How Much Can I Contribute to My TFSA? I Turned 18 or Arrived in Canada after 2009

Newspapers, bank ads, and even financial websites are often a bit careless when telling people how much they can contribute to their TFSA. They all seem to assume that everyone is 24 or older (in 2015.) What if it’s 2015 and you’re under 24? What if you are 24 or older, but you moved to Canada in 2012 to 2015? What if you left Canada between 2012 and 2015? How much can you contribute to your TFSA if you just turned 18 or if you immigrated to Canada after 2009?

The Age of Majority Is Not the Same Throughout Canada

For younger investors it’s important to clarify one rule about TFSAs. The age of majority varies in different provinces in Canada. Banks and financial institutions will not let you set up a TFSA until you reach the age of majority.

If you are a Canadian Resident, have a SIN number, and you live in

  • Alberta
  • Manitoba
  • Ontario
  • Prince Edward Island
  • Quebec, or
  • Saskatchewan

you can open and contribute to a TFSA once you turn 18 years of age.

If you live in

  • British Columbia
  • New Brunswick
  • Newfoundland and Labrador
  • Northwest Territories
  • Nova Scotia
  • Nunavut, or
  • the Yukon

you can’t open and contribute to a TFSA until you turn 19. Your TFSA contribution room starts accumulating once your turn 18 years of age, though. So you will lose one year of tax-sheltered growth of your investments, but otherwise you are not penalized. This is because in these provinces and territories you cannot legally enter into an agreement until you are 19 years of age.

So for people who have been Canadian Residents for each and every year since 2009, this table lets you lookup your TFSA contribution room, if
* you have never made any TFSA contributions before
* you are a Canadian Resident and have been one for each and every year since 2009
* you have a Social Insurance Number, SIN

Year You Were Born Year You Make Your First Contribution to your TFSA Maximum You Can Contribute that Year to Catch Up All Previous Years’ Contribution Room
if you live in
Alberta
Manitoba
Ontario
Prince Edward Island
Quebec
Saskatchewan
Maximum You Can Contribute that Year to Catch Up All Previous Years’ Contribution Room
if you live in
British Columbia
New Brunswick
Newfoundland and Labrador
Northwest Territories
Nova Scotia
Nunavut, or
the Yukon
1991 or earlier 2009 5 000 0
1991 or earlier 2010 10 000 10 000
1991 or earlier 2011 15 000 15 000
1991 or earlier 2012 20 000 20 000
1991 or earlier 2013 25 500 25 500
1991 or earlier 2014 31 000 31 000
1991 or earlier 2015 36 500 36 500
1992 2009 0 0
1992 2010 5000 0
1992 2011 10 000 10 000
1992 2012 15 000 15 000
1992 2013 20 500 20 500
1992 2014 26 500 26 500
1992 2015 32 000 32 000
1993 2009 0 0
1993 2010 0 0
1993 2011 5000 0
1993 2012 10 000 10 000
1993 2013 15 500 15 500
1993 2014 21 000 21 000
1993 2015 26 500 26 500
1994 2009 0 0
1994 2010 0 0
1994 2011 0 0
1994 2012 5 000 0
1994 2013 10 500 10 500
1994 2014 16 000 16 000
1994 2015 21 500 21 500
1995 2009 0 0
1995 2010 0 0
1995 2011 0 0
1995 2012 0 0
1995 2013 5 500 0
1995 2014 11 000 11 000
1995 2015 16 500 16 500
1996 2009 0 0
1996 2010 0 0
1996 2011 0 0
1996 2012 0 0
1996 2013 0 0
1996 2014 5 500 0
1996 2015 11 000 11 000
1997 2009 0 0
1997 2010 0 0
1997 2011 0 0
1997 2012 0 0
1997 2013 0 0
1997 2014 0 0
1997 2015 5 500 0

NOTES:

Wait for Your Birthday

According to the Canada Revenue Agency website, you can only contribute to your TFSA on or after your 18 (or 19) birthday. So if your birthday is December 31, 1996, and the age of majority in your province is 18, you must wait till December 31, 2014 to make your first contribution. If the age of majority in your province or territory is 19, you must wait till December 31, 2015. You cannot make the contribution on any date before then.

What If You Contributed Something Already to Your TFSA?

This article is meant for people who have not invested in their TFSA at all yet. You can’t use the numbers in this article to get the information you need.

What If You Contributed Something Already to Your TFSA and Already Took Some Out?

This article is meant for people who have not invested in their TFSA at all yet. You can’t use the numbers in this article to get the information you need.

What If You Were Not a Canadian Resident for Each and Every Year from 2009-the Present?

If you were or are not a Canadian Resident for one or more years between 2009 and the present, you must not include the maximum TFSA contribution limit for that year or those years in your calculation of how much you can contribute.

