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What to Do When You Max Out Your TFSA in Canada

Updated

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 CheckSteps
CRA My AccountLog in → Tax information → TFSA room (most accurate, updates April each year)
Your financial institutionTFSA balance shows your holdings, not your room — do not rely on this alone
Calculate manuallyAdd 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 SituationBest 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 riseRRSP — shelter income now, withdraw in lower-bracket retirement
Low earner or income near peakNon-registered — RRSP deduction is less valuable when rate is low
Parent with children under 18RESP — 20% CESG grant on first $2,500/year is hard to beat
All registered accounts maxedNon-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 FeatureDetail
Annual contribution limit$8,000
Lifetime limit$40,000
Tax deductionYes
Tax-free growthYes
Tax-free qualifying withdrawalYes
Unused room carry-forward1 year (max $16,000 in a single year)
Account expiry15 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-RegisteredWhy
Your marginal rate is above 33%The tax deduction alone justifies the contribution
Your retirement income will be lower than current incomeYou defer today’s high-rate tax to a lower withdrawal rate
You have unused RRSP room from previous yearsCatch-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 TypeTax TreatmentTax-Efficiency
Canadian eligible dividendsDividend tax credit reduces effective rateHigh — often taxed at 15–25%
Capital gains50% inclusion rate (first $250K for individuals)High
Return of capital (ROC)Not immediately taxable; reduces ACBHigh
Interest incomeTaxed as regular income at your marginal rateLow — put interest-bearing assets in RRSP/TFSA
Foreign dividendsFull marginal rate, no creditLow — 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 BasicsDetail
Basic grant20% of contributions, up to $500/year per beneficiary
Additional CESG10–20% more for lower-income families
Lifetime CESG maximum$7,200 per child
Unused annual grant roomCan 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:

StrategyAction
Asset locationMove the highest-growth assets (all-equity ETFs) inside the TFSA — gains are tax-free
Dividend payersEligible Canadian dividends in a TFSA lose the dividend tax credit — consider moving them to a non-registered account
Rebalance annuallyNo tax triggered by selling inside the TFSA — use this to maintain your target allocation without tax cost
Beneficiary designationEnsure 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