TFSA vs RRSP vs FHSA: The Canadian “Where Should I Put My Money?” Guide

Simple answers, real examples, and a clear decision method for 2026

This question is basically a Canadian rite of passage:

“Should I put money in TFSA or RRSP?”

Now add FHSA and people get overwhelmed.

Let’s simplify this once and for all.

First: what each account is meant to do (in plain language)

TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account)

  • You don’t get a tax refund for contributing
  • But growth and withdrawals are tax-free
  • Great for flexibility: emergencies, goals, investing, life

RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan)

  • Contributions reduce taxable income → potential refund
  • Money grows tax-deferred
  • Withdrawals are taxed later
  • Great when your income is higher today than it may be later

FHSA (First Home Savings Account)

  • Designed for first-time home buyers
  • Contributions can give a tax deduction (like RRSP)
  • Withdrawals for a home can be tax-free (like TFSA)
  • Extremely powerful if you’re eligible

The easiest decision method

Ask yourself these 3 questions:

1) Do you need access to the money soon?

  • Yes → TFSA usually wins
  • No → RRSP or FHSA could be better

2) Are you in a higher tax bracket right now?

  • Yes → RRSP often wins because deduction saves tax today
  • No / early career → TFSA often wins for flexibility

3) Are you buying your first home in the next few years?

  • Yes → FHSA is usually priority #1 (if eligible)
cost saving

Real examples (relatable scenarios)

Scenario A: New grad, income $45k

Likely priorities:

  • Emergency fund in TFSA (safe investment or HISA)
  • Small investing contributions
  • RRSP later when income increases

Scenario B: Mid-career, income $90k

Likely priorities:

  • RRSP to reduce tax
  • TFSA for flexibility
  • Consider splitting goals: part retirement, part near-term

Scenario C: First home buyer planning in 2–4 years

Likely priorities:

  • FHSA first
  • Then TFSA for extra down payment
  • RRSP if it helps (and consider HBP later)

Mistakes people make (very common)

  • Using RRSP as emergency fund (not ideal)
  • Using TFSA only as a “savings account” forever (missed investing growth)
  • Ignoring FHSA eligibility
  • Contributing blindly without thinking about income bracket

How Solstice Partners helps

We create a simple plan:

  • Which account to prioritize
  • How much to contribute
  • What to invest in based on timeline
  • How it affects your tax return and cash flow

Your accounts are tools. The right order can save thousands over time.

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