Cut the Crap Investing

How to invest this 2026 RRSP season.

Canadians are turning their attention to investing as the deadline looms for making an RRSP contribution. When you contribute to your RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan) you can lower your income taxes owed, the funds then grow tax free. It’s more than a good deal. You might contribute enough to your RRSP to generate a tax refund. Who doesn’t want a cheque from the government? With respect to your investments, you want to keep more of that money in your portfolio pocket. You want to invest in a low-fee manner and you want to invest for growth. You want to own stocks and stock markets around the globe. Today, we’ll have a look at how to invest this RRSP season.

The deadline for making an RRSP contribution (that can be applied to your 2025 tax return) is March 02, 2026. It’s called the first 60 Days Rule. Any money contributed to your RRSP from January 1 to March 02 will qualify. The rule applies to your personal RRSP, a spousal RRSP and RRSP Employer Group Plans.

Must read: Retirement tip: use the spousal RRSP account.

Accept all free money

If you have a Group RRSP plan with your employer, be sure to accept all free money. Employers will often offer to pay into your Group RRSP Plan; they will match your contribution up to a certain threshold. For example, you put in 5% and they put in 5%. You should contribute the full amount that your employer will match. Once again, take ALL free money.

From MoneySense, here is a very good post that covers the RRSP basics for Canadians.And here’s another good post from a go-to site for those looking to advance their investment knowledge. The RRSP from Get Smarter About Money.

Some important RRSP details

You can contribute up to 18% of your annual earnings. You can also carry forward any unused RRSP space from previous years. That means you might hold back that RRSP-created tax break for a year or years when you have much higher income.

How does the tax break work?

Let’s say you have $70,000 of earned income in 2024. You make a $20,000 RRSP contribution. You will only have to pay income tax on $50,000. The RRSP contribution reduces your taxable income for the year. In that scenario you will generate a tax refund. That would mean that you paid too much in taxes during the year in 2024, so the government will cut you a cheque.

You might then direct that tax return to your RRSP. You might invest the refund in a Tax Free Savings Account.

The maximum someone can contribute

For 2024, the RRSP contribution limit was $31,560. It does increase each year. For 2025, the annual limit is 18% of your earned income up to a maximum contribution of C$32,490, and for 2026, it’s C$33,810. To contribute the maximum in 2025, your 2024 earned income must have been more than around C$180,000; for 2026, your 2025 earned income must be nearly C$188,000.

Unused/carry forward contribution

RRSP contribution room accumulated after 1990 can be carried forward to another year. If you aren’t able to top up your RRSP contribution this year, you are allowed to make up the difference in a later year.

On the Tangerine Forward Thinking blog I demonstrated how you might be able to play RRSP catch up.

That said, it is certainly much more beneficial to begin as early as possible and invest on a regular schedule. You want to “set it and forget it”. “Wind it up and let it go”.

Put your portfolio on auto pilot. Build wealth over time.

Get rich slow.

– smart investors

And there’s no need to be on the sidelines. Here’s a must-read post on dollar cost averaging. There’s no need to be spooked by the markets.

Tangerine Investments is a good place to set up that automatic investment plan. The money goes directly into your investment portfolio on a regular basis.

Check with your discount brokerage to see if any regular direct deposit is possible. You can certainly set up a (PAD) Pre-Authorized Deposit at Questrade.

You can set up ongoing deposits and investments at Wealthsimple as well. Check with your discount brokerage to see if you can set up an automatic investment plan.

Don’t ignore the RRSP, it’s a wonderful gift

The RRSP often gets a bad (and undeserved rap in Canada). The reason for the bad press is that when you take money out of your RRSP in retirement the money is taxable. But we have to balance that against two very meaningful benefits of the RRSP:

In fact, those two financial forces are so powerful that for many, the RRSP can be more useful than the TFSA. And the TFSA is incredible and true to its name. Your money grows tax free and when you take money out of your TFSA it is not taxable. It is tax-free income.

Here’s an example of the RRSP benefit in Canada by way of the wonderful RRSP vs TFSA tool at Steadyhand. An RRSP can be superior due to the fact that we usually contribute to RRSPs in a time of higher income, but retire in a period of lower income. So many costs have decreased or disappeared. Canadians typically spend at a rate that’s equal to about 50% to 80% of their working years income.

How to use the TFSA account

In the following scenario, $90,000 of income was invested while earning $100,000 per year (Ontario). The money (portfolio) was then used to generate $60,000 in annual income in retirement. Keep in mind that the TFSA is funded with after-tax dollars.

In the above scenario, the tax refund dollars were invested in the RRSP. After 25 years we see the RRSP come out ahead. The benefit is often more advantageous than what is shown above. Tax rates can fall precipitously in retirement.

Play around with that tool and you might discover what is the right choice for you. But for most, the process will be … Fill your RRSP then TFSA then Taxable.

Invest for growth

“Investing” in a savings accounts and GICs will make building wealth (and any retirement) very difficult. There’s simply no growth. If you factor in inflation you are usually losing real spending power. Your money is actually going backwards.

That said, having an emergency fund in cash is important. We use EQ Bank. It is easy to use, and it was easy to set up. In fact, EQ Bank offers RRSP accounts if you’re looking to park some funds as you figure things out.

Here’s a post that covers the financial planning basics and checklists.

Build wealth by way of stocks and equity ETFs

You want to invest in stocks. When you invest in stocks you are owning companies that generate considerable profits. While there is no guarantee of future returns, stocks and stock markets generate about 9% t0 10% annual returns. That’s an average over long periods. And check out this video on the creating the balanced portfolio …

You can invest in funds or ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) that make it easy. Those funds will hold big baskets of blue chip companies in Canada, the U.S. and around the world. In fact with ETFs it’s easy to hold one fund and own most of the big blue chip companies in the entire world. The fees are super low.

Too many Canadians are still in high-fee actively managed mutual funds with fees in the 2.0% range. Most everyone should move to index-based investing available by way of those ETFs. It’s a no brainer.

What is index investing? