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Can You Have Multiple TFSAs in Canada?

Updated

Short Answer

Yes, you can have multiple TFSAs. CRA allows you to hold TFSA savings accounts, TFSA GICs, and TFSA investment accounts at different institutions simultaneously.

The rule that matters is simple: your combined contributions across all accounts must not exceed your available TFSA room in that calendar year.

How TFSA Contribution Room Works

Every Canadian who is 18 or older and a Canadian resident accumulates TFSA contribution room each year. Room is individual — it does not depend on income.

YearAnnual TFSA limit
2009$5,000
2010$5,000
2011$5,000
2012$5,000
2013$5,500
2014$5,500
2015$10,000
2016$5,500
2017$5,500
2018$5,500
2019$6,000
2020$6,000
2021$6,000
2022$6,000
2023$6,500
2024$7,000
2025$7,000

If you were 18+ and a Canadian resident since 2009, your cumulative TFSA room as of 2025 is $102,000 (assuming no contributions have been made).

Withdrawals add room back on January 1 of the following year, not immediately.

Example: Two Accounts, One Pool of Room

TFSA accountContribution this year
TFSA HISA at Bank A$4,000
TFSA brokerage at Bank B$3,000
Total contributed$7,000

If your available room for the year is $7,000, you are fully maxed across both accounts.

What Happens If You Overcontribute

CRA charges 1% per month on the amount over your limit. This applies to each calendar month (or partial month) the excess remains:

Overcontribution amountMonthly penaltyAfter 6 monthsAfter 12 months
$1,000$10$60$120
$5,000$50$300$600
$10,000$100$600$1,200

The fix is to withdraw the excess promptly. The room does not return until January 1 of the next year, so avoid contributing that amount again before then.

Account Types You Can Hold as Separate TFSAs

Account typeBest for
TFSA HISA (High-Interest Savings)Emergency fund, short-term savings, money you may need soon
TFSA GICMedium-term locked-in savings with a set return
TFSA brokerage (self-directed)Long-term investing in stocks, ETFs, mutual funds
TFSA mutual fund accountManaged investing through a bank or advisor

There is no rule preventing you from having all four simultaneously, as long as total contributions stay within your room.

Why Multiple TFSAs Make Sense

Splitting your TFSA across account types addresses different goals without mixing funds:

StrategySetup
Emergency fund + long-term investingTFSA HISA (3-6 months expenses) + TFSA ETF portfolio
Short goal + long goalTFSA GIC for car purchase in 2 years + TFSA brokerage for retirement
Rate shoppingMove idle TFSA savings to institution with higher current rate
Keeping registered and non-registered investing separateAll TFSA assets held in dedicated accounts by type

The Most Common Overcontribution Mistake

Withdrawing in the fall and recontributing before year-end is the top cause of TFSA penalties.

Example: You withdraw $10,000 from your TFSA in October, thinking you freed up room. You recontribute $10,000 in November. If you had already used your full annual room earlier in the year, that November recontribution is an excess contribution — the $10,000 withdrawal does not restore room until January 1.

How to Check Your TFSA Contribution Room

  1. Log in to CRA My Account at canada.ca/my-cra-account.
  2. Under “RRSP and savings plans,” look for TFSA details.
  3. Note the displayed room — it reflects contributions reported by institutions and may lag the current calendar year.
  4. Add up all contributions you have made this year that CRA may not yet have recorded.
  5. Subtract from displayed room to get your true current available room.

Keep your own spreadsheet of contributions and withdrawals. Do not rely solely on CRA’s number for in-year decisions.

Direct Transfers Between TFSAs

If you want to move money from one institution to another without using contribution room:

  1. Do not withdraw to cash. This uses your room for the current year.
  2. Contact the receiving institution and request a direct TFSA transfer.
  3. The receiving institution sends transfer paperwork to the sending institution.
  4. Funds move as a registered transfer with no impact on contribution room.

Transfers take 2 to 6 weeks and may involve a transfer-out fee (typically $50 to $150) from the sending institution.

Bottom Line

Multiple TFSAs are allowed and often useful for goal separation. The key rule is treating all accounts as a single shared contribution pool. Check CRA My Account regularly, keep your own records, and always use direct transfer paperwork when moving TFSA assets between institutions.

Frequently asked questions

Do multiple TFSAs have separate contribution limits? No. All TFSAs you hold at any institution share one combined contribution limit. CRA tracks contributions across all accounts. Over-contributing — even by accident across multiple accounts — triggers a 1% per-month penalty on the excess.

Can I have a TFSA at multiple banks at the same time? Yes. You can have a TFSA savings account at one bank, a TFSA GIC at another, and a TFSA brokerage account at a discount broker, all simultaneously. The institution reports contributions to CRA; you are responsible for tracking the total across all accounts.

What is the best way to move a TFSA from one bank to another? Use a direct transfer — not a withdrawal. Ask the receiving institution to initiate a “TFSA transfer” (Form T2033 or equivalent). A direct transfer does not count as a withdrawal and does not eat into your contribution room. If you withdraw and re-contribute instead, you cannot re-contribute the withdrawn amount until January 1 of the following year.

Is there a fee to transfer a TFSA between institutions? Most institutions charge a $50–$150 transfer-out fee. Many receiving institutions will reimburse the transfer-out fee if you move a large enough balance (typically $10,000–$25,000+). Wealthsimple and Questrade both offer transfer fee reimbursements — check current promotions.


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