The most effective savings strategy is automation — set it up once and let it run:
Set up automatic transfers on payday to a separate high-interest savings account (HISA) or TFSA — before you see the money
Automate RRSP contributions monthly rather than waiting for RRSP season (avoids last-minute large contributions and takes advantage of year-round compounding)
Use a separate account for each goal — emergency fund, car purchase, vacation — so funds don’’t mix
Increase contributions automatically — set your automatic transfer to increase by 1% of income every January
Top Canadian HISAs for automated savings (2026): EQ Bank (5.25% on personal account), Wealthsimple Cash (4%+), KOHO (3%+ with premium).
Frequently asked questions
What percentage of income do Canadians actually save?
Statistics Canada reports an average personal savings rate of approximately 5–8% in recent years. During COVID it spiked to over 25%; it has since normalized. The recommended 15–20% savings rate for retirement preparedness is well above the average Canadian actually saves.
Is it better to save monthly or annually?
Monthly. Consistent monthly savings benefits from dollar-cost averaging if invested, and removes the temptation to spend the money that would otherwise sit in a chequing account. Annual lump-sum RRSP contributions are common but less optimal than 12 equal monthly contributions.