaty specifically recognizes RRSPs and RRIFs as pension plans. Article XVIII of the treaty provides that income earned inside these accounts is exempt from US withholding tax. This is a significant benefit that makes RRSPs the optimal account for US dividend-paying stocks and ETFs.

TFSAs Are NOT Treaty-Exempt: The treaty was negotiated before TFSAs existed (TFSAs launched in 2009). The IRS does not recognize TFSAs as qualifying pension plans. As a result, the 15% US withholding applies to all US dividends received in a TFSA, and you cannot claim a foreign tax credit to recover it (because TFSA income is not included in your Canadian taxable income). The withholding is permanently lost.

How to Recover Withholding in Non-Registered Accounts

If you hold US dividend stocks in a non-registered (taxable) brokerage account:

  1. The 15% US withholding is automatically deducted before you receive dividends
  2. The withheld amount is reported on your NR4 slip (from the broker) or shown on your US 1042-S
  3. You report the gross dividend as foreign income on line 12100 of your T1
  4. You complete Form T2209 (Federal Foreign Tax Credits) to claim a credit for the 15% withheld
  5. The credit reduces your Canadian tax owing by the foreign tax paid

In most cases, the foreign tax credit fully offsets the US withholding, resulting in no double taxation in non-registered accounts.

Best Account Placement Strategy

To minimize withholding tax drag:

Canadian-Listed ETFs: If you buy a Canadian-listed ETF that holds US stocks (like XUS, VUN, ZSP), there is a "double layer" of withholding in TFSAs. The ETF itself pays 15% withholding as a foreign investor in US stocks, and you cannot recover this in a TFSA. Holding the same US ETF directly (VOO, VTI) in an RRSP eliminates this entirely.

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Other Countries' Withholding Tax

US withholding at 15% is not the only withholding to be aware of. Other countries have different rates under their tax treaties with Canada:

CountryDividend Withholding Rate (Treaty)
United States15%
United Kingdom15%
Germany15%
France15%
Switzerland15%
Japan15%
No treaty countries25–30%

Withholding Tax on REIT Distributions

US REITs pay distributions that are subject to 30% US withholding tax (not reduced to 15% under the treaty) for Canadian investors in non-registered accounts. In an RRSP, US REIT distributions are exempt from withholding under the treaty. This is another strong argument for holding US REITs in an RRSP rather than a TFSA or non-registered account.

Bottom Line

The RRSP is the single most effective tool for eliminating US withholding tax — the treaty exemption saves 15% on every US dividend, compounding significantly over time. The TFSA, despite its otherwise excellent tax-free status, is the worst account for US dividend investments due to the permanent, unrecoverable 15% withholding. Strategic account placement is one of the highest-value tax optimizations available to Canadian investors.