don't worry. if every video you do is tfsa, it still won't be enough to raise awareness and educate canadians on how awesome it is. everyone should have one.
Adam thanks to your previous TFSA video on successor holder instead of assigning a beneficiary I changed my TFSA that I’ve had since they became available. Back then most financial institutions only knew of assigning a beneficiary. We moved my wife’s TFSA from a bank to their brokerage house accounts so she could buy stocks not just mutual funds. Easy to do as long as you stay within the same financial institution. The dividends we earn we leave as a cash buildup instead of DRIPPING the dividends. This become our emergency fund. Once there is too much cash then we take some of it & buy more stocks. The only cost is a small $10 brokerage fee instead of no fee to DRIP a stock. Everyone should have a TFSA as part of their financial strategy as you say. You don’t have to be rich to have one, but it is a way to become richer tax free.
Good to hear Norm! Sounds like a good plan. If you are buying cdn stocks look at Wealthsimple Trade - offers free trading. You could transfer your account over and they will cover transfer fees too
One of the reasons that many people are not investing or misusing the TFSA is because it’s a misnomer. The name implies it’s a tax free Savings account while in reality it should be more appropriately named as a tax free Investment account.
Adam, thanks for the great video. Somehow, it encourage me to touch my TFSA and invest some of the money so it will grow a bit more. Right now, the rate of my TFSA is almost zero.
Great video Adam that answered the question I had about the effect of withdrawals on year+1 contribution room. Please note, though, that the Successor Holder option appears to not be allowed in Quebec, as we can't designate Successor Holders or Beneficiaries in the TFSA itself (nor Successor Annuitants or Beneficiaries in RRSPs/RRIFs) so that leaves only instructions in the Will, which means that the RC240 form must be used to add the sums inherited to the surviving spouse's TFSA without impacting its contribution room. I believe the TFSA is considered a testamentary trust in the interim so any gain will be taxed at the marginal rate, which leads some experts to recommend closing the TFSA as soon as possible (AFAIK, its investments may then be sold or kept in a non-registered account and thus treated as dividends, capital gains or losses, etc.).
As a.canadian born and raised abroad that settled in the country in their 40's, we started using TFSA as a part of our emergency fund. Part of it in TFSA (higher interests) and part of it on a regular saving account As soon as we can get the full amount for EF out of the TFSA, we will definitely use it to invest. Thanks for the reminder though - it's easy to not change anything and miss the opportunity to invest.
I naively thought that almost everyone had a TFSA (maxed out no less). I was shocked recently to see some statistics showing just how few Canadians are actually using it. It's such a fantastic investment account option, I wish so much it was around 25 years ago when I was starting out in investing. I would be so much further along by now.
Most don't have the funds to invest and leave there/ most can not afford a home let alone the paint to make it look nicer/ If you invest $6000. for 5 years you make $300. that's enough to take a family of four to the local fair on a Friday nite/ crime pays better / so who has $86,000. to invest this year? so your comment is just boasting & good for u
really good video..I'd also suggest for people to be aware that if you have US investments in your TFSA that pay out dividends, the IRS with withhold 15% tax
Thank you for your videos, investing in stocks is quite risky though, invested 50k in a TFSA during the Russian war and hit a wall, took out my money and injected more in a GIC at 4% and planning to keep it compounding until retirement
The account value at death passes tax free. If there is growth from point of death to account being sold and moved to beneficiaries there would be a tax bill in beneficiaries hands.
I think it's a misconception that DIY Investing (eg. WS Trade) is just high risk stock picking. You can buy the same broad ETFs, the same that investment companies charge you 1-2% yearly for. My WS Trade portfolio is 75% broad ETF, 10% stock picks, and 15% Crypto ETF.
@@ParallelWealth You lose 3% but only after you buy/ sell. If you're not actively trading, the % is extremely minor compared to 2% MER on a mutual fund.
hi Adam… to recap.. if I had 75k and it did well and it’s worth 150K.. to set my TFSA roof.. pulling it all out Dec 31 and then putting it all back Jan1 sets my TSFA ceiling for future @ 150k.
The RRSP has one potential advantage over the TSFA in that sums contributed are deducted from your highest tax bracket (marginal tax rate) but usually taxed at a lower rate when you withdraw during retirement
Great piece of information.thanks Adam. If I have money in TFSA and I temporarily move out of the country for five years, do I have to withdraw money from the TFSA?
how to merge our tfsa accounts without trouble, can you have a video on that pls. a lot of people have one tfsa in high interest savings and another in investment acct, now you said shouldn't put tfsa in high interest savings, how to bring the high interest savings tfsa and merge it with tfsa investment acct. pls make a video on it, thanks.
