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TFSA vs Non-Registered Account | Which Is Better?

Updated

TFSA vs Non-Registered: Quick Comparison

FeatureTFSANon-Registered
Annual contribution limit$7,000 (2024-2026)Unlimited
Tax on growthNoneYes
Tax on withdrawalNoneCapital gains taxed
Contribution room recoveryYes (following year)N/A
Losses deductibleNoYes
Best forAll investmentsAfter TFSA/RRSP maxed

How Each Account Is Taxed

TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account)

EventTax Treatment
ContributionsAfter-tax (no deduction)
Interest earnedTax-free
DividendsTax-free
Capital gainsTax-free
WithdrawalsTax-free

Example: Invest $50,000, it grows to $100,000, withdraw $100,000 — pay $0 tax.

Non-Registered Account

Income TypeTax Treatment
Interest100% taxable as ordinary income
Canadian dividendsGrossed up 38%, then tax credit
Foreign dividends100% taxable as ordinary income
Capital gains (≤$250k)50% taxable (inclusion rate)
Capital gains (>$250k)66.7% taxable (2024+)

Example: $10,000 capital gain at 40% marginal rate = $10,000 × 50% × 40% = $2,000 tax

Tax Comparison Example

Assume: $50,000 invested, grows to $100,000 over 20 years, 40% marginal rate

Scenario A: All Growth from Capital Gains

AccountFinal ValueTaxAfter-Tax
TFSA$100,000$0$100,000
Non-Registered$100,000$10,000$90,000

Tax calculation: $50,000 gain × 50% inclusion × 40% rate = $10,000

Scenario B: All Growth from Interest

AccountFinal ValueTaxAfter-Tax
TFSA$100,000$0$100,000
Non-Registered*~$75,000Ongoing~$75,000

*Interest-heavy investments in non-registered accounts pay tax annually, dragging down compounding.

Scenario C: Canadian Dividends

AccountFinal ValueTaxAfter-Tax
TFSA$100,000$0$100,000
Non-Registered$100,000~$7,500~$92,500

Dividend tax credit makes Canadian dividends more tax-efficient than interest or foreign dividends.

Order of Account Priority

For most Canadians, fill accounts in this order:

PriorityAccountWhy
1TFSATax-free growth, flexible withdrawals
2RRSPTax deduction now (if in high bracket)
3FHSATax deduction + tax-free for home purchase
4Non-RegisteredAfter registered accounts maxed

Exception: If you’re in a low tax bracket now and expect higher income later, prioritize TFSA over RRSP.

Asset Location Strategy

If you have both TFSA and non-registered accounts, put the right assets in each:

In TFSA (tax-free):

  • High-growth assets
  • Interest-bearing investments
  • REITs (real estate investment trusts)
  • Bonds
  • US/foreign dividend stocks

In Non-Registered (taxable):

  • Canadian dividend stocks
  • Buy-and-hold equity ETFs
  • Tax-efficient index funds

Why: Canadian dividends get a tax credit in non-registered accounts. Interest has no tax benefit, so it belongs in TFSA.

Advantage of TFSA: Contribution Room Recovery

When you withdraw from your TFSA, the room is restored the following January.

YearTFSA ActionContribution Room
2025Max TFSA ($95,000)$0
2025Withdraw $20,000$0 (until Jan 1)
2026New room + restored$7,000 + $20,000 = $27,000

Non-registered accounts don’t have “room” — you can deposit and withdraw freely, but you pay tax on gains.

Advantage of Non-Registered: Loss Harvesting

Capital losses can offset capital gains in non-registered accounts:

EventTax Impact
$10,000 gain+$5,000 taxable (50% inclusion)
$5,000 loss-$2,500 taxable
Net taxable gain$2,500

TFSA disadvantage: Losses in a TFSA disappear — you can’t use them to offset gains elsewhere.

When Non-Registered Makes Sense

SituationUse Non-Registered
TFSA and RRSP maxedYes
Short-term savings (1-3 years)Consider if TFSA full
Want to harvest lossesYes
Corporate investment accountYes (no access to TFSA)
Very high income, maxed all accountsYes

Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Not Maxing TFSA First

The tax-free growth in a TFSA almost always beats the tax-efficient treatment in non-registered.

Mistake 2: Holding Interest in Non-Registered

Interest is taxed at your full marginal rate. Keep bonds and GICs in your TFSA.

Mistake 3: Ignoring US Withholding Tax

US dividends face 15% withholding in TFSA (no recovery), but RRSP is exempt. If you hold lots of US dividend stocks, consider RRSP.

Mistake 4: Day Trading in TFSA

CRA may classify frequent trading as business income, making your TFSA taxable. Keep trading in non-registered if you trade actively.

Long-Term Growth Comparison

$10,000 invested at 7% growth for 30 years:

AccountPre-Tax ValueTaxAfter-Tax
TFSA$76,123$0$76,123
Non-Reg (cap gains)$76,123$6,612$69,511
Non-Reg (interest)$45,000*Ongoing$45,000

*Interest-heavy investments pay tax annually, dramatically reducing compounding.

The TFSA advantage compounds over time. Over 30 years, it’s worth $30,000+ more than a non-registered account holding interest-bearing investments.

Summary

AccountBest For
TFSAEverything (use first)
Non-RegisteredAfter TFSA/RRSP maxed, Canadian dividends, loss harvesting

Always max your TFSA before investing in non-registered accounts. The tax-free compounding is too valuable to pass up.