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Foreign Dividend Withholding Tax for Canadian Investors: Country-by-Country Guide

Updated

Foreign dividends from outside the United States face their own withholding rules. Where you invest — and which account you hold them in — determines how much of each dividend you keep. For the broader asset-location framework, start with best account type for US stocks and ETFs in Canada.

Withholding tax rates by country for Canadian investors

CountryDomestic WHT rateTreaty rate (Canada)TFSA recoveryRRSP recoveryNon-reg recovery
United States30%15% (0% in RRSP)NoneFull (0%)Full via T2209
United Kingdom0%0%N/AN/AN/A
Germany26.375%15%NonePartial (15% still applies)Full via T2209
France30%15%NonePartial (15% still applies)Full via T2209
Switzerland35%15%NonePartial (15% still applies)Full via T2209
Netherlands15%15%NonePartialFull via T2209
Japan20.315%15%NonePartial (15% still applies)Full via T2209
Australia (unfranked)30%15%NonePartialFull via T2209
Australia (franked)0%0%N/AN/AN/A
CanadaN/AN/AN/AN/ADividend tax credit
Singapore0%0%N/AN/AN/A
Hong Kong0%0%N/AN/AN/A
China10%10%NonePartialFull via T2209
India20%15–20%NonePartialFull via T2209
South Korea22%15%NonePartialFull via T2209

Key insight: only the US-Canada treaty fully exempts Canadian registered accounts

That is why US holdings deserve their own treatment in US ETFs vs Canadian-listed ETFs: withholding tax comparison.

The Canada-US treaty Article XXI(2) has a specific registered-plan pension exemption covering RRSP and RRIF. Most other Canadian tax treaties do not include an equivalent registered-plan exemption. As a result:

  • US dividends in RRSP: 0% withholding
  • European dividends in RRSP: typically still 15% withheld (cannot recover inside registered account)
  • UK dividends in any account: 0% (no withholding to discuss)

This means the RRSP preference for avoiding withholding applies uniquely to US dividends. For European and Asian dividends, the non-registered account (where T2209 recovery is available) may actually be preferable to RRSP.


Embedded withholding drag in international ETFs (approximate)

If you are trying to keep the product lineup simple despite these tax nuances, our best all-in-one ETFs in Canada guide shows the tradeoff between simplicity and precision.

ETF typeTypical embedded drag (TFSA)Typical embedded drag (RRSP)Typical embedded drag (Non-reg)
US equity (VFV)~0.17–0.20%~0.17–0.20%~0.17% (unrecoverable fund portion)
International developed (VIU, XEF)~0.25–0.40%~0.20–0.35%~0.25–0.40% (partial T3 recovery)
Emerging markets (XEC, VEE)~0.30–0.60%~0.25–0.50%~0.30–0.60% (partial T3 recovery)
Canadian equity (XIC, VCN)0%0%0%

Asset location summary: where to hold what

Asset classBest accountWorst accountReason
US equity ETFRRSPTFSATreaty exempts RRSP; TFSA has permanent 15% loss
UK stocks/ETFAny0% withholding everywhere
European equity ETFNon-regTFSAT2209 recovery in non-reg; no recovery in TFSA
International developed (VIU)Non-reg or RRSPTFSAPartial T2209 in non-reg; no recovery in TFSA
Emerging marketsNon-regTFSASame as above
Canadian equityTFSA firstNo withholding, maximum tax-sheltered growth

If you are still deciding between registered accounts before getting this detailed, see TFSA vs RRSP for beginners.


Frequently asked questions

Why does withholding tax vary by country? Each country sets its own domestic withholding tax rate on dividends paid to foreigners. Canada has bilateral tax treaties with over 90 countries that reduce these rates (typically to 15%). Without a treaty, the domestic rate applies — which can be as high as 30–35%.

Can I claim foreign withholding tax as a credit in Canada? Yes — in non-registered accounts, you can claim a foreign tax credit using Form T2209. The credit offsets your Canadian taxes dollar-for-dollar, up to 15% of the foreign income. If the treaty rate is 15% and you were withheld at 15%, you typically recover the full amount.

Does RRSP eliminate foreign withholding tax? Only for the US. The Canada-US tax treaty specifically exempts RRSPs and RRIFs from the 15% US withholding tax on dividends and interest. For all other countries (UK, Germany, Japan, etc.), the treaty withholding rate (typically 15%) still applies even inside an RRSP — there is no equivalent exemption.

What is the most tax-efficient account for European stocks? A non-registered account, where you can claim the T2209 foreign tax credit to recover the 15% withholding. Inside a TFSA, European withholding is permanent and unrecoverable. Inside an RRSP, the 15% treaty rate still applies with no recovery mechanism.