Can someone explain like I’m 5, or like I’m dumb (cause I am 😂) what is meant by holding investments in a TFSA. I thought I can only put cash in like a savings. I just learned there are three types of TFSA. Is it that I go into a bank or financial institution and ask for a tfsa that I can also put investments in? So confused
Great video thanks! but can you please explain how dividends are managed inside a TFSA i.e. US dividend stocks vs Canadian dividend stocks and the withholding taxes of each on their dividend payments?
US dividends within a TFSA are subject to the 15% withholding tax on the dividend. The only account that is exempt from this is a RSP/ RIF account. It only applies to the dividend - capital gains are not impacted.
@@ParallelWealth But what if I want to live off a US monthly dividend? if I buy the US dividend stock in the RSP, every time we pull out the money monthly, I will be hit with Canadian tax come April. If I buy the US dividend stock in my TFSA, I am hit with a 15% withholding tax
Hi I have a question. Does TFSA contribution limit depends on the year when you became a resident of Canada? Or the whole TFSA limit gets (if ones born before 1991) regardless of the year of residency canada? Please give me the government website link which shows that. Thanks
I think you have 2 questions here. 1) Can I trade options in a TFSA. You are not allowed to short options (or stocks/ETFs) in your Registered account with the exception of Covered Calls and Cash secured short Puts (only some Brokers allow the short Puts). I am with IBKR and they do not allow cash secure short Puts. I do trade covered Calls in my TFSA and I also buy long Puts as a hedge. 2) Can I do short-term trading in my TFSA (like as in day trading?). TFSA is meant to be used for investments, so if you are day trading/high-frequency trading and CRA finds out, they will audit you. If they determine that you are generating business income instead of investment income, my understand is there can be heavy penalties.
We recently opened a ontario Corp. Would it be possible to borrow from a H.E. L.O.C , deposit those funds into a TFSA , Then lend that money to the ontario Corp plus interest as a shareholder loan, And pay that back principal and interest when the Corp has enough money back the TFSA tax free ?. Or would that trigger tax on the interest gained.
I don't understand how you can increase your TSFA limit higher than the government limits. You stated that if I invested $75,500 which is maximum for 2021 and it grew to $150,000 and I withdrew all the money from this TSFA before 2021and didn't reinvest until 2022. Are you saying that In January 2022 I can reinvest $150,000 into a TSFA? I do not understand how I can invest the whole $150,000 in TSFA when my new limit is now $81,500 for the year 2022.
what if you do not max. out the 2021 contribution of $75,500 but maybe have a contribution of $60,00 and then... that $60k makes $40k (in stocks)...so in the TFSA acct. there is $100K in the end of 2021 (not pulled out). Can I contribute the remaining $15,500 from 2021 and the new $6k for 2022 , totaling $21,500 in Jan, 2022?
That’s great , you and your spouse have TFSA investments and also will receive CPP, OAS. What would be your strategy for withdrawal… RRSP melt down , or CPP or OAS at a later age ?
gee you mentions a lot of things here. one was many different type of tfsa account... ? what is that? i have a us$ and Can$ tfsa within those cannot i not just buy blue chips or more risky stocks? I currently have some F1 stock as play investment and vce, vfv as safer long term stocks. what else in tfsa option is there? thx, great great channel.
Hi Adam,i have a question:for a 52k over contribution in 2021 (75.5k max)what is my contribution room in 2022: 81.5k,(75.5k+6k) that means i am ok in 2022 or 0 room space+6k new space+52k from last year withdrawn=58k,that means i still have 17.5k at least an over contribution in 2022( there are also the gains of the over contribution to consider)Thanks for clarifying this .
Hi Adam,you talked about the over contribution room in the tfsa,but you did not mention a situation as i experience right now: here is my case:in 2021 i took around the 52k from the tfsa i had in my bank account,put them first in the check account then i put the 52k in the new tfsa account i have with wealthsimple.I added around 23.5k from the check account to tfsa wealthsimple account,so i had the max contribution:75.5k.(with around 150 dollars withdraw from divideds and the value of portfolio around 75.800)Studying how to transfer my rrsp and resp from the bank to wealthsimple,i just understood that the transfer i made from one tfsa to another tfsa account doesn"t qualify as transfer,but is considered a regular withdraw( a qualified transfer is made between the 2 institutions)witch means i over contributed with around 52k or more for the last 6 months already!Ought!I need to remove immediately the over contribution room,but i am confused about the exact amount:you said that the gains from the over contribution needs to be withdrawn,yes?how they are calculated?,how about the 2022 year room?when i can add funds for 2022?what is the best move right now to do?Thanks!
