Can I Use My TFSA as Collateral for a Quick Loan?

Sometimes life happens and a person needs a few thousand dollars in a hurry. They may even have that same few thousand saved up in a Tax Free Savings Account but it’s locked up in a GIC that can’t be cashed until it reaches maturity. The question then is: Can I use my TFSA as collateral for a quick loan?

You Can Not Use RRSP Assets as Collateral for a Loan

If you run into financial problems, your bank cannot seize your RRSP assets, at least until you try to withdraw them, to reclaim what you owe them on a loan. Consequently, no legitimate lender will let you use the value of the assets in your RRSP as collateral for a loan.

What Is Collateral?

(This is not a legal definition just an approximate explanation. If you need more details, please talk to a financial expert or lawyer.)

Collateral is something of value that the bank can claim if you default on your loan by not paying it back. For example, if you have a brand new car which is fully paid off, a bank might allow you to list the car as collateral for a small short-term loan. If you don’t pay the loan back in full with the agreed interest by the payable date, the bank can then take your car, sell it, keep the amount needed to redeem the loan and to recover the costs of forcing them to seize your car, etc, then give you the balance of the value.

Banks prefer cash and investment assets as collateral as they are much easier for them to process than physical goods like cars.

You Can Use the Assets in Your TFSA as Collateral for a Loan

Unlike RRSPs, the assets in your TFSA can be pledged as collateral against a loan.

It’s important to remember, though, that the bank does not *have* to allow you to use your TFSA as collateral. It’s up to them. There is no rule that says they must lend you money.

What Type of TFSA Assets Might Be Acceptable As Collateral?

If your TFSA is invested in cash, the bank would probably suggest you just withdraw the cash and use it instead of getting a loan. In most cases, that would be the sensible solution.

If your TFSA is invested in bonds or GICs, the bank would probably allow you to pledge part of the value of those assets as collateral against a loan. They would likely need proof of the terms, principal and interest rates for the assets. You are most likely to be able to get a loan from the same financial institution that holds your TFSA as it would be easiest for them to keep an eye on their collateral and get access to it if you don’t repay your loan.

If your TFSA is invested in individual stocks, mutual funds or ETFs, it gets trickier. The bank would have to decide how risky it thinks those investments are. For example, in mid-November 2008 TD bank shares were worth about $48 each. By mid-December they were down to about $34 each. The institution making the loan knows these types of market drops can occur anytime without warning. Depending on how risky they rate your investments they may or may not accept them as collateral and they are very unlikely to loan you even 90% of the current value of them.

Borrowing Against Your TFSA to Invest in a Non-Registered Account

In his book, How TFSAs Can Make You Rich, Gordon Pape explains that you might be able to use your TFSA as collateral to borrow money which you could then use to invest in a non-registered account.

He also says “you can deduct interest on a loan against a TFSA if the money is used to invest in a non-registered portfolio, say Gena Katz of Ernst & Young Canada and Jamie Golombek of CIBC Private Wealth Management.”

Mr. Pape also points out that many people who borrowed to invest suffered only increased losses, not gains, caused by the crash of 2008-2009. Leverage can increase earnings but it can also cause devastating losses.

For most people and in most situations, I would not recommend borrowing to invest. (Not that you should ever make any investment decision based on my website. Talk to a financial professional for financial advice, not an engineer/tech writer! I’m only trying to share what I’ve learned not tell you what to do.)

In case you don’t already know, you can not deduct interest for a loan used to invest in your TFSA.

Have I Used my TFSA as Collateral?

So far I’ve never needed a short-term loan. I’m hoping I’ll never need to personally test this information.

Related Reading

Join In
Have you ever used your TFSA as loan collateral? Was it to get out of a pinch or to leverage your portfolio? Please share your experiences with a comment.

TFSA Tips from Gordon Pape: A Review of How TFSAs Can Make You Rich

Starting in 2009, Canadians had a new investment mechanism to tinker with called Tax Free Savings Accounts . Since 2008, Gordon Pape has been trying to educate Canadians about the varied and intriguing opportunities these accounts offer through his books. His How TFSAs Can Make You Rich is his third book on the topic. I’ve read each of them and from each I’ve learned a bit more. Here’s my review and a few TFSA tips from Mr. Pape.

What’s Good About How TFSAs Can Make You Rich

This is a great book for reading in short bursts while waiting for hockey practice to end, while riding the train to work, or during that glorious 15-minutes a week that you get to do what *you* want.

It’s divided into compact chapters with clear titles so you can skip ahead if that’s what you want or need.

It also includes a chapter of real questions from readers with their answers. For those of us who like reading Financial Facelifts and Portfolio Makeovers, these tantalizing glimpses into the finances and devious minds of others have a special appeal.

Gordon Pape knows that many of us have questions like “should I save for my first home in my TFSA or my RRSP?” He tries to answer them in this book. For questions that have no one “correct” answer, he points out factors to consider.

TFSA Tips from How TFSAs Can Make You Rich

Here are a few facts I found interesting and worth noting in the book.

TFSAs can be used as collateral for loans provided the financial institution is willing. For example, if your TFSA money is locked up in 5-year term GICs (Please see: Can I Cash my GIC Whenever I Want?) the bank that issued the GICs might allow you to use those certificates as collateral for a short-term loan.

In provinces and the territories where a person cannot legally open a TFSA until they turn 19 years of age, the contribution room still begins accumulating at 18. So at 19, the person can contribute $(5000+5500) = $10,500 or $11,000 in the first year if they turn 19 in 2013 or 2014. (Please click to check your maximum TFSA contribution limit if you’ve never made a contribution. )

TFSAs are a “cheap and simple tax shelter” for Canadians over 71. When the youngest spouse in a relationship reaches 71, neither of the couple can contribute to a RRSP or a spousal RRSP any longer.  Based on a CRA schedule, they will have to start taking money out of their RRIF (if they set one up) and pay taxes on it. If they don’t need to spend the money they withdraw, after paying the tax, they can invest the balance in their TFSA if they have contribution room available. The new investment growth of that money will not be taxed.

If you have a spouse (married or common law), that person should be designated as the Successor Holder to your TFSA, not as the Beneficiary. This will ensure that probate fees are not payable on the TFSA holdings if you die; It also allows your spouse to simply keep and use your TFSA as if it were his or her own. (A Beneficiary has to withdraw the assets from a TFSA. They don’t pay any tax on the investment earnings in the TFSA prior to the person’s death, but they do have to pay taxes on anything the investments earn after the person’s death. [Please see Get Ready to Die: Beneficiary and Successor Account Holder Forms for your Online Brokerage Accounts for more info on Successor Holders and Beneficiaries.]

Here’s Other Questions Answered in TFSAs Can Make You Rich

  • If you borrow money to invest in a TFSA can you claim the interest on the loan as a tax deduction?
  • Can you “sell” or “rent” your TFSA room to someone with more money than you so they can invest tax-free until you need the space?

If you want to know the answers or want a great explanation of how TFSAs work and how you can make them work for you, buy the book! (Or look for it at your public library.)

Related Reading

Join In
Did you read this, or Gordon Pape’s earlier books, on TFSA investing? Please share your opinions with a comment.