CA Tax Tools

March 22, 2026

TFSA Contribution Room: How It Works

How Tax-Free Savings Account contribution room accumulates since 2009, the 2025 annual limit, re-contribution rules, and why withdrawals don't count as income.

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TFSA Contribution Room →

Cumulative TFSA room since age 18 — including this year's $7,000.

The Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) is perhaps the most flexible savings vehicle available to Canadians. Unlike the RRSP, contributions are made with after-tax dollars, but every dollar of growth — interest, dividends, capital gains — is completely tax-free, and withdrawals are never added back to your income.

The Annual Contribution Limit: $7,000 in 2025

The federal government sets an annual TFSA dollar limit each year, indexed to inflation in $500 increments. For 2025, the limit is $7,000.

YearAnnual TFSA LimitCumulative (Since 2009)
2009$5,000$5,000
2010$5,000$10,000
2011$5,000$15,000
2012$5,000$20,000
2013$5,500$25,500
2014$5,500$31,000
2015$10,000$41,000
2016$5,500$46,500
2017$5,500$52,000
2018$5,500$57,500
2019$6,000$63,500
2020$6,000$69,500
2021$6,000$75,500
2022$6,000$81,500
2023$6,500$88,000
2024$7,000$95,000
2025$7,000$102,000

A Canadian who was 18 or older in 2009 and has never contributed has up to $102,000 in available TFSA room as of January 1, 2025 (assuming they were a Canadian resident throughout).

Who Gets TFSA Room?

You accumulate TFSA room if you are:

  1. A Canadian resident for tax purposes
  2. 18 years of age or older (in provinces where the age of majority is 18; 19 in provinces where it is 19, though room still accrues from age 18)
  3. In possession of a valid Social Insurance Number (SIN)

Non-residents do not accumulate new room and pay a 1% monthly penalty tax on any contributions made while non-resident.

The Re-Contribution Rule: Withdrawals Come Back

The most misunderstood TFSA rule is when you can re-contribute after a withdrawal.

You can re-contribute withdrawn amounts, but only on January 1 of the following calendar year.

Example: Priya has $102,000 in room. She has contributed the full $102,000. In August 2025 she withdraws $20,000 for a home renovation. Her new available room is:

  • Remaining room in 2025: $0 (she was already fully contributed)
  • On January 1, 2026: the $20,000 withdrawal comes back as new room, plus the new 2026 annual limit

She cannot put the $20,000 back until 2026. If she re-contributes it in 2025, she creates a TFSA over-contribution and owes a 1% monthly penalty on the excess.

Over-Contribution Penalty

Over-contributing to a TFSA by even $1 triggers a 1% per month penalty tax on the excess. This penalty accrues monthly, and the CRA enforces it. Common mistakes:

  • Withdrawing and re-contributing in the same calendar year
  • Holding multiple TFSAs across different institutions and losing track of total contributions
  • Contributing while non-resident

The CRA tracks your contribution room. You can check your available room in My CRA Account at any time — though note there can be a lag of several months while financial institutions report transactions.

What Can You Hold in a TFSA?

A TFSA is not a savings account — it is a registered account type that can hold virtually any “qualified investment”:

  • Cash and GICs
  • Canadian and foreign stocks and ETFs
  • Bonds and bond funds
  • Mutual funds

Income earned on foreign investments inside a TFSA may be subject to foreign withholding tax (e.g., US dividends are subject to a 15% US withholding tax even inside a TFSA, unlike inside an RRSP). For US dividend-paying investments, an RRSP is often more efficient due to treaty protections.

Tax-Free Growth: The Compounding Advantage

Because there is no tax drag inside a TFSA, all returns compound at their gross rate.

Example: $10,000 invested in a TFSA earning 7% annually for 30 years:

  • TFSA: $10,000 × (1.07)^30 = $76,123 — all tax-free on withdrawal
  • Non-registered account (assuming 40% marginal rate on annual gains): considerably less, as each year’s growth is reduced by tax

The longer the time horizon, the more dramatic the tax-free compounding advantage.

Withdrawals Are Not Income

TFSA withdrawals do not appear on your income tax return. This matters because income from non-registered accounts or RRIFs can:

  • Trigger OAS clawback (income-tested above $90,997 in 2025)
  • Reduce income-tested benefits like the GST/HST Credit, Canada Child Benefit, and Guaranteed Income Supplement

Drawing from a TFSA in retirement has no such effect.

TFSA vs RRSP: When to Use Each

A simplified framework:

  • RRSP is generally better when you expect to be in a lower tax bracket in retirement than now — the deduction is worth more when marginal rates are high.
  • TFSA is generally better when you expect to be in a similar or higher bracket in retirement, or when you want flexibility (no forced conversion at 71, no minimum withdrawals).
  • For many Canadians, contributing to both optimizes outcomes — RRSP to reduce current high marginal rates, TFSA for flexibility.

Spousal TFSA: There Is No Such Thing

Unlike RRSPs, you cannot contribute to a TFSA in your spouse’s name. Each person has their own room and their own TFSA. However, you can give your spouse cash to contribute to their own TFSA — the attribution rules that apply to other spousal income-splitting strategies do not apply to TFSA contributions funded by gifts.

Key Takeaways

  • The 2025 annual TFSA limit is $7,000; cumulative room since 2009 is $102,000.
  • Room accumulates from age 18 for Canadian residents with a SIN.
  • Withdrawals restore room — but only on January 1 of the following year.
  • Over-contributions face a 1% monthly penalty; check your room in My CRA Account.
  • TFSA growth and withdrawals are completely tax-free and do not count as income.
  • TFSAs are ideal for retirement savings when you expect similar or higher marginal rates later, and for those wanting to preserve income-tested benefits.

Use our calculators to apply these concepts to your own income. Tax information is for general guidance only — consult a CPA for advice specific to your situation.

Tax rates and thresholds sourced from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). Last verified for the 2025 tax year.

Last updated May 1, 2026Tax year 2026

Data sources: CRA (canada.ca)

This tool is general information only, not financial advice.

Reviewed by CA Tax Tools Editorial Desk

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