For example, if you were 25 in 2009 and opened a TFSA and contributed the maximum of $5000, and then for 2010, 2011 and 2012, you were not a Canadian Resident, and in 2013 you became a Canadian Resident again, you can only contribute an additional $5500 to your TFSA in 2013. You cannot contribute the ($5000+5000+5000 =) $15,000 for the years that you were non-Resident. When you are non-Resident you do not earn contribution room and you do not get it back later.

Things Are a Bit More Complicated for People Becoming Canadian Residents or Leaving Canada Permanently

Tax laws would be simpler to understand if no one ever moved. In reality people immigrate to and emigrate from Canada every year. Here’s some information for new immigrants to Canada.

I Am a New Immigrant to Canada; As a New Canadian Resident What Is My TFSA Limit?

Only Canadian Residents earn an annual TFSA contribution amount. Each year, a Canadian Resident earns a bit more TFSA contribution room.

If you were not a Canadian Resident in a given year, even if you were 18 or older, you have not earned any TFSA room for that year.

So if a person who was born in 1991 or earlier moves to Canada and becomes a Canadian Resident

  • In 2009, he or she has the same limits as someone born in 1991 or earlier in Canada
  • In 2010, has the same limits as someone born in 1992 living in Alberta
  • In 2011, has the same limits as someone born in 1993 living in Alberta
  • In 2012, has the same limits as someone born in 1994 living in Alberta
  • In 2013, has the same limits as someone born in 1995 living in Alberta
  • In 2014, has the same limits as someone born in 1996 living in Alberta
  • In 2015, has the same limits as someone born in 1997 living in Alberta

According to the CRA website you earn TFSA contribution room in one-year chunks. Even if you arrive in Canada part way through a year, you will earn the room for the entire year, not just part of it. For example, if you became a Canadian resident in November 2013, you will still have $5500 in contribution room for 2013.

What If I am a Grad Student with a Temporary (R prefix) Social Insurance Number

Not everyone living in Canada is a Permanent Resident. Some are students attending university. Those students may be working and paying taxes. They will have a SIN that starts with the letter R.

According to The Canada Visa website  some students are considered Residents of Canada although they are not Permanent Residents. They are eligible to open a TFSA. The CRA definitions for a Canadian Resident are online.

If a person needs further clarification on whether they are a Resident, more information is available. The CRA website says “For more information, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-221R, Determination of an individual’s Residence Status, or contact the international Tax Services Office at 1-855-284-5942. If you are calling from outside Canada and the United States, call 613-940-8495.”

What Is My TFSA Limit If I Was a Canadian Resident but Left, then Returned and Became a Resident Again?

If you leave Canada and are no longer a Canadian Resident (and the Canada Revenue Agency agrees you are no longer a resident) you do not have to cash out your TFSA. You cannot make any new contributions however.

According to Canadian Tax Resource, while non-Resident, a person will *not* get any new contribution room. Even if they move back and become a resident again later, they will not get back those lost years of contribution room.

Be aware, also, that if you make a withdrawal from your Canadian TFSA while a Resident of a country other than Canada, that other country may consider the money to be income taxable by that country.

According to the CRA website, if you make a withdrawal from your TFSA while a non-Resident of Canada the following year you will be given the room to re-contribute that withdrawal, but you can only put the money back in after you re-establish Canadian Resident status, not before.

If you plan to move out of Canada and take up residence elsewhere, I strongly suggest you plan how to handle your TFSA with a Canadian tax specialist who fully understands the rules both in Canada and in the country to which you are moving!

How Much Can Old Timer Canadians Contribute to our TFSAs?

If you turned 18 in 2009 or before, and if you have always been a Canadian, and if you have never made any contribution to a TFSA, and if the current year is 2013, you can contribute $25,500.

If you turned 18 in 2009 or before, and if you have always been a Canadian, and if you have never made any contribution to a TFSA, and if the current year is 2014, you can contribute $31,000.

If you turned 18 in 2009 or before, and if you have always been a Canadian, and if you have never made any contribution to a TFSA, and if the current year is 2015, you can contribute $36,500.

If You’re Still Unsure Contact the Canada Revenue Agency

The fines for over-contributing to your TFSA are high. If you’re still not sure what you can contribute, I’d strongly recommend you contact the CRA to discuss your personal limit.

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Get Ready to Die: Beneficiary and Successor Account Holder Forms for your Online Brokerage Accounts

The best time to get ready to die is when your demise is still a long, long time in the future. So if you are young and healthy and life is good, now is the time to get some of your financial paper work in order. One of the best and simplest things to do is to designate who the beneficiary and successor holder should be for your RRSP, RRIF, LIRA, TFSA and other online brokerage accounts.

