Here’s the Average Canadian TFSA at Age 55
Alex Smith
5 days ago
If youâre turning 55 this year, the countdown to the traditional retirement age of 65 begins. This final stretch of the working years is criticalâespecially for those who feel their nest egg isnât enough yet. But as the clock ticks, have Canadians used the Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) to save and invest for retirement?
Unlike the Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP), thereâs no income requirement to open a TFSA. Moreover, all interest, capital gains, and dividends earned inside the account are tax-free for life. However, published reports reveal a significant utilization gap.
The TFSA contribution room accumulates every year. For Canadians who have been eligible since the TFSAâs inception in 2009, the cumulative contribution room in 2026 is now $109,000. Of this potential tax-exempt capital, the average Canadian at age 55 holds only $33,242 in their account. The data shows underutilization, or a gap of nearly $76,000.
Critical decade
The TFSA is a powerful tool for saving, though there may be mistakes or valid reasons for the shortfall. Some Canadians treat the TFSA as a regular savings account. Unfortunately, cash is the least productive asset to park inside a TFSA. To maximize tax-free growth, hold income-producing assets such as stocks instead.
While you can own a TFSA and RRSP at the same time, there could be a bias or default to the RRSP during the high-income years to capture immediate tax refunds. Still, the shift to the TFSA could happen at 55, the final decade of the working life. Since the room carries over indefinitely, that untapped gap of $75,758 is an opportunity to build a substantial, tax-free nest egg before taking the retirement exit.
Tax-free growth engine
The TFSA could be your tax-free growth engine in the 10-year horizon before age 65. You can fill the gap through dividend investing and dividend reinvesting, essentially letting the money do the work.
Assuming you have $75,758 to invest in a dividend stock, the money would produce about $3,780 per year on a 5% yield or rate of return. If the yield remains constant and you use the dividends to buy more shares, the original capital will compound to roughly $149,000 by the 10th year. The $73,242 difference is pure profit, and 100% tax-free within a TFSA.
Suitable TFSA holding
Whitecap Resources (TSX:WCP) is a suitable holding in a TFSA. In addition to the high-yield, the payout frequency is monthly. You can reinvest dividends 12 times a year, rather than the market standard of four. If you invest today, the share price is $13.11, while the dividend yield is 5.5%.
The $16 billion oil and gas company operates in Western Canada, developing and producing light oil and liquids-rich natural gas. This growth-oriented energy player utilizes a high-return drilling inventory to help deliver sustainable dividends to shareholders. WCP perfectly aligns with the tax-free compound growth strategy.
Never late
Even at age 55, average Canadians with significant unused TFSA contribution room can still achieve their long-term financial goals, including a substantial nest egg. The gap-filling example above illustrates what maximizing your unused TFSA contribution room can achieve for your long-term retirement planning.
The post Hereâs the Average Canadian TFSA at Age 55 appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.
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More reading
- 2 High-Yield Dividend Stocks for Stress-Free Passive Income
- This 5.5% Dividend Stock Pays Cash Every Month
- How to Generate $500/Month Tax-Free Using a TFSA
- The Ideal TFSA Stock for February Paying 5.7% Each Month
- Passive Income Investors: This TSX Stock Has a 5.7 Percent Dividend Yield With Monthly Payouts
Fool contributor Christopher Liew has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Whitecap Resources. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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