Great informative video. My question is I am legally separated from my wife. Can I name her as the successor holder of my TFSA and will the money go directly into her TFSA?
@@ParallelWealth thanks! I went to their website to see if they offer services to individual costumers like me but they don't seem to do so. I'm wondering if this company only manages wealth for companies wholesale?
My contribution limit is 75k this year. Say I put 30k into my tfsa and now its worth 50k. I withdraw the whole amount of 50k in December for emergency reasons. How will this affect my contribution limit in 2022?
moved to Canada in 2017, I opened my TFSA with my bank when I arrived. I only started to put money into my TFSA since Dec and make monthly contributions (small amount nothing too big) as for today I put into the max for the year $6000.00 Can I put in more to make up for the years I didn't contribute since 2017, 2018 and so on?
I don’t think the information at the beginning of the video is correct. If you maxed out your TFSA contributions ($75,000) and it grew to $150,000 and then you withdraw it all this year I think for the next year your room would be only $75,000 plus the $6,000 for the next year, not $150,000 plus $6,000. You cannot increase your contribution room just because your money grew. I think you just get back the contribution room you have utilized before but when you withdraw your money out of TFSA you get that same room back, but not the increase. Let me know if this is correct.
Not true. You can put all the money you took out back plus any new room. If you are in doubt check your room in your cra account. It will be updated in the new year.
Sonja, the video is correct. If your account grows and you pull money out you will get all that redemption back the following year plus new contribution room. Margaret - thanks for beating me to this!
Hi Adam and thanks; I really like many of the videos you put together. Question - for example, if my father (81yrs old) hasn't contributed for couple of yrs and has accrued let's say $12K and passes away, does he lose that availability or can my mother, as successor holder, use that available room along with whatever room she may have? Obviously, my father's available room won't increase going forward after he passes, but is that previous "earned" room still available to be used by my mother as successor holder? If she can use, are there time limits as to when she needs to fund the account? For the record, my father is still alive; I'm just trying to help them get their affairs in order. thanks so much for all your hard work and insight into investing!
It's lost. Your mom would take over his account and the current value would increase her room should she ever take it out. So the $12k is lost and can't be used past death.
It's correct. If your accounts grows and you take it out - regardless of size - you get that withdrawal amount back as contribution room the following year plus the usual $6k. We have clients that have TFSA accounts well over $500k.
Question: I'm guessing that most if not all banks offer TFSA accounts, including online only banks. Do you have to open a TFSA account at a brick and mortar bank to be able to pick whatever investment(s) you want to invest in..?? Also, how many different investments can you include in a TFSA account..?
@@ParallelWealth Hey, thank you for clarifying..!! So, you would have to talk to someone over the phone to choose whatever investments you want..? Cause I'm not exactly sure which investments either. I do know I want to invest in ETFs though.
So if your single and die who gets your tfs account/If you can't give it to your kid?not transferable///does it cash out w/ tax or not to the beneficiary who may be your only living child? or is the question you asked us not to post?
Bonus question (lol) Also, if one passes mid year and has not contributed, can the successor holder contribute full amount for that year or is it pro rated? thanks again!
You would take on their account and boost your contribution room - but no further deposits to their account. So if you die mid year without making a contribution, tough luck! It's not prorated or allowed past death.
Thank you for the great video sir. I just had one question about cryptocurrency. As far as I'm aware, you can't invest in crypto with a TFSA account, right? I think whenever you try to open a crypto investment account, it will be a separate dedicated crypto account that would be taxed as regular capital gains are. This assumption is based on my experience with Wealthsimple. Please enlighten me on this matter. Thank you.
hello great video. i am new to this. in last February 2021 i deposit 19k to my account and withdraw after 4 days. now my account is 0$. iam thinking of adding 70k next week? think??
So if I’m buying a new vehicle and make 4% on investment generally I’m better to take out TFSA money to buy vehicle to avoid paying 7% interest and no harm no foul come Jan 1 of the following year .
Once you make the TFSA's as successor holders, what happens to the TFSA money should both husband and wife die. Where does the money go? Does it go to the estate and what tax implications?
not sure if you touched this on your videos.... say I have a direct trading account at a discount broker, that includes a TFSA and an RRSP, so for year 2021 the TFSA contribution limit is $75,500.00 and I was able to grow it to $100,000.00, then I withdraw the $100,000.00 this year. So base on the video by year 2022 I can put back $106,000.00 to my TFSA. Question, can I get that $106,000.00 from my regular trading account and put it to my TFSA?