I’ve been twiddling my thumbs waiting to shuffle off this mortal coil and waiting for my RRSP money to transfer into my new RBC Direct Investing RRSP account, and wondering if I should take bets on which will happen first. (The money left ING Direct on November 7. It’s now November 13 and it’s still “in transit.” What did they send it by? Speedy Snail Delivery Service?)

While waiting, I printed, signed and mailed in the Standard Beneficiary Designation. I’ve already filed similar forms for our BMO InvestorLine and CIBC Investor’s Edge accounts.
In this article, I’ll show you where to find the forms online, after I’ve convinced you that this matters.

Why Should You Designate a Beneficiary for your Accounts? Do You Like Giving the Government Money?

If you designate a beneficiary for your RRSP or RRIF, when you die the assets will be paid out directly to your beneficiary. The money will not be included in the amount on which your estate has to pay probate fees. You (well, you’re dead, so it’s your estate or your heirs) will pay the government less of your hard-earned money.

In some cases, the money will also be allowed to remain tax-sheltered. For example, if I die, my husband will get to add my RRSP money to his own, without ever taking it out of the tax shelter because he is my designated beneficiary. That saves him paying a lot of tax. Instead, he will pay taxes gradually as he makes planned withdrawals from my RRSP in the future.

(Unfortunately, in other cases the money will have to come out of the RRSP and be taxed before going to the beneficiary. For example, if I designated my children as the beneficiaries for my RRSP, the RRSP would be collapsed and the funds taxed before the after-tax proceeds would be distributed. It still wouldn’t incur probate taxes though.)

Designate Your Spouse or Partner as Your Successor Holder for Your TFSA

TFSAs are quirky.

If you have a spouse or a common-law partner whom you have lived with for at least 3 years or with whom you have children, you should designate this spouse/partner as the Successor Holder to your TFSA. According to Gordon Pape’s book “How TFSAs Can Make You Rich” you can only designate this person as a Successor Holder. You can’t designate a friend or other relative.

The Successor Holder will receive the TFSA in kind. They will not have to collapse the plan. They will not have to take the investments out of the plan. They will not have to pay probate fees or taxes on the value of the plan. Any profits earned after the death of the original TFSA holder are still tax-free.

If you don’t have a spouse or partner, you should designate a Beneficiary.

Designating a TFSA Beneficiary ensures that probate fees and taxes are not payable on the value of the TFSA.

However, the Beneficiary of a TFSA can’t keep the plan. They have to take the investments out of the TFSA. Once out, they become regular non-registered investments and any gains or income the investments earn from then on are taxable.

The Beneficiary will also have to pay tax on any income, gains or dividends earned by the investments in the TFSA from the day the person died until the day they get them. So say it takes 6 months for the Beneficiary to actually get a TFSA full of stocks. They will owe capital gains tax and dividend tax on any gains and distributions the stocks make between the day of death and the day 6 months later when they get the stocks.

You can see that it’s good to be a Beneficiary of a TFSA, but it’s even better to be the Successor Holder. That’s why you should designate your spouse or partner the successor if possible.

There may be cases when you don’t want the money going to your spouse or partner. That’s different. In that case, designate a Beneficiary or describe what should be done in your will.

What about Non-Registered Investment Accounts?

There is no form to designate a beneficiary for a non-registered investment account. You can state what should be done with your account in your will. Your estate will have to pay taxes and probate fees on the value of the account.

Don’t Put This Stuff Off! Designate Your Beneficiary Now

According to the RBC DI website, a Power of Attorney does *NOT* have the right to designate a beneficiary. That should ring some warning bells. Don’t put off designating your beneficiaries. You don’t want to be disabled and unable to make your wishes known realizing that you’ve just ensured your heirs will have to hand a large chunk of money over to the government for no good reason. Do it now. Get it done.

Update Your Beneficiary When Your Life Changes

If you marry, divorce, change common law partners or are widowed, please remember to update your beneficiary designations. Lawyers see many nasty cases where the beneficiary was not updated with unexpected, sometimes even tragic, results. It usually takes less than an hour to get this paper work done. Find the time.

Imagine paying even $100 more tax than you have to. Isn’t it worth filling in this form for $100?

What If My Beneficiary Dies First? Using Contingent Beneficiaries

In general, if your beneficiary dies before you die, you should just update your beneficiary form with your new choice. However, because sometimes people forget or life happens, in some cases you can file a form with both your Beneficiary and the name of your Contingent Beneficiary. The account would go to the Beneficiary normally, but if the Beneficiary has died before you die, then it will go straight to the Contingent Beneficiary.

As a Distinct Society, Quebec is Always a Little Different

The rules for Beneficiaries and Successor Holders are a little different in Quebec. I’d suggest that you seek advice from your financial institution if you live in Quebec. I believe that you can only designate your beneficiary and successor in your will not by a form. However, I’m not a tax or financial expert so I recommend you speak to someone who is to find out the correct, current information.

