Canadian Tax Guide ยท 2026

RRSP vs TFSA: Which Is Right for You?

A plain-language comparison of Canada's two most powerful tax-sheltered accounts โ€” when each one wins, and how to use both.

Canada gives you two excellent tax-sheltered accounts: the Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) and the Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA). Both shelter your investment growth from tax. The key difference is when the tax advantage kicks in.

The Core Difference in One Sentence

RRSP gives you a tax deduction now but you pay tax on withdrawals later. TFSA gives you no deduction now but withdrawals are completely tax-free forever.

2026 Contribution Limits

Account2026 Annual LimitLifetime/CumulativeCarries Forward?
RRSP$31,560 (or 18% of prior year earned income)Based on income โ€” no fixed ceilingYes โ€” unused room carries forward indefinitely
TFSA$7,000$102,000 cumulative if eligible since 2009Yes โ€” unused room + withdrawals restored Jan 1 next year

Your personal RRSP limit is printed on your most recent Notice of Assessment from the CRA. Your TFSA room accumulates automatically starting at age 18 regardless of income.

How Each Account Is Taxed

RRSPTFSA
ContributionTax-deductible โ€” reduces taxable income this yearNo deduction โ€” made with after-tax dollars
Growth inside accountTax-sheltered (not taxed until withdrawal)Completely tax-free
WithdrawalsFully taxable as income in the year withdrawn100% tax-free, any time
Effect on income-tested benefitsWithdrawals count as income โ€” can reduce OAS, GIS, creditsWithdrawals do NOT count as income

Which Account Wins at Different Income Levels?

High income now, lower income in retirement โ†’ RRSP wins

Low income now, expecting higher income later โ†’ TFSA wins

Scenario: Student or early-career earning $40,000

Your marginal rate today is only 20โ€“25%. Deferring an RRSP deduction to a year when you earn more (and face a higher marginal rate) is worth waiting for. Meanwhile, use TFSA for any savings now โ€” the tax-free growth still applies, and you're not wasting a high-value deduction on a low tax rate.

Already retired or on OAS/GIS โ†’ TFSA wins clearly

Scenario: Age 70+, collecting OAS and GIS

RRSP withdrawals count as income and can trigger OAS clawback (above ~$90,997 in 2026) or reduce GIS entitlements. TFSA withdrawals are invisible to income tests โ€” a significant advantage for seniors managing their income in retirement.

Self-employed or variable income โ†’ Both, strategically

If your income fluctuates significantly year to year, save RRSP contributions for your high-income years (maximizing the deduction's value) and use TFSA in lower-income years. Both accounts let unused room carry forward, giving you flexibility.

RRSP Rules to Know

TFSA Rules to Know

Can You Use Both?

Absolutely โ€” and most Canadians should. The optimal strategy for most working Canadians with stable income:

  1. Max your RRSP first if you're in the 26%+ federal bracket (income roughly above $57,375).
  2. Deposit your RRSP tax refund into your TFSA.
  3. Max your TFSA with any remaining savings capacity.

This "RRSP refund into TFSA" loop is a well-known strategy that lets you compound both the tax deferral advantage and the tax-free growth advantage simultaneously.

Quick Decision Guide

Your situationPrioritize
High income, low expected retirement incomeRRSP first
Low income, expected to earn more laterTFSA now, RRSP later
May need the money before retirementTFSA (flexible, no penalty)
Collecting OAS / receiving GISTFSA (no income clawback impact)
Saving for a first home in the next few yearsFHSA first, then TFSA/RRSP
Can max both accountsBoth โ€” RRSP refund โ†’ TFSA

Don't Forget the FHSA in 2026

The First Home Savings Account (FHSA), introduced in 2023, is now a major consideration for first-time buyers. It combines the best of both worlds: contributions are tax-deductible (like an RRSP) and qualifying withdrawals for a first home purchase are completely tax-free (like a TFSA). The 2026 annual limit is $8,000, with a lifetime maximum of $40,000. If you're saving for a first home, the FHSA should be your first dollar in.

Run the numbers with our free tools

See exactly how much an RRSP contribution saves you this year โ€” including your refund amount.

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Consult a licensed CPA or financial advisor for advice specific to your situation.