Quick answer: A Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) is a registered Canadian investment account where every dollar of interest, dividends, and capital gains grows tax-free. The 2026 contribution limit is $7,000 (same as 2024 and 2025). Cumulative room for someone eligible every year since 2009 reached $109,000 on January 1, 2026. Contributions are not tax-deductible (unlike RRSP). Withdrawals are tax-free and the withdrawn amount is added back to your contribution room the following January 1 — not the same calendar year.
What this means: You can hold cash, GICs, stocks, ETFs, mutual funds, bonds, and most CRA-qualified investments inside a TFSA. Over-contributions trigger a 1% per month tax on the excess until withdrawn. Re-contributing the same year you withdraw can accidentally create an over-contribution — wait until next January 1.
What to do next: See your exact contribution room. TFSA contribution room calculator →
What a TFSA is
A TFSA is a registered investment account created in 2009 under the Income Tax Act s. 146.2. It lets you contribute after-tax dollars (no deduction for the contribution itself), invest in qualified investments, and pay zero tax on the growth — whether interest, dividends, or capital gains. Withdrawals at any time, for any purpose, are also tax-free.
A TFSA is not a single investment product. It is a tax wrapper that can hold many different investment types — cash, GICs, stocks, ETFs, mutual funds, bonds. The CRA defines “qualified investments” in Income Tax Act s. 204 and ITR s. 4900.
2026 contribution room
| 2026 TFSA figure | Amount |
|---|---|
| Annual dollar limit | $7,000 |
| Cumulative room since 2009 (eligible since age 18+ in 2009) | $109,000 |
| Cumulative room going into 2026 (pre-contribution) | $102,000 |
| Over-contribution tax | 1% per month on the excess |
The annual dollar limit is indexed to inflation but rounded to the nearest $500. The 2026 limit stays at $7,000 because the indexed inflation adjustment didn’t cross the $250 rounding threshold. Detailed history and the next likely step-up to $7,500 are in TFSA contribution limit and cumulative room (2026).
Your personal contribution room is based on the years you were age 18+ and a Canadian tax resident. Someone who turned 18 in 2020 has cumulative room of $7,000 + $6,000 + $6,000 + $6,500 + $7,000 + $7,000 + $7,000 = approximately $46,500 going into 2026 (subject to actual year-by-year eligibility and any contributions made).
Are TFSA contributions tax deductible?
No. TFSA contributions are made with after-tax dollars and do not reduce your taxable income on the T1. This is the single biggest difference vs. RRSP. The trade-off: TFSA withdrawals are tax-free at any age, while RRSP withdrawals are fully taxable at marginal rates.
Are TFSA withdrawals taxable?
No. Withdrawals from a TFSA are tax-free in the year withdrawn and do not appear on the T1 return. The withdrawal does not trigger any withholding tax (unlike RRSP/RRIF). You can withdraw cash by transfer to a chequing account, or by selling securities and transferring the proceeds.
One gotcha: TFSA withdrawals do not appear on the T1 but they do affect your contribution room next year (see “Recontribution timing” below).
Recontribution timing (the 1-year wait)
The amount you withdraw from a TFSA is added back to your contribution room on January 1 of the following year — NOT in the same year. This is the most common TFSA mistake.
Example. Yara contributes $7,000 in February 2026 (using all of her 2026 annual room). In August 2026 she withdraws $4,000 to cover an unexpected expense. She cannot re-contribute the $4,000 until January 1, 2027 — doing so before then is an over-contribution and triggers the 1% per month tax. The $4,000 withdrawal is added to her 2027 contribution room: $4,000 + $7,000 = $11,000 of room in 2027.
For the full mechanic with multi-year withdrawals, see TFSA withdrawal and re-contribution rules.
Over-contributions and the 1% tax
If you contribute more than your contribution room (combining all your TFSAs across all institutions), the excess is subject to a 1% per month tax on the highest excess in each month. The tax is paid on Form RC243, Schedule A.
Common ways people over-contribute:
- Re-contributing within the same calendar year after a withdrawal.
- Having multiple TFSAs and forgetting that the limit applies across all accounts combined.
- Treating in-kind transfers as adding new room when they don’t (the FMV at deposit counts as a contribution).
- Carrying forward a misunderstanding of room from a year of non-residency or under-18 eligibility.
The cleanest way to verify your room: check CRA My Account under “TFSA contribution room.” CRA updates this figure annually based on issuer reports (TFSA Annual Information Returns).
What investments are allowed in a TFSA?
