TFSA vs RRSP vs FHSA: Which Account Should You Use?

The short version: Use a TFSA for flexibility, an RRSP for retirement, and an FHSA if you're saving for your first home. Most Canadians benefit from using all three — but the order matters.

Canada offers three tax-advantaged accounts that can dramatically improve your financial outcomes. Understanding which to use when — and in what order — is one of the highest-impact financial decisions you can make.


Quick Comparison

FeatureTFSARRSPFHSA
Full nameTax-Free Savings AccountRegistered Retirement Savings PlanFirst Home Savings Account
Introduced200919572023
Annual contribution room$7,000 (2026)18% of earned income, up to $32,490 (2026)$8,000/year, $40,000 lifetime
Tax on contributionsNo deduction (after-tax dollars)Deducted from taxable incomeDeducted from taxable income
Tax on growthNoneTax-deferred (taxed on withdrawal)None (if used for qualifying home purchase)
Tax on withdrawalNoneTaxed as income in the year of withdrawalNone (if qualifying home purchase); otherwise taxed as income
Withdrawal flexibilityAnytime, any reason, no penaltyWithdrawals taxed as income; some exceptions (HBP, LLP)Must be for first home purchase within 15 years
Unused roomCarries forward indefinitelyCarries forward indefinitelyCarries forward 1 year only (max $8,000 carry-forward)
Withdrawal room recoveryAmount withdrawn added back next January 1Room is permanently lostN/A — account closes after qualifying withdrawal or 15 years

TFSA: The Flexible Powerhouse

A TFSA is the most straightforward tax-advantaged account in Canada. You contribute after-tax dollars, your money grows tax-free, and you can withdraw at any time — for any reason — without paying tax.

When a TFSA Makes Sense

2026 TFSA Contribution Limits

DescriptionAmount (CAD)
2026 annual limit$7,000
Lifetime cumulative limit (if you were 18+ in 2009 and never contributed)$102,000 (as of 2026)
How to check your roomCRA My Account → "TFSA contribution room"
Over-contributing triggers a 1% per month penalty on the excess amount. Always check your CRA My Account before making large contributions.

RRSP: The Retirement Workhorse

An RRSP gives you a tax deduction today and tax-deferred growth — you'll pay tax when you withdraw, ideally in retirement when your tax rate is lower.

When an RRSP Makes Sense

2026 RRSP Contribution Limits

DescriptionAmount (CAD)
Maximum annual contribution18% of previous year's earned income, up to $32,490
Lifetime limitNo hard cap — carries forward indefinitely
Deadline60 days after calendar year-end (typically March 1)

FHSA: The New Kid (Since 2023)

The FHSA combines the best of both worlds: contributions are tax-deductible (like an RRSP), and qualifying withdrawals for a first home are tax-free (like a TFSA). If you don't buy a home, the money can roll into your RRSP without penalty.

When an FHSA Makes Sense

2026 FHSA Limits

DescriptionAmount (CAD)
Annual contribution limit$8,000
Lifetime contribution limit$40,000
Carry-forwardUp to $8,000 of unused room (1 year only)
Maximum account duration15 years from opening (or until end of year you turn 71)

The Contribution Order: Where to Put Your Money First

Financial guidance across Canadian institutions (FCAC, major banks, regulators) generally converges on this priority sequence:

PriorityAccountWhy First?
1Employer-matched RRSPFree money. No investment beats a guaranteed 50-100% match.
2FHSA (if saving for first home)Tax deduction on the way in, tax-free on the way out. Best of both worlds.
3TFSAMaximum flexibility, tax-free growth, no withdrawal penalties.
4RRSP (additional, beyond employer match)Tax-deferred growth; best if you're in a higher bracket now.
5Non-registered accountNo tax advantages, but no limits either. Last resort.

Scenario Examples

SituationRecommended Order
25-year-old earning $55,000, renting, wants to buy in 5 yearsEmployer match → FHSA → TFSA
35-year-old earning $95,000, already owns home, no employer matchTFSA → RRSP
45-year-old earning $140,000, maxed TFSA, owns homeEmployer match → RRSP → Non-registered
22-year-old student, earning $20,000 part-timeTFSA only (low bracket = less RRSP benefit)

TFSA vs RRSP: The Detailed Breakdown

Which Is Better for You?

The decision between TFSA and RRSP comes down to one core question: Will your tax rate be higher now, or in retirement?

Your Current SituationBetter AccountWhy
Early career, lower income (under ~$55,000)TFSARRSP deduction worth less at low rates; TFSA flexibility matters more
Mid-career, higher income (over ~$100,000)RRSP (after employer match)Tax deduction at 30-40%+ marginal rate is powerful
Near retirement, maxed TFSA, high incomeRRSPReduce high-income years, defer tax to lower-income retirement
Uncertain about future incomeTFSAFlexibility to withdraw without penalty; can always contribute to RRSP later

The "RRSP Refund" Trap

RRSP contributions generate a tax refund — but that refund isn't "free money." It's a loan from your future self. The refund represents tax you'll eventually pay on withdrawal. If you spend the refund instead of reinvesting it, you reduce the RRSP's advantage significantly.

The rule: reinvest your RRSP refund — ideally into your TFSA.


Common Questions

Can I have all three accounts?

Yes. There's no rule against holding a TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA simultaneously — and most Canadians who can afford to should. The question is which to prioritise with limited funds.

What happens to my FHSA if I don't buy a home?

After 15 years (or the end of the year you turn 71, whichever comes first), your FHSA must close. You can:

  1. Transfer to an RRSP — no tax impact, no effect on RRSP contribution room
  2. Withdraw as cash — fully taxable as income that year

What happens if I over-contribute?

Check your limits on CRA My Account before contributing.

Is the TFSA really "tax-free"?

Yes. You pay no tax on interest, dividends, or capital gains earned inside a TFSA — ever. This is true regardless of how much it grows or when you withdraw.


Next Steps

How to Build an Emergency Fund in Canada →

Before investing, build your safety net. We recommend 3–6 months of essential expenses in a liquid HISA.

Best High-Interest Savings Accounts in Canada →

If you're using a TFSA or non-registered HISA for your savings, compare the best rates currently available.


Canadian Money Guide is a research-driven publication, not a financial advisor or tax professional. Contribution limits are current as of 2026 and subject to annual indexation by the CRA. Always verify your personal contribution room via CRA My Account. See How We Research.