Room appears available
Your planned year-one contribution fits inside the room estimate entered, assuming recent activity is accurate.
Use this page to estimate available TFSA room, model tax-free growth, and decide whether the TFSA should get the next contribution before you move into ETFs, dividend income, or RRSP comparisons.
Important: educational information only
EasyFinanceTools provides calculators, examples, and articles for general education only. Nothing on this site is personal financial, investment, tax, legal, mortgage, or accounting advice.
Results are estimates based on the inputs and assumptions shown. Investment returns, dividends, interest rates, tax rules, contribution room, and government benefit amounts can change. Always verify numbers with official sources such as CRA, your financial institution, or a qualified professional before making decisions.
Investing involves risk. Past performance, advertised yields, and calculator examples do not guarantee future results.
Founder review
This page is written and maintained by Easy Finance Tools, checked against official Canadian sources where applicable, and not reviewed by a licensed financial advisor unless a reviewer is explicitly named.
Source verification
Last updated: April 22, 2026
Last verified for 2026: official rule pages and source links checked where they apply.
Video support
A short plain-English video can be added here once the matching Easy Finance Tools explanation is published.
TFSA contribution room and growth explained
Future video support can explain contribution room, withdrawals, CRA room lag, and tax-free growth without autoplay.
Estimated TFSA room now
$69,000
Accrued room since 2010: $104,000.
Projected balance in 15 years
$230,997
Includes $100,997 of projected tax-free growth.
Contribution used in year one
$7,000
Uses 100% of the 2026 annual limit.
2026 TFSA limit source
The annual limit and withdrawal-room timing referenced in this result are sourced from CRA TFSA guidance.
Decision support
Limitations
Scenario discipline
Interpretation
This is a straightforward TFSA funding plan: the annual contribution target fits within the current annual limit assumption, which makes the account easier to manage and easier to automate.
Annual contribution target
$7,000
About $583 per month if you automate the plan.
Current marginal-rate context
29.7%
Helpful when comparing the TFSA against taxable investing or an RRSP deduction.
Next-year room estimate
$69,000
Assumes the future annual TFSA limit stays at the current 2026 level.
Result interpretation
This scenario points to $69,000 of estimated TFSA room and $230,997 after 15 years. Use the room number to avoid contribution mistakes first, then use the projection to compare whether the TFSA should beat RRSP or FHSA contributions.
Room appears available
Your planned year-one contribution fits inside the room estimate entered, assuming recent activity is accurate.
Longer timeline value
A longer timeline gives tax-free compounding more time to matter, but investment risk still belongs to the holdings you choose.
Account comparison
If your income is high or a first-home purchase is realistic, compare RRSP and FHSA before treating TFSA as the default next account.
Result quality check
Treat the output as a planning estimate. The sections below show the assumptions used, Canadian caveats, official source checks, and safer next steps.
Calculator guidance
This result may help you compare TFSA room safety and tax-free growth before deciding whether the next $7,000 belongs in a TFSA, RRSP, or FHSA.
Related content
Use these next if the room estimate looks useful but the account priority is still unclear.
Important warnings
Most serious TFSA problems come from timing and room tracking, not from the calculator math itself.
Continue planning
Account Decision Tool
Compare whether TFSA, RRSP, or FHSA should receive the next contribution.
RRSP Calculator
Test whether the deduction and refund assumptions are strong enough to beat TFSA flexibility.
TFSA contribution room guide
Review contribution-room rules, withdrawals, and common CRA timing mistakes.
Next step links
Move from room safety into the decision that actually changes behavior.
Result insight
The first job of this result is avoiding an accidental over-contribution. The second job is deciding what role the TFSA should play: flexible savings, long-term ETF growth, dividend income, or a mix. The same balance target can be sensible or awkward depending on that account job.
When TFSA beats RRSP
A TFSA is not automatically better than an RRSP, but it often wins when the future use of the money is still uncertain.
Save RRSP room for higher-income years.
Works better when: current tax bracket is modest and career income could climb.
Watch out when: TFSA room is used for short-term spending without a plan to rebuild it.
TFSA withdrawals can be replaced in a later calendar year.
Works better when: housing, job, family, or emergency needs could change.
Watch out when: same-year recontributions create overcontribution risk.
Tax-free distributions can be simple when TFSA room exists.
Works better when: income is secondary to a diversified long-term plan.
