Here’s What Belongs in Your TFSA Now
Alex Smith
4 hours ago
A key perk many Canadians miss out on with the Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) is its tax-free growth feature. The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) releases data every year to reveal how account holders utilize this unique wealth-building tool. However, nowadays, the term âsavings accountâ still misleads some users.
As of January 2026, the maximum cumulative lifetime contribution limit has reached $109,000, yet the average balance sits at only $38,566. While thereâs no mandated amount, the actual TFSA balances per age group are likewise below the potential available contribution room.
The breakdown below shows what belongs in a TFSA as of the 2024 contribution year:
Age GroupAverage TFSA Balance20â29$9,000â$14,00030â39$18,000â$21,00040â49$24,000â$28,00050â59$35,000â$43,00060â64$52,38165â69$58,00070â74$64,97275â79$71,00080+$76,305Closing the gap
Very few Canadians maximize their room, as evidenced by the huge difference between the actual average balance and the ideal ceiling. An open TFSA space presents a massive opportunity to close the gap. Replacing the traditional âsavingsâ mindset with a tax-free growth mentality will start a truly rewarding journey.
The TFSA shields 100% of interest, capital gains, and dividend income earned inside the account. Forget about storing cash or leaving it idle. Instead, invest in income-producing assets, ideally TSX stocks. The power of compounding works best with dividend reinvestment.
Unused contribution room carries forward indefinitely, although maximizing your TFSA contribution ceiling isnât a strict financial necessity. Nonetheless, top it off if finances allow or as early as possible. No user, regardless of age, will regret making this wealth-building move.
Ultimate liquidity
The Bank of Nova Scotia (TSX:BNS), or Scotiabank, can be the compounding engine initially and your ultimate liquidity provider during retirement. This $152.2 billion lender pays the highest dividend among Canadaâs Big Six banks. At $124.14 per share, the yield is 3.7%. Notably, Scotiabank boasts an imposing 194-year dividend track record. It recently announced a 4% hike to its quarterly dividend.
A $14,000 position will compound to $20,173.80, 29,070.10, and $41,889.60 in 10, 20, and 30 years, respectively, including dividend reinvestment. The final balance excludes price appreciation and future yield increases. Current BNS investors are up 26.5% year-to-date.
In Q2 fiscal 2026 (three months ending April 30, 2026), Scotiabankâs adjusted net income rose 28% year-over-year to $2.7 billion. Its CEO, Scott Thomson, said, âOur focus on evolving our business mix drove strong fee income and wealth management revenues, along with sequential Canadian commercial and small business loan growth.â
The bank launched Scotia Intelligence last month to firm up its unified approach to data and artificial intelligence (AI). Phil Thomas, Group Head and Chief Strategy & Operating Officer of Scotiabank, said it marks another step forward in deploying AI at scale.
Motivating factor
The TFSA is not only a simple tax shelter but also purpose-built for growth. Users must recognize this as a motivating factor in maximizing that contribution ceiling. It will set the tone for concrete action. The reward is an enormous payoff or pension-like in the sunset years.
The post Hereâs What Belongs in Your TFSA Now appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.
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More reading
- 5 TSX Dividend Stocks With Solid Yields Built for Steady Cash Flow in Any Market
- Where Will Scotiabank Stock Be in 3 Years?
- How $20,000 Across 4 TSX Stocks Can Deliver $1,000 in Passive Income
- 2 Dividend Giants That Look Attractive After Recent Pullbacks
- Have $21,000 in TFSA Room? Here’s a Dividend Stock Worth Considering
Fool contributor Christopher Liew has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Bank of Nova Scotia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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