Canadians: Here’s How Much You’ll Likely Need in Your TFSA to Retire
Alex Smith
2 hours ago
Canadian investors often question how much they will need in their TFSA to retire. Answering that question can be tough. Retirement planning becomes an impossible task when confronted with a massive number. Itâs also a number thatâs different for each person.
More is always better. A TFSA with $50,000 certainly helps, and a balance of $150,000 provides even greater options. For most investors, using a TFSA to retire with $250,000 is a great benchmark.
Thatâs especially true when combined with other accounts such as RRSPs, pensions, CPP and OAS benefits and even a paid-off home.
The balance needed in a TFSA to retire depends on a slew of different factors. Someone with a workplace pension, no mortgage and modest spending may not need a massive TFSA.
To meet those income needs, investors should hold the right assets that can provide growth over longer periods of time. This allows compounding to do the heavy work.
And perhaps best of all, within a TFSA, the investments to retire on compound tax-free.
Here are two of those investments to consider adding to your TFSA today.
Invest in broad, long-term growth
The first option for investors looking at their TFSA as the engine to retire on is the Vanguard S&P 500 Index ETF (TSX:VFV). This ETF tracks the performance of the S&P 500 Index, which allows Canadians to gain exposure to the largest companies in the U.S.
This makes the fund appealing to investors seeking long-term growth. More importantly, it provides investors with instant diversification across major sectors of the U.S. economy. That includes consumer businesses, financials, healthcare, and even high-growth tech stocks.
The appeal of the Vanguard S&P 500 is the basket itself. Investors donât need to pick individual holdings but just let compounding do the work.
This makes the fund better suited for long-term investors using their TFSA to retire.
Consider a blue-chip foundation
Another option for investors looking to build their TFSA to retire on is Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR). Canadian National is one of the largest railways in North America, connecting three coastlines on the continent.
The railway hauls everything from automotive components and raw materials to crude oil, essential products, wheat and precious metals across its vast network.
In terms of volume, Canadian National transports over $250 billion worth of goods across its network each year. This makes it one of the most defensive options to consider within a TFSA retirement portfolio.
As an income stock, Canadian National doesnât offer investors the highest yield. As of the time of writing, the railway only offers a yield of 2.1%, but the real appeal of Canadian National is its compounding potential.
The railway has provided investors with generous annual upticks to that dividend for three consecutive decades. This handily positions the railway as a strong option for any long-term TFSA portfolio.
Using a TFSA to retire is possible
Investors donât need to hit a perfect TFSA number to retire. What is needed is a realistic target and the right investments. Thatâs where the Vanguard S&P 500 and Canadian National can provide the growth and long-term compounding to hit that TFSA retirement goal.
In my opinion, one or both should be in any long-term, well-diversified TFSA portfolio.
Buy them, hold them, and let compounding do the heavy lifting.
The post Canadians: Hereâs How Much Youâll Likely Need in Your TFSA to Retire appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.
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More reading
- The TFSA Fine Print Every Canadian Should Read Before Holding U.S. Stocks
- Some of the Smartest Canadian Investors Are Piling Into This TSX Stock
- How to Create Your Own Self-Directed Pension With TSX Dividend Stocks
- 1 Dividend-Growth Giant That Looks Attractive After a 5% Pullback
- This TSX Dividend Stock Looks Built for the Long Haul
Fool contributor Demetris Afxentiou has positions in Canadian National Railway. The Motley Fool recommends Canadian National Railway. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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