PERSONAL FINANCE
TFSA
Understanding tax-free savings accounts
Last Updated: Tuesday, December 23, 2008 | 9:32 AM ET
By Fred Langan, CBC News
IN DEPTH: Personal finance
Terms explained
- Understanding tax-free savings accounts (TFSA)
- Tax-Free Savings Accounts – A primer
- Registered Education Savings Plans
- Deflation
- Exchange-traded funds
- Labour-sponsored Investment Funds
- Hedge funds
- Canada Savings Bonds
- Income trusts
- Stock spam – The new boiler room
- Insider trading – What’s the problem?
- Microcredit lending
Money management
- Budget 101: where's my money going? (December 2008)
- Defensive investing back in vogue (Dec. 2008)
- A guide to finding lost money (May 2008)
- How to cope with student debt (June 2007)
- Online trading – Who’s the cheapest? (March 2008)
- Cutting back: fees you can avoid (April 2009)
- Tips on getting through the recession
- Bank fees – How to avoid paying them (June 2008)
- How to check your credit rating (June 2008)
- Your credit rating (Jan. 2009)
- Rebuilding your tarnished name
- Going broke: What to do when you can't pay your bills (September 2008)
- Card costs: who pays what to whom?
- Anatomy of a credit card bill
- Teaching kids about money (March 2008)
- Real estate, apartments rates, housing starts (April 2008)
Retirement planning
- Spending your kids’ inheritance (June 2007)
- RRSPs – A user’s guide (February 2008)
- Retirement In Depth (February 2005)
- Ethical investing – The ‘socially responsible’ RRSP (February 2007)
- Estate planning – Myths and misconceptions (May 2007)
- Dipping into RRSPs before retirement (January 2006)
Taxation (December 2007)
- December’s tax deadlines – Year-end financial moves
- Netfiling 2009– A guide to tax software
- Back-to-school tax breaks (Sept. 2007)
- Income splitting FAQs (November 2006)
Features
- Green investing: Buy a bond, save the planet (July 2008)
- Gasoline prices (May 2008)
- Canada’s super-rich (March 2008)
- Canadians and debt – in depth series (September 2006)
- Income trusts probe – FAQs (February 2007)
- The U.S. subprime mortgage meltdown (August 2007)
- Gold fever (March 2008)
- Tuition fees – The high cost of higher education (June 2008)
- History of the Canadian dollar (November 2007)
- October’s scariest stock market moments (October 2007)
CBC Archives
Fred Langan, host of Newsworld Business News. A tax-free savings account (TFSA) is a new wrinkle for savers, and most tax advisers — though not all — say putting money into a tax-free savings account is a no-brainer for people who can afford to save.
Starting in 2009, any resident of Canada over the age of 18 can put up to $5,000 a year into a tax-free savings account. That amount will be indexed to inflation, so it will grow in future years.
A TFSA has some of the features of a registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) — income earned inside a TFSA is not taxable, although you won't get a tax refund for the amount invested the way you would for an RRSP contribution. Tax-free savings accounts also have few of the drawbacks, since the money can be taken out tax-free at any time.
"Opening a tax-free savings account (TFSA) can offer you and your family the opportunity to earn a significant amount of investment income tax-free," says a KPMG Canada note to its clients. "Though your contributions to this new type of tax-assisted savings account will not be tax-deductible, the investment income and capital gains earned on investments in the account will be tax-free. You'll be able to withdraw this income and your contributions to your TFSA at any time without tax consequences."
You can hold the same things inside a TFSA that you can in an RRSP: cash, guaranteed investment certificates (GICs), term deposits, mutual funds, government and corporate bonds, stocks traded on public exchanges, and shares of some small business corporations.
"The kind of product you put inside your tax free savings account is really dictated by what you already hold in your RRSP and your regular savings," Kurt Rosentreter, a financial adviser with Manulife Securities, told CBC News Business. "Generally I would suggest, because of the tax-free nature of the income, that you would put your highest-tax forms of investments — like GICs, bonds and regular bank account cash — [into a TFSA] and shelter that first," said Rosentreter.
Stocks held outside a tax-free account, for example, qualify for lower tax rates on dividends. If you have losses on stocks, you can deduct those losses against previous capital gains if you hold them outside a registered plan, but not if they are in a tax-free savings account.
If you don't make a contribution in 2009 you can carry forward that amount to the next year. So if you don't make a contribution in the new year, in 2010 you'd be able to contribute up to $10,000 (assuming the contribution limit remains the same next year). This carry-forward feature goes on indefinitely.
There are no upper age limits for holding a TFSA, either, as there are with RRSPs.
"I think for retired Canadians this is a great way to tax shelter more of their investment income, transferring some of their taxable investments into a tax-free savings account," says Manulife's Rosentreter.
He points out that another advantage for retired people is that tax-free withdrawals don't bump them into a higher tax bracket, where things such as Old Age Security payments are clawed back.
Caveats
Not everyone thinks the new tax-free savings account is the greatest thing since the invention of the RRSP, though. "I'm puzzled by why so much ink has been spilled on the TFSA," says Moshe Milevsky, a professor at the Schulich School of Business at York University and author of several books on personal finance.
"Let's do the math. You get to save $5,000 — assuming you have any money to spare in the recession — without paying tax on the gains made during 2009. Assume this money is sitting in GICs, since everyone is petrified of putting money in the stock market, and that rates are 4 per cent, assuming the Bank of Canada doesn't march us to zero.
"That leads to $200 of interest for 2009, which is tax-free. Yippee. At a 45 per cent marginal tax rate, that saves me $90 in taxes. In 2010 it might save me $180 in taxes, and then in 2011 it's worth $270, give or take some compounding."
While the government didn't plan the tax-free savings account as part of its overall recession package — it was introduced in the spring 2008 budget — Milevsky says the recession has left him and other investors with less money but lots of tax losses from failing investments.
"Ironically, I have realized enough capital losses this year to spare me from a lifetime of capital gains taxes. The bear market created my own personal TFSA," he says.
In spite of his misgivings, the new tax-free savings accounts are expected to be popular with savers. They will also be popular with the financial institutions that will be handling the money.
The account can be set up at a credit union, bank, brokerage house or other financial institution. Prepare for an RRSP-style avalanche of advertising aimed at enticing people to open these accounts. Perhaps the best idea is to go with the firm already handling your savings as long as their fees are reasonable.
Fred Langan is host of CBC News Business.
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