Yup, the cash to put in your TFSA can come from your non- reg trading account. There may be a tax consequence in selling/moving those no reg assets tho.
Awesome video Adam. I read a few stories about the CRA deeming your trades ( ie:Stocks, ETF etc..)within a TFSA as an income and taxed accordingly. Not even as capital gains but as income because supposedly, your research and knowledge on a stock make it as though you're actually making a living trading stocks. I'm afraid to buy and sell stocks within my TFSA even once a month, so I don't get dinged on this rules which to me looks like a grey area. I just keep dollar cost averaging into it. Any thoughts on that? Thank You !
Its a grey area. CRA has a criteria in determining if you're a "day trader" so they can tax you as regular income. As long as your not making trades every single day within the span of a few hours...you should be fine. They also look at frequency of trades. If your investing and holding for the long term you shouldn't have any issues contributing once or even a couple times a month.
Hi Adam! I have a question regarding contributions to an RRSP vs a TFSA. I know you suggest contributing to an RRSP when your salary is above $50,000, but do you suggest contributing 100% to an RRSP until there’s no room and then switching to the TFSA? I’m in the highest tax bracket and my Wife doesn’t work. Mathematically it makes most sense to max out my RRSPs, but I fear missing out on the flexibility that the TFSA offers. I’ve toyed with the idea of investing my RRSP tax return money into my TFSA, but then I lose on all the compounding effect of always reinvesting my RRSP tax return money. What do you think would be best? Thanks a lot in advance and sorry for the long message.
I like the tax refund to TFSA. Balances it out. Actually recommended that to someone else earlier we were building a plan for. Definitely focus on RRSP but start building some TFSA now. Hope that helps
don't worry. if every video you do is tfsa, it still won't be enough to raise awareness and educate canadians on how awesome it is. everyone should have one.
I feel the same...honestly if each TFSA video helps 1 person it's a win!
Too many people think it’s just a higher interest savings account, and just forgo it.
Adam thanks to your previous TFSA video on successor holder instead of assigning a beneficiary I changed my TFSA that I’ve had since they became available. Back then most financial institutions only knew of assigning a beneficiary. We moved my wife’s TFSA from a bank to their brokerage house accounts so she could buy stocks not just mutual funds. Easy to do as long as you stay within the same financial institution. The dividends we earn we leave as a cash buildup instead of DRIPPING the dividends. This become our emergency fund. Once there is too much cash then we take some of it & buy more stocks. The only cost is a small $10 brokerage fee instead of no fee to DRIP a stock. Everyone should have a TFSA as part of their financial strategy as you say. You don’t have to be rich to have one, but it is a way to become richer tax free.
Good to hear Norm! Sounds like a good plan. If you are buying cdn stocks look at Wealthsimple Trade - offers free trading. You could transfer your account over and they will cover transfer fees too
One of the reasons that many people are not investing or misusing the TFSA is because it’s a misnomer. The name implies it’s a tax free Savings account while in reality it should be more appropriately named as a tax free Investment account.
Tanah, couldn't agree more!
I understand that part Tanah, I just have no idea as then how to use this account for investing. Can you possibly expand on your statement,
@@ParallelWealth or Maybe you could answer my question? Thank you both in advance
@@ParallelWealth can I ask my bank to invest for me, and is this a responsible idea?
You break things down very well and have uncovered many things for me to think about. I like the Canadian focus also. Subscribed!
Thanks Howard! Welcome to the channel
Adam, thanks for the great video. Somehow, it encourage me to touch my TFSA and invest some of the money so it will grow a bit more. Right now, the rate of my TFSA is almost zero.
Great video Adam that answered the question I had about the effect of withdrawals on year+1 contribution room. Please note, though, that the Successor Holder option appears to not be allowed in Quebec, as we can't designate Successor Holders or Beneficiaries in the TFSA itself (nor Successor Annuitants or Beneficiaries in RRSPs/RRIFs) so that leaves only instructions in the Will, which means that the RC240 form must be used to add the sums inherited to the surviving spouse's TFSA without impacting its contribution room. I believe the TFSA is considered a testamentary trust in the interim so any gain will be taxed at the marginal rate, which leads some experts to recommend closing the TFSA as soon as possible (AFAIK, its investments may then be sold or kept in a non-registered account and thus treated as dividends, capital gains or losses, etc.).
As a.canadian born and raised abroad that settled in the country in their 40's, we started using TFSA as a part of our emergency fund. Part of it in TFSA (higher interests) and part of it on a regular saving account
As soon as we can get the full amount for EF out of the TFSA, we will definitely use it to invest.
