Most Canadians Waste Their TFSA on This

Most Canadians Waste Their TFSA on This Paid links: Wealthsimple (referral) + EQ Bank (referral) + Amazon (affiliate) — my opinions. 👉 Wealthsimple — Track your TFSA, RRSP, and non-registered accounts in one place + $25 bonus: https://www.wealthsimple.com/invite/H... 📖 Books that shaped this video (paid links): 📖 Reboot Your Portfolio by Dan Chicken (the Canadian ETF structuring guide used in this video): https://amzn.to/4jpZPLF 0:00 — The "gross wealth" lie and why CRA is your silent partner 2:14 — The interest income trap: why GICs in a non-registered account face your full marginal rate 5:12 — The 15% US dividend withholding tax your TFSA can never recover 7:18 — The Canadian dividend Trojan horse: how eligible dividends trigger OAS clawback 10:51 — Where high-growth assets belong (why capital gains favor the TFSA) 12:28 — TFSA audit triggers and CRA day-trading reclassification risk 📚 Full book links with US and CA options (paid links): 📚 Reboot Your Portfolio by Dan Chicken — US: https://amzn.to/4pj4mRp | CA: https://amzn.to/4jpZPLF Asset location is the tax strategy most Canadian investors skip entirely, and the wrong placement creates permanent tax leaks. The biggest mistake is holding US dividend-paying stocks or ETFs inside a TFSA. Under the Canada-US tax treaty, RRSPs are exempt from the 15% US withholding tax on dividends, but TFSAs are not. Every US dividend paid into your TFSA loses 15% to the IRS before it reaches you, and no foreign tax credit is available to recover it. The fix is straightforward: hold US dividend stocks in your RRSP where the treaty protection applies, and use your TFSA for Canadian equities and high-growth assets where capital gains compound tax-free. Interest-bearing investments like GICs and savings accounts are taxed at your full marginal rate in a non-registered account, which can exceed 50% in the top bracket, so they belong inside a registered account. Canadian eligible dividends create a different problem: the gross-up mechanism inflates your net income on paper, which can trigger an OAS clawback in retirement even though you received less cash than the grossed-up amount. Placing Canadian dividend stocks in a TFSA avoids this entirely because TFSA income does not appear on your tax return. KEY NUMBERS: US dividend withholding tax in TFSA: 15% (unrecoverable, no foreign tax credit available) US dividend withholding tax in RRSP: 0% (exempt under Canada-US tax treaty) Interest income marginal tax rate: up to 53%+ in top combined federal/provincial bracket Canadian eligible dividend gross-up factor: 38% (inflates net income for benefit calculations) OAS clawback threshold (2025): $90,997 net income TFSA annual contribution limit (2026): $7,000 Cumulative TFSA room since 2009: $109,000 RESOURCES: CRA My Account (check your TFSA room): https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agen... TFSA Rules and Contribution Room: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agen... Canada-US Tax Treaty (withholding tax provisions): https://www.canada.ca/en/department-f... I am not a registered financial advisor or tax professional. This video is general financial education broadcast to a wide audience. It is not tailored to your individual financial situation, needs, or objectives. Consult a qualified professional before making investment or tax decisions. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Description contains affiliate links — purchases through these links earn commission at no extra cost to you. NEXT → Most Canadians get their RRSP withdrawal order wrong. Fix your tax strategy before it costs you. Subscribe so you catch it. 🎬    • RRSP Refund Mistake EXPOSED | Most Canadia...   #AssetLocation #TFSATax #HudsonBayFinance