Most CRA-qualified investments are allowed:
- Cash and high-interest savings (HISA).
- Guaranteed Investment Certificates (GICs).
- Bonds, money market funds.
- Mutual funds, ETFs.
- Stocks listed on a designated exchange (TSX, NYSE, NASDAQ, etc.).
- Certain options strategies (covered calls on long positions, cash-secured puts).
- Shares of a CCPC in some narrow circumstances (subject to the prohibited-investment rules).
Not allowed (non-qualified or prohibited):
- Shares listed only on a non-designated exchange.
- Certain crypto products held directly (only some ETFs holding crypto are qualified).
- Naked options.
- Shares of a private corporation the holder controls (prohibited investment).
Holding a non-qualified or prohibited investment triggers a 50% tax on the FMV (refundable in some circumstances if disposed of quickly). See when CRA can tax your TFSA for the full five-paths-to-taxation framework.
TFSA vs RRSP: which to use first
The basic decision rule:
| Situation | Usually use |
|---|---|
| Your marginal tax rate now is higher than your expected retirement rate | RRSP first (deduct at high rate, withdraw at low rate) |
| Your marginal tax rate now is lower than your expected retirement rate | TFSA first (pay tax now at low rate, withdraw tax-free) |
| You expect to use the funds for non-retirement goals (down payment, emergency, sabbatical) | TFSA — tax-free withdrawal at any age, no penalty |
| You need to lower current taxable income (e.g., to qualify for CCB or other income-tested benefits) | RRSP — reduces net income and increases benefit entitlement |
| You are saving for a first home | FHSA + RRSP HBP + TFSA combined — see FHSA 2026 and HBP 2026 |
For a deeper decision walkthrough, see the RRSP vs TFSA calculator and the “TFSA vs RRSP: which is better” article in the cluster.
Long-run growth of a TFSA
The compounding advantage of tax-free growth becomes very large over 20-30 years. Example: $7,000 per year contributed for 30 years, growing at 6% annually, grows to roughly $553,000 entirely tax-free. The same $7,000 contributed to a non-registered account at a marginal rate of 30% on dividends and capital gains would grow to roughly $420,000 — a $130,000+ disadvantage.
Plug your own numbers into the TFSA growth projection calculator.
Day trading and business income risk
Active intra-day trading inside a TFSA can flip the account from a tax shelter into a fully-taxed trust. If CRA assesses the TFSA as carrying on a business of trading securities, it taxes the trading income at the top marginal rate. The leading case is Canadian Western Trust Company v The King, 2024 FCA 108, affirming Ahamed v The King, 2023 TCC 17.
For the six-factor business test and concrete reduction steps, see the dedicated guide: TFSA Day Trading Rules: When CRA Can Tax Your TFSA as Business Income.
Common mistakes
- Re-contributing the same year you withdraw. Wait until January 1 of the following year — otherwise the re-contribution is an over-contribution.
- Treating multiple TFSAs as separate limits. The $7,000 annual limit applies across all your TFSAs combined.
- Holding US-listed shares without considering withholding tax. US dividends paid to a TFSA are subject to 15% US withholding tax (unlike in an RRSP). For dividend-focused US holdings, RRSP is more tax-efficient.
- Over-contributing because of CRA My Account lag. Issuer reporting can lag by months. Track your own contributions in real time.
- Forgetting that contributions while non-resident don’t earn room. Years spent outside Canada as a non-resident don’t add to TFSA contribution room.
- Day-trading and triggering business income. Active intra-day trading can flip your TFSA from a tax shelter into a fully-taxed trust.
- Holding a private company in your TFSA. Shares of a CCPC where you have significant interest are usually prohibited investments — the 50% FMV tax applies.
Frequently asked questions
What is the 2026 TFSA contribution limit?
$7,000 (same as 2024 and 2025). Indexation is pending the next $500 round-up.
Are TFSA contributions tax deductible?
No. They are made with after-tax dollars. (Withdrawals are tax-free, which is the offsetting advantage.)
How much can I have in a TFSA in 2026?
If you have been eligible every year since 2009 and never contributed, $109,000 (cumulative through 2026). Plus any growth on prior contributions.
What is the penalty for over-contributing?
1% per month on the highest excess in each month, paid on Form RC243. Withdraw the excess promptly to stop the meter.
Can I day-trade in my TFSA?
Be careful. Active intra-day trading, especially by finance professionals, can trigger CRA reassessment of the TFSA as carrying on a business, with tax at the top marginal rate on its trading income. See the dedicated day-trading article.