Thanks for the reminder though - it's easy to not change anything and miss the opportunity to invest.
Wow, very helpful; especially the example that starts at 4.29 min. Thanks Adam.
Another tremendously helpful video. Thank you, Adam. LOL - I do watch a lot of YT videos in 1.5 speed but not this channel.
I would recommend it:) LOL
You Sir explain it so well. Thank you very much.
Great advice as usual 👍
I naively thought that almost everyone had a TFSA (maxed out no less). I was shocked recently to see some statistics showing just how few Canadians are actually using it. It's such a fantastic investment account option, I wish so much it was around 25 years ago when I was starting out in investing. I would be so much further along by now.
Most don't have the funds to invest and leave there/ most can not afford a home let alone the paint to make it look nicer/ If you invest $6000. for 5 years you make $300. that's enough to take a family of four to the local fair on a Friday nite/ crime pays better / so who has $86,000. to invest this year? so your comment is just boasting & good for u
really good video..I'd also suggest for people to be aware that if you have US investments in your TFSA that pay out dividends, the IRS with withhold 15% tax
Thanks for clearing this for me
Wonderful work. Thank you so much, Mr Adam.
You are very welcome
Thank you Adam for the great content.
Thanks Adam. Great video.
You’re doing amazing work. Thank you for your content. Subscribed and a supporter. Kind Regards
Thank you so much 👍
@@ParallelWealth ✨
Thank you for your videos, investing in stocks is quite risky though, invested 50k in a TFSA during the Russian war and hit a wall, took out my money and injected more in a GIC at 4% and planning to keep it compounding until retirement
Great video, thank you! My question is about taxation of TFSA funds when someone passes away and beneficiaries are kids.
The account value at death passes tax free. If there is growth from point of death to account being sold and moved to beneficiaries there would be a tax bill in beneficiaries hands.
@@ParallelWealth that’s so much for clarifying!👍
I think it's a misconception that DIY Investing (eg. WS Trade) is just high risk stock picking. You can buy the same broad ETFs, the same that investment companies charge you 1-2% yearly for.
My WS Trade portfolio is 75% broad ETF, 10% stock picks, and 15% Crypto ETF.
Yup. Also a misconception it is free trading. The FX they charge on US stocks is really high.
@@ParallelWealth You lose 3% but only after you buy/ sell. If you're not actively trading, the % is extremely minor compared to 2% MER on a mutual fund.
hi Adam… to recap.. if I had 75k and it did well and it’s worth 150K.. to set my TFSA roof.. pulling it all out Dec 31 and then putting it all back Jan1 sets my TSFA ceiling for future @ 150k.
Correct, plus new contribution room for the year (currently $6k)
Great video
Fabulous as always! Thanks a bundle (is in cash) :0)
Sounds like ultimately it may be more beneficial to max out a TFSA before working on maxing rrsp
The RRSP has one potential advantage over the TSFA in that sums contributed are deducted from your highest tax bracket (marginal tax rate) but usually taxed at a lower rate when you withdraw during retirement
Great piece of information.thanks Adam. If I have money in TFSA and I temporarily move out of the country for five years, do I have to withdraw money from the TFSA?
Will depend which country and if you keep residency
Thank you
how to merge our tfsa accounts without trouble, can you have a video on that pls.
a lot of people have one tfsa in high interest savings and another in investment acct, now you said shouldn't put tfsa in high interest savings, how to bring the high interest savings tfsa and merge it with tfsa investment acct.
pls make a video on it, thanks.
Just request financial institution to consolidate them. If at different institutions then you will use a T2033 and transfer it.
My neighbour “Joe” is a brilliant man
Can someone explain like I’m 5, or like I’m dumb (cause I am 😂) what is meant by holding investments in a TFSA. I thought I can only put cash in like a savings. I just learned there are three types of TFSA. Is it that I go into a bank or financial institution and ask for a tfsa that I can also put investments in? So confused
i dont understand why you cant day trade with money in your tfsa. the logic escapes me as to why it matters how many trades we do.
Chad, it surrounds the intention of the account. It would be great if CRA came out with more language around the rules.
Could not clearly hear which investment company you use?
BCV Asset Management.
Great video thanks! but can you please explain how dividends are managed inside a TFSA i.e. US dividend stocks vs Canadian dividend stocks and the withholding taxes of each on their dividend payments?
US dividends within a TFSA are subject to the 15% withholding tax on the dividend. The only account that is exempt from this is a RSP/ RIF account. It only applies to the dividend - capital gains are not impacted.
