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RRSP vs TFSA

A practical all-in-one guide to how Registered Retirement Savings Plans (RRSPs) and Tax-Free Savings Accounts (TFSAs) differ, and when each account type can be the better fit.

Core Tax Difference

RRSP: Tax deduction now TFSA: Tax-free withdrawals later

RRSP contributions are generally tax-deductible, while TFSA contributions are not. RRSP withdrawals are generally taxable; TFSA withdrawals are generally tax-free.

Contribution Room Basics

  • RRSP: room is tied to earned income (up to the annual limit) and unused room carries forward.
  • TFSA: annual room is set by the government and accumulates each year for eligible residents.
  • Re-contributions: TFSA withdrawals restore room in a future year; RRSP withdrawals do not.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Feature RRSP TFSA
Contribution tax treatment Usually tax-deductible Not tax-deductible
Growth inside account Tax-deferred Tax-free
Withdrawals Generally taxable Generally tax-free
Contribution room system Based on earned income and annual max Annual fixed amount for eligible residents
Room after withdrawal Not restored Restored in a later year
Typical use case Higher tax bracket today, lower in retirement Need flexibility and tax-free access

Annual TFSA Contribution Limits (2009–2026)

Cumulative contribution room (as of 2026): $109,000

Decision Signals

High taxable income today RRSP edge
Need withdrawal flexibility TFSA edge
Saving strictly for retirement Balanced

Common Strategy

  • Use RRSP contributions when you are in a higher marginal tax bracket and can benefit more from the deduction.
  • Use TFSA for flexible savings goals and tax-free withdrawals.
  • Many investors use both: RRSP for retirement tax planning and TFSA for flexible, tax-free growth.

Reference resource: TD Canada Trust – Comparing TFSA vs RRSP.