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.
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.
| Year | Annual TFSA Limit | Cumulative (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:
- A Canadian resident for tax purposes
- 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)
- 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You can re-contribute withdrawn amounts, but only on January 1 of the following calendar year.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.