@@James_48 awesome thanks
Thanks James!
@@ParallelWealth But what if I want to live off a US monthly dividend? if I buy the US dividend stock in the RSP, every time we pull out the money monthly, I will be hit with Canadian tax come April. If I buy the US dividend stock in my TFSA, I am hit with a 15% withholding tax
Isn’t better to max out REER before putting money in tfsa so that the lowering of tax is worth more then growth in tfsa?
I assume you mean RRSP? Will really depend on your income.
Hi I have a question. Does TFSA contribution limit depends on the year when you became a resident of Canada? Or the whole TFSA limit gets (if ones born before 1991) regardless of the year of residency canada? Please give me the government website link which shows that. Thanks
Could you name your spouse successor holder to any other accounts other than TFSA? Thank you.
Not the RRSP, though.
Nope. But a beneficiary on a RRSP works much the same.
Can you do short-term option trading (covered calls, puts) in TFSA? Will CRA allow it, or treat as trading business?
My understanding is yes, but speak to your investment advisor to confirm.
I think you have 2 questions here.
1) Can I trade options in a TFSA. You are not allowed to short options (or stocks/ETFs) in your Registered account with the exception of Covered Calls and Cash secured short Puts (only some Brokers allow the short Puts). I am with IBKR and they do not allow cash secure short Puts. I do trade covered Calls in my TFSA and I also buy long Puts as a hedge.
2) Can I do short-term trading in my TFSA (like as in day trading?). TFSA is meant to be used for investments, so if you are day trading/high-frequency trading and CRA finds out, they will audit you. If they determine that you are generating business income instead of investment income, my understand is there can be heavy penalties.
I did invest within my TFSA account, so why i have less money in it that i put in without any withdraw.
Can you buy/sell crypto in your TFSA? Like BTC, ETH or other alt coins?
Through ETFS, yes
We recently opened a ontario Corp.
Would it be possible to borrow from a H.E. L.O.C , deposit those funds into a TFSA ,
Then lend that money to the ontario Corp plus interest as a shareholder loan,
And pay that back principal and interest when the Corp has enough money back the TFSA tax free ?. Or would that trigger tax on the interest gained.
I don't understand how you can increase your TSFA limit higher than the government limits. You stated that if I invested $75,500 which is maximum for 2021 and it grew to $150,000 and I withdrew all the money from this TSFA before 2021and didn't reinvest until 2022. Are you saying that In January 2022 I can reinvest $150,000 into a TSFA? I do not understand how I can invest the whole $150,000 in TSFA when my new limit is now $81,500 for the year 2022.
Correct, you can increase your limit (or decrease) based on performance. 2022 would be the $150k plus the new $6k contribution room!
what if you do not max. out the 2021 contribution of $75,500 but maybe have a contribution of $60,00 and then... that $60k makes $40k (in stocks)...so in the TFSA acct. there is $100K in the end of 2021 (not pulled out).
Can I contribute the remaining $15,500 from 2021 and the new $6k for 2022 , totaling $21,500 in Jan, 2022?
Yup, exactly right. Happy investing!!
That’s great , you and your spouse have TFSA investments and also will receive CPP, OAS. What would be your strategy for withdrawal… RRSP melt down , or CPP or OAS at a later age ?
gee you mentions a lot of things here.
one was many different type of tfsa account... ? what is that?
i have a us$ and Can$ tfsa within those cannot i not just buy blue chips or more risky stocks?
I currently have some F1 stock as play investment and vce, vfv as safer long term stocks.
what else in tfsa option is there?
thx, great great channel.
Is this money just sitting there?? Or do you have to have the amount already saved??? Cause I just got told I don't have anything
Hi Adam,i have a question:for a 52k over contribution in 2021 (75.5k max)what is my contribution room in 2022: 81.5k,(75.5k+6k) that means i am ok in 2022 or 0 room space+6k new space+52k from last year withdrawn=58k,that means i still have 17.5k at least an over contribution in 2022( there are also the gains of the over contribution to consider)Thanks for clarifying this .
Hi Adam,you talked about the over contribution room in the tfsa,but you did not mention a situation as i experience right now: here is my case:in 2021 i took around the 52k from the tfsa i had in my bank account,put them first in the check account then i put the 52k in the new tfsa account i have with wealthsimple.I added around 23.5k from the check account to tfsa wealthsimple account,so i had the max contribution:75.5k.(with around 150 dollars withdraw from divideds and the value of portfolio around 75.800)Studying how to transfer my rrsp and resp from the bank to wealthsimple,i just understood that the transfer i made from one tfsa to another tfsa account doesn"t qualify as transfer,but is considered a regular withdraw( a qualified transfer is made between the 2 institutions)witch means i over contributed with around 52k or more for the last 6 months already!Ought!I need to remove immediately the over contribution room,but i am confused about the exact amount:you said that the gains from the over contribution needs to be withdrawn,yes?how they are calculated?,how about the 2022 year room?when i can add funds for 2022?what is the best move right now to do?Thanks!
