What the Average Canadian TFSA Looks Like at Age 50
Alex Smith
4 weeks ago
It has been 17 years since the tax-free savings account (TFSA) was rolled out in 2009, and by all accounts, the program has been a success. The average Canadian has deposited tens of thousands into his/her TFSA over the years and made substantial investment gains in the process.
So, thereâs no doubt that TFSAs are popular. The question is whether they are making a real contribution to Canadiansâ retirement savings. While the TFSA is widely used, it is still less popular than the RRSP, which often has employer-matching plans and other such institutional supports attached to it. The TFSA isnât quite there yet. Still, the TFSA is a popular account for making investments, especially short-term trades.
So, itâs a natural thing to wonder how your TFSA compares to that of the average Canadian your age. If youâre 50 years old, then youâve had some time to grow and compound your account. Whatâs your scorecard?
While your âposition relative to the averagesâ is not something that determines how much youâll actually need to retire, it is something you can ask on your way to figuring that out. With that in mind, hereâs my best estimate of what the average Canadian has in his/her TFSA at age 50.
How to gauge what the average Canadian has in TFSAs
The easiest way to estimate what the average Canadian has in TFSAs at age 50 is to go off of Statistics Canada (StatCan) data. StatCan publishes lists of TFSA contributions and balances for the most recent year it has on file. Currently, that year is 2023. While StatCan doesnât give exact TFSA estimates for every possible age, it does give estimates for age brackets. Using these tables, we can put together a range of estimates for adjacent age groups and come up with an estimate based on that.
What the average 50-year-old Canadian had in a TFSA in 2023
According to the most recent StatCan data, the average Canadian had something like $24,000âÂÂ$27,000 in his/her TFSA in 2023. Hereâs how I arrived at that.
According to StatCanâs 2025 data dump, the average TFSA balance in the 45 to 49 age range was $23,818, while the average for the 50âÂÂ54 age range was $29,371. While we canât assume that the annual amounts grow perfectly linearly and just take the exact middle value as the average, we can be reasonably confident that the average TFSA balance at age 50 was between $25,000 and $28,000 in 2023.
Investing in your TFSA
If youâre wondering how to increase your TFSA balance, I have one suggestion for you:
Take a look into index funds.
Take a fund like the Vanguard FTSE Canadian High Dividend Yield Index ETF (TSX:VDY). Itâs a Canadian dividend-themed index fund built on high-yield dividend stocks. It tracks an index provided by FTSE, a reputable index publisher. It has 61 stocks, which is a reasonable amount of diversification (ânot putting all your eggs in one basketâ). Finally, it has a 16.5 P/E ratio and a 2.3 price-to-book ratio, indicating itâs a decent value. Overall, putting your money into a fund like VDY probably makes a lot more sense than chasing individual âhotâ stocks in your TFSA.
The post What the Average Canadian TFSA Looks Like at Age 50 appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.
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More reading
- 3 Canadian ETFs to Buy and Hold Forever in Your TFSA
- TFSA Investors: Hereâs the Only Time Using a Taxable Account Is a Better Choice
- Your TFSA Should Be Your Income Engine, Not Your RRSP
- The ETF I Keep Buying and Plan to Hold Forever â Hereâs Why
- Canadians: Hereâs How Much You Need in Your TFSA to Retire
Fool contributor Andrew Button has no positions in the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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