Maxing out your TFSA is a genuine milestone — it means you have fully used the most flexible tax-sheltered account in Canada. Now the question is: where does the next dollar go?
This guide maps out the optimal next steps based on your situation, so your savings keep working as tax-efficiently as possible.
Quick check: Are you actually maxed?
Before deciding what to do next, confirm your TFSA room is genuinely zero.
| How to Check | Steps |
|---|---|
| CRA My Account | Log in → Tax information → TFSA room (most accurate, updates April each year) |
| Your financial institution | TFSA balance shows your holdings, not your room — do not rely on this alone |
| Calculate manually | Add all annual limits since your eligibility year, subtract total contributions, add back total withdrawals from prior years |
If you were born in or before 1991 and have never contributed, your cumulative TFSA room by end of 2026 is $102,000.
→ See: TFSA Contribution Limit 2026 | How Much TFSA Room Do I Have
Decision tree: where to go after TFSA
| Your Situation | Best Next Account |
|---|---|
| First-time home buyer (or haven’t owned in 4+ years) | FHSA — best of RRSP + TFSA combined |
| High earner (40%+ marginal tax rate) | RRSP — deduction worth more at higher brackets |
| Mid-range earner expecting income to rise | RRSP — shelter income now, withdraw in lower-bracket retirement |
| Low earner or income near peak | Non-registered — RRSP deduction is less valuable when rate is low |
| Parent with children under 18 | RESP — 20% CESG grant on first $2,500/year is hard to beat |
| All registered accounts maxed | Non-registered — use tax-efficient assets |
Option 1: FHSA — if you qualify
The First Home Savings Account gives you a tax deduction like an RRSP and tax-free withdrawal like a TFSA — but only for a qualifying first home purchase.
| FHSA Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Annual contribution limit | $8,000 |
| Lifetime limit | $40,000 |
| Tax deduction | Yes |
| Tax-free growth | Yes |
| Tax-free qualifying withdrawal | Yes |
| Unused room carry-forward | 1 year (max $16,000 in a single year) |
| Account expiry | 15 years or when you turn 71, whichever is first |
Even if you are not buying soon, opening the FHSA starts the 15-year clock and accumulates room. If you never buy a home, the balance can be transferred to your RRSP without using contribution room.
→ See: FHSA Guide Canada | Is the FHSA Worth Opening?
Option 2: RRSP
The RRSP is the most powerful tax deferral tool for higher earners. Contributions reduce your taxable income today, and the investment grows tax-deferred until withdrawal (ideally at a lower marginal rate in retirement).
| When RRSP Wins Over Non-Registered | Why |
|---|---|
| Your marginal rate is above 33% | The tax deduction alone justifies the contribution |
| Your retirement income will be lower than current income | You defer today’s high-rate tax to a lower withdrawal rate |
| You have unused RRSP room from previous years | Catch-up contributions are allowed; all unused room carries forward indefinitely |
| You expect to use the Home Buyers’ Plan | $60,000 ($120,000 per couple) can be withdrawn tax-free for a first home purchase |
RRSP contribution limit 2026: 18% of your 2025 earned income, up to a maximum of $32,490, minus any pension adjustment.
→ See: RRSP Guide Canada | RRSP vs TFSA Calculator
Option 3: Non-registered account
Once all registered room is used, a non-registered (taxable) account is still worth using — but you need to be strategic about what you hold there.
Tax treatment of investment income in non-registered accounts
| Income Type | Tax Treatment | Tax-Efficiency |
|---|---|---|
| Canadian eligible dividends | Dividend tax credit reduces effective rate | High — often taxed at 15–25% |
| Capital gains | 50% inclusion rate (first $250K for individuals) | High |
| Return of capital (ROC) | Not immediately taxable; reduces ACB | High |
| Interest income | Taxed as regular income at your marginal rate | Low — put interest-bearing assets in RRSP/TFSA |
| Foreign dividends | Full marginal rate, no credit | Low — hold in RRSP for withholding tax treaty benefit |
Asset location rule of thumb: Hold interest-paying bonds and GICs in your RRSP/TFSA. Hold Canadian dividend stocks and ETFs in your non-registered account where the dividend tax credit applies. Hold US dividend or foreign-income ETFs in your RRSP (US withholding tax is waived under the Canada-US tax treaty).
→ See: Asset Location Strategy Canada
Option 4: RESP for children
If you have children under 18 with unused RESP grant room, the 20% Canada Education Savings Grant (CESG) on the first $2,500/year is a guaranteed instant return.
| CESG Basics | Detail |
|---|---|
| Basic grant | 20% of contributions, up to $500/year per beneficiary |
| Additional CESG | 10–20% more for lower-income families |
| Lifetime CESG maximum | $7,200 per child |
| Unused annual grant room | Can carry forward 1 year — max $1,000/year in catch-up grants |
→ See: RESP Guide Canada | How to Maximize CESG
Making the most of your maxed TFSA
Even though you cannot contribute more room, there are still ways to optimize what is inside:
| Strategy | Action |
|---|---|
| Asset location | Move the highest-growth assets (all-equity ETFs) inside the TFSA — gains are tax-free |
| Dividend payers | Eligible Canadian dividends in a TFSA lose the dividend tax credit — consider moving them to a non-registered account |
| Rebalance annually | No tax triggered by selling inside the TFSA — use this to maintain your target allocation without tax cost |
| Beneficiary designation | Ensure your TFSA has a named successor holder (spouse) or beneficiary to avoid estate delays and maximize tax-free transfer |
→ See: TFSA vs Non-Registered Account | What Happens to Your TFSA When You Die