Yikes! I would reach out to your bank for help on this - or wealthsimple.
Always make sure you are using a T2033 for transfers.
@@ParallelWealth Thanks Adam,let me know the details about this,how i can get in contact with you?
@@clarabudescu8969 www.parallelwealth.com/planning
Great informative video. My question is I am legally separated from my wife. Can I name her as the successor holder of my TFSA and will the money go directly into her TFSA?
Not if legally separated.
If someone was living overseas and came in Canada in 2021 for the first time then how much is the contribution room for that person?
$6k
@@ParallelWealth thanks a lot. I really appreciate your videos. Keep posting this type of education stuff👍
Hi just question if I did not contribute every year 6000.00 can I contribute 12000.00 in the next year?
Thanks for the video. Question- when is it more advantageous to invest in an RRSP vs TFSA, and vice versa.
In very broad terms, $50k or more of income look to use RRSP
Who do you have your investments with I couldn’t hear.
BCV Asset Management.
Thanks so much.
Thanks again for the free education. Can you please let us know what is the name of the company that drives your personal TFSA?
BCV Asset Management manages my personal accounts.
@@ParallelWealth thanks! I went to their website to see if they offer services to individual costumers like me but they don't seem to do so. I'm wondering if this company only manages wealth for companies wholesale?
Never mind, found this: "Our minimum account size is 300 thousand dollars" 👀
My contribution limit is 75k this year. Say I put 30k into my tfsa and now its worth 50k. I withdraw the whole amount of 50k in December for emergency reasons. How will this affect my contribution limit in 2022?
You would have 101k of contribution room. 50+45+6
@@ParallelWealth thank you!!
moved to Canada in 2017, I opened my TFSA with my bank when I arrived. I only started to put money into my TFSA since Dec and make monthly contributions (small amount nothing too big) as for today I put into the max for the year $6000.00 Can I put in more to make up for the years I didn't contribute since 2017, 2018 and so on?
Yes, but I would first confirm your TFSA limit on your CRA site to make sure you do not over contribute.
I don’t think the information at the beginning of the video is correct. If you maxed out your TFSA contributions ($75,000) and it grew to $150,000 and then you withdraw it all this year I think for the next year your room would be only $75,000 plus the $6,000 for the next year, not $150,000 plus $6,000. You cannot increase your contribution room just because your money grew. I think you just get back the contribution room you have utilized before but when you withdraw your money out of TFSA you get that same room back, but not the increase. Let me know if this is correct.
Not true. You can put all the money you took out back plus any new room. If you are in doubt check your room in your cra account. It will be updated in the new year.
Sonja, the video is correct. If your account grows and you pull money out you will get all that redemption back the following year plus new contribution room. Margaret - thanks for beating me to this!
@@ParallelWealth Thank you, you are correct. I checked the information.
@@mpTraveller87 Thank you, you are right, I was wrong. This is actually amazing. I did not know it works this way.
@@sonja8282 it IS amazing!! Now let’s find the cash to put it all back and then some shall we 🤣!!!
Hi Adam and thanks; I really like many of the videos you put together.
Question - for example, if my father (81yrs old) hasn't contributed for couple of yrs and has accrued let's say $12K and passes away, does he lose that availability or can my mother, as successor holder, use that available room along with whatever room she may have? Obviously, my father's available room won't increase going forward after he passes, but is that previous "earned" room still available to be used by my mother as successor holder? If she can use, are there time limits as to when she needs to fund the account? For the record, my father is still alive; I'm just trying to help them get their affairs in order.
thanks so much for all your hard work and insight into investing!
It's lost. Your mom would take over his account and the current value would increase her room should she ever take it out. So the $12k is lost and can't be used past death.
@@ParallelWealth much appreciated for the response Adam!
That example of redemption sounds wrong. How can you get $150,000 in contribution room.. ??
It's correct. If your accounts grows and you take it out - regardless of size - you get that withdrawal amount back as contribution room the following year plus the usual $6k. We have clients that have TFSA accounts well over $500k.
@@ParallelWealth WOW. It just sounds to good to be true..especially when dealing with the CRA..
I don't understand why this is confusing. The rules are very simple and easy to follow.
Question: I'm guessing that most if not all banks offer TFSA accounts, including online only banks. Do you have to open a TFSA account at a brick and mortar bank to be able to pick whatever investment(s) you want to invest in..??
Also, how many different investments can you include in a TFSA account..?
No, online options are good too. Investment options are endless.
@@ParallelWealth Hey, thank you for clarifying..!!
So, you would have to talk to someone over the phone to choose whatever investments you want..? Cause I'm not exactly sure which investments either. I do know I want to invest in ETFs though.
Is there a best to track your contribution for TFSA?
CRA online, but best to double check it as it's not always up to date.
So if your single and die who gets your tfs account/If you can't give it to your kid?not transferable///does it cash out w/ tax or not to the beneficiary who may be your only living child? or is the question you asked us not to post?
Whoever you list as beneficiary would receive the amount of the TFSS in cash. They can then use it for what they want.
Bonus question (lol) Also, if one passes mid year and has not contributed, can the successor holder contribute full amount for that year or is it pro rated?
thanks again!
You would take on their account and boost your contribution room - but no further deposits to their account. So if you die mid year without making a contribution, tough luck! It's not prorated or allowed past death.
Thank you for the great video sir. I just had one question about cryptocurrency. As far as I'm aware, you can't invest in crypto with a TFSA account, right? I think whenever you try to open a crypto investment account, it will be a separate dedicated crypto account that would be taxed as regular capital gains are. This assumption is based on my experience with Wealthsimple. Please enlighten me on this matter. Thank you.
You can buy crypto ETFs within your TFSA. There are a few companies in Canada that offer them. This is also unique to Canada.
@@ParallelWealth Thank you so much.
hello
great video.
i am new to this.
in last February 2021
i deposit 19k to my account and withdraw after 4 days.
now my account is 0$.
iam thinking of adding 70k next week?
think??
So if I’m buying a new vehicle and make 4% on investment generally I’m better to take out TFSA money to buy vehicle to avoid paying 7% interest and no harm no foul come Jan 1 of the following year .
100%
Once you make the TFSA's as successor holders, what happens to the TFSA money should both husband and wife die. Where does the money go? Does it go to the estate and what tax implications?
Estate or you can name beneficiary still as well. Typically best to estate for planning, even if you do incur a small probate fee
not sure if you touched this on your videos.... say I have a direct trading account at a discount broker, that includes a TFSA and an RRSP, so for year 2021 the TFSA contribution limit is $75,500.00 and I was able to grow it to $100,000.00, then I withdraw the $100,000.00 this year. So base on the video by year 2022 I can put back $106,000.00 to my TFSA. Question, can I get that $106,000.00 from my regular trading account and put it to my TFSA?
Yup, the cash to put in your TFSA can come from your non- reg trading account. There may be a tax consequence in selling/moving those no reg assets tho.
Why can't you have your emergency money in a TFSA account in a cashable GIC just in case you need it. It will at least grow some %
Awesome video Adam. I read a few stories about the CRA deeming your trades ( ie:Stocks, ETF etc..)within a TFSA as an income and taxed accordingly. Not even as capital gains but as income because supposedly, your research and knowledge on a stock make it as though you're actually making a living trading stocks. I'm afraid to buy and sell stocks within my TFSA even once a month, so I don't get dinged on this rules which to me looks like a grey area. I just keep dollar cost averaging into it. Any thoughts on that? Thank You !
Keep in mind mutual funds trade daily....so there has to be some precedence there as well. Not sure a few trades a month would be a red flag
Its a grey area. CRA has a criteria in determining if you're a "day trader" so they can tax you as regular income. As long as your not making trades every single day within the span of a few hours...you should be fine. They also look at frequency of trades. If your investing and holding for the long term you shouldn't have any issues contributing once or even a couple times a month.
Hi Adam!
I have a question regarding contributions to an RRSP vs a TFSA. I know you suggest contributing to an RRSP when your salary is above $50,000, but do you suggest contributing 100% to an RRSP until there’s no room and then switching to the TFSA? I’m in the highest tax bracket and my Wife doesn’t work. Mathematically it makes most sense to max out my RRSPs, but I fear missing out on the flexibility that the TFSA offers. I’ve toyed with the idea of investing my RRSP tax return money into my TFSA, but then I lose on all the compounding effect of always reinvesting my RRSP tax return money. What do you think would be best? Thanks a lot in advance and sorry for the long message.
I like the tax refund to TFSA. Balances it out. Actually recommended that to someone else earlier we were building a plan for. Definitely focus on RRSP but start building some TFSA now. Hope that helps