RIDGE 3: TAX EFFICIENCY
Personal and Family Tax Strategy
Canada uses a progressive tax system that creates real planning opportunities for families who understand how it works. The difference between your marginal rate today and your expected rate in retirement determines which accounts to prioritize, when to split income with your spouse, and how to sequence withdrawals so you keep more of what you have built. This guide walks through the core frameworks that apply to most Canadian families, from choosing between a TFSA and an RRSP to structuring retirement income so it does not trigger benefit clawbacks.
The Tax Landscape
How Canadian tax brackets actually work, and why it matters for planning.
Canada uses a progressive tax system. That means you do not pay one flat rate on all your income. Instead, each dollar is taxed at the rate for the bracket it falls into. Your first $55,867 (federally) is taxed at 15%, and only the income above that threshold moves into the next bracket.
This distinction between marginal rate (the rate on your next dollar) and average rate (your total tax divided by total income) is the foundation of every tax strategy. When someone says "I am in the 30% bracket," they mean their marginal rate is 30%, not that all their income is taxed at 30%.
Why this matters for planning: RRSP deductions save tax at your marginal rate. If you contribute $10,000 while in the 30.5% bracket, you save $3,050 in tax. If you withdraw that same $10,000 in retirement while in the 25% bracket, you pay $2,500. The difference is the planning opportunity.
Alberta 2025 Combined Marginal Tax Rates
Each bracket only applies to the income within that range, not your total income.
$0 - $55,867
$55,867 - $100,392
$100,392 - $155,625
$155,625 - $221,708
$221,708+
*Approximate. Actual rates vary slightly due to surtaxes and credits.
TFSA vs RRSP
The most common question in Canadian financial planning. Here is how to think about it.
Feature
RRSP
TFSA
Tax on contribution
Deductible (reduces taxable income)
After-tax dollars (no deduction)
Tax on growth
Tax-deferred (taxed on withdrawal)
Tax-free (never taxed)
Tax on withdrawal
Fully taxable as income
Completely tax-free
Contribution room
18% of earned income (max ~$32K)
$7,000/year (2025), cumulative
Impact on benefits
Withdrawals count as income (GIS, OAS)
No impact on income-tested benefits
Best when
High income now, lower in retirement
Lower income now, or want flexibility
Spousal option
Yes (income splitting strategy)
No (but each spouse has own room)
The decision is not "which is better." It is "which is better for your situation right now." Most Canadians benefit from using both. The question is which to prioritize when you cannot max out both. The flowchart below walks through the key decision points.
If your tax rate is the same at contribution and withdrawal, the TFSA and RRSP produce mathematically identical after-tax results. The RRSP gives you a bigger account balance (because you invested the tax savings), but you owe tax on withdrawal. The TFSA gives you a smaller balance, but it is all yours. The difference shows up when rates change between contribution and withdrawal, or when government benefit clawbacks enter the picture.
Income Splitting for Families
Legal ways to shift income to lower-taxed family members.
Because Canada taxes individuals (not families), a household where one spouse earns $200,000 and the other earns $0 pays significantly more tax than a household where both earn $100,000. Income splitting strategies attempt to shift income from the higher-rate spouse to the lower-rate spouse within the rules.
The CRA's attribution rules limit many splitting strategies. If you gift or lend money to your spouse or minor children and they invest it, the investment income is generally attributed back to you for tax purposes. Understanding what is permitted and what triggers attribution is essential before implementing any approach.
Spousal RRSP
Permitted
Higher earner contributes, claims deduction. Lower earner withdraws at their rate after 3-year hold.
Pension Income Splitting
Permitted (age 65+)
Up to 50% of eligible pension income can be allocated to spouse on tax return.
Spousal Loan at Prescribed Rate
Permitted (with formalities)
Lend to lower-income spouse at CRA prescribed rate. They invest, report income at their rate.
CPP Sharing
Permitted (both 60+)
Spouses can share CPP benefits based on years of cohabitation during contribution period.
Gifting to Adult Children
No attribution (18+)
Gifts to adult children (18+) do not trigger attribution. Investment income is theirs.
RESP Contributions
Tax-deferred growth
Contributions grow tax-free. Withdrawals taxed in child's hands at their (usually low) rate.
Withdrawal Order
The sequence you draw from accounts in retirement can save or cost thousands per year.
Accumulation gets most of the attention, but the order in which you draw from your accounts in retirement has a significant impact on your after-tax income and government benefit eligibility. Drawing too much from the RRIF too early can trigger OAS clawbacks. Drawing too little can result in a large taxable estate.
The general framework below is a starting point. Your optimal withdrawal sequence depends on your specific income sources, account balances, tax bracket, and benefit eligibility. A retirement income plan models this in detail.
General Withdrawal Priority
This is a simplified framework. Your optimal order depends on your specific tax situation.
Non-Registered
Withdraw first (only gains taxed)
RRSP / RRIF
Convert at 71, draw strategically
TFSA
Withdraw last (tax-free, no clawback)
CPP + OAS
Government benefits (income-tested)
Non-registered accounts generate annual taxable events (interest, dividends, capital gains) whether you withdraw or not. Drawing from these accounts first reduces the ongoing tax drag. Only the capital gains portion is taxable (at 50% inclusion rate for the first $250,000 annually), and you recover your original cost base tax-free. Meanwhile, your RRSP and TFSA continue to grow tax-sheltered.
Important Notes
Limitations, assumptions, and when to get professional help.
This guide explains general tax concepts for educational purposes. It does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax rules are complex, change frequently, and interact with each other in ways that depend entirely on your specific circumstances. Every strategy discussed here requires professional analysis before implementation.
This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, investment, or financial advice. Tax laws are complex and subject to change. The information presented is based on general Canadian tax rules as of 2025 and may not apply to your specific situation. Consult a Chartered Professional Accountant (CPA) and/or a qualified tax professional before implementing any tax strategy. Five Ridge Financial Ltd. does not provide tax advice.