To Find the Beneficiary and Successor Forms for RBC Direct Investing Brokerage Accounts

  1. Sign in to your RBC Direct Investing account/s.
  2. Click on the My Home tab.
  3. Click on the Forms link in the long list across the top of the screen under My Home.
    Way down in the grey Forms box, click on the link called: Beneficiary Designation
    A long list of links to forms will be displayed.
  4. The next step depends on the types of accounts you have
    • For RRSP, RRIF, LIF, PRIF, LIRA, LRIF, RLIF and RLSP accounts,
      If you want to designate one person as your Beneficiary, click on the link called: Designation of Beneficiary.
      If you want to designate more than one person, click on the link called: Designation of Multiple Beneficiaries
    • For TFSA accounts,
      if you want to designate a regular beneficiary, click on the link: Tax-Free Savings Account Beneficiary Designation
      If you want to designate a charitable corporation as the beneficiary, click on the link: TFSA Beneficiary Designation (for Charitable Corporations)

    (In all cases you will have to save the blank form to your computer or print it immediately.

  5. To end your online session, click on the Sign Out button.
    For added security, clear your browser’s cache and close your browser session.
  6. Open the form/s.
    Print the form/s.
    Complete the form/s.
    Generally you will need to report the name and address of the person who will be the Beneficiary or the Successor, and if you have it you can include their Social Insurance Number. Adding the SIN reduces the risk of a mistake being made if many people share the same name. (E.g. if your Beneficiary is John Smith or Mohammed Masoud.)
  7. If necessary, have your signature witnessed by an agent at the appropriate bank or financial institution. The RBC DI RRSP form does not require you to get an agent’s signature. They sign it when they receive it.
  8. Mail the completed form to RBC Direct Investing. They need an original with your signature for legal reasons.

To Find the Beneficiary and Successor Forms for BMO InvestorLine Brokerage Accounts

  1. Sign in to your InvestorLine account/s.
  2. Click on the Account Services tab.
  3. Click on the Forms link.
  4. Click on the tab for the first type of account you have. For example, click on
    • RSPs/RIFs
    • TFSAs
  5. For a RSP or RIF, click on the link called: Beneficiary Designation and Successor Annuitant Form (RSP/RIF)
  6. For TFSAs, click on the link called: Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) Successor Account Holder Appointment and/or Beneficiary Designation Form
  7. When you’ve printed your forms, click on the Sign Out button.
    For increased security clear your browser cache and close your browser session.
    Open the form/s.
  8. Print the form/s.
    Complete the form/s.
    You’ll need the name and address of the person who will be the Beneficiary or the Successor. If you include their Social Insurance Number you will reduce the risk of a mistake if many people share the same name. (E.g. if your Beneficiary is Cathy Smith or Fatima Khan.)
  9. Mail the completed form/s to BMO InvestorLine. They need an original with your signature for legal reasons.

To Find the Beneficiary and Successor Forms for CIBC Investor’s Edge Brokerage Accounts

  1. Sign on to your Investor’s Edge account/s.
  2. From the long list on the left side of the screen, click on the link called: Forms.
  3. Click on the tab: Registered Accounts.
    • For an RSP, click on the Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) PDF link. Section 8 of the form is the Designation of the Beneficiary.
    • For a TFSA, click on the Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) PDF link.  Section 6 of the form is the Designation of Successor Holder or other Beneficiary.
    • For a RIF, click on the Registered Retirement Income Fund (RRIF) PDF link. Section 8 of the form is the Designation of the Beneficiary.
    • For a LIRA, click on the Locked-In Retirement Account (LIRA) PDF link. Section 8 of the form is the Designation of the Beneficiary.
    • For a LIF, click on the LIF PDF link. [Don’t ask me why they didn’t type out Life Income Fund!] Section 8 of the form is the Designation of the Beneficiary.
    • There are quite a few themes are variations on the LIF. If applicable, click on the form for the kind you have. Chances are good it will be Section 8, but you can scroll through the form to find the correct section if it’s not.
  4. Click on the Sign Off button.
    For added security clear your browser cache and close your browser session.
  5. Print the required form.
    Complete and sign the form.
    Usually you will list the name and address of the Beneficiary or Successor. Including their Social Insurance Number will reduce the risk of a mistake if many people share the same name. (E.g. if your Beneficiary is Choudhary Singh.)
  6. Mail it to CIBC Investor’s Edge. Legally, they will need your original signature.

Give It Time Then Check Your Beneficiary and Successor Designations Are Correct

It’s a good idea to keep an eye on your statements to check whether the correct Beneficiary or Successor gets named. Papers get lost. Until you see it’s registered properly, keep an eye on this.

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Do you have your Beneficiaries and Successors up to date? Did you ever meet someone who suffered because they weren’t set up correctly? Please share your experiences with a comment.