Watch out when: high yield hides weak total return or concentrated ETF exposure.
A refund only improves the RRSP case if it is used intentionally.
Works better when: the TFSA keeps the plan simple and accessible.
Watch out when: the RRSP comparison ignores future withdrawal tax.
Compare outcomes
Room protection
$69,000
Treat this as a planning estimate until CRA room and recent withdrawals are verified.
Contribution habit
$7,000
This is the amount the model can use in year one without exceeding the room estimate entered.
Tax-free growth
$100,997
This is the projected growth sheltered from annual tax if the assumptions hold.
Before you act
CRA room can lag real activity. If you recently contributed, withdrew, or used multiple institutions, check your own records too.
A TFSA can hold investments, but money needed soon should not be forced into stock-market risk just because the account is tax-free.
Dividend ETFs, all-in-one ETFs, cash savings, and emergency money can all live in a TFSA, but each serves a different purpose.
If the next dollar has multiple account options, run the RRSP or FHSA calculator before treating TFSA as the default.
Watch-outs
Output
Common mistakes
Re-contributing a same-year withdrawal too early: this is one of the most common avoidable TFSA errors and can create a penalty even when your long-term room is healthy.
Using the TFSA without defining the account job: broad ETF growth, emergency savings, and dividend income are all valid uses, but they are not interchangeable decisions.
Ignoring account comparisons: the TFSA is excellent, but it is not always the best next account if the RRSP deduction or FHSA structure is clearly stronger.
Treating the room estimate as final: use this as a planning tool, then verify with CRA before acting.
Year-by-year usage
| Year | Room | Used | Next year | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $33,738 |
| Year 2 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $43,014 |
| Year 3 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $52,863 |
| Year 4 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $63,319 |
| Year 5 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $74,420 |
| Year 6 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $86,206 |
| Year 7 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $98,719 |
| Year 8 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $112,004 |
| Year 9 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $126,107 |
| Year 10 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $141,081 |
| Year 11 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $156,979 |
| Year 12 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $173,856 |
| Year 13 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $191,775 |
| Year 14 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $210,799 |
| Year 15 | $69,000 | $7,000 | $69,000 | $230,997 |
Example calculation
In this scenario, estimated current TFSA room is $69,000 and the projected balance after 15 years is $230,997. The first number helps prevent an over-contribution; the second number shows what the contribution habit could become if the room estimate, return assumption, and timeline hold up.
Real Canadian scenario
A 31-year-old Ontario resident has $18,000 invested in a TFSA, no same-year withdrawals, and wants to add $500 per month for the next year before comparing RRSP deductions.
The calculator is used to separate contribution-room safety from projected growth.
If the room estimate is comfortable, the TFSA can remain a flexible investing account. If room is tight, the better next step is to confirm CRA records before contributing and compare the same dollars against RRSP or FHSA options.
Limitation: CRA My Account can lag recent transactions. Same-year withdrawals and transfers between institutions can make the calculator estimate too optimistic.
Last updated: April 22, 2026
This page estimates TFSA room from your eligibility year, lifetime contributions, and restored withdrawals, then projects tax-free growth using the contribution pace and return assumptions you enter.
Self-reviewed by: Gourav Kumar
Checked against official Canadian source material where applicable; not reviewed by a licensed financial advisor, accountant, mortgage broker, or tax professional unless explicitly stated.
Educational planning tool only. Verify room, withdrawal timing, and account suitability before making real contributions.
Official sources
Use these CRA references to confirm contribution room, withdrawal timing, and excess-contribution rules before making a real TFSA contribution.
Source shell
When annual limits or CRA guidance change, update the shared finance config first, then re-check these sources.
CRA TFSA overview
Primary source for annual limits, withdrawals, and general TFSA eligibility rules.
Open sourceCRA TFSA contributions page
Use this to verify room rules, contribution timing, and over-contribution treatment.
Open sourceCRA excess TFSA tax guidance
Important when the scenario involves same-year re-contributions or possible excess amounts.
Open sourceLocal config to update
Refresh TFSA annual limits and assumptions in src/config/financial.js when the new tax year is known.
Manual review needed each year: confirm TFSA annual limits, any CRA guidance updates, and related account-comparison content.
Educational information only
Easy Finance Tools provides educational calculators and general information only. Results are estimates and are not financial, investment, tax, legal, or mortgage advice. Always verify details with official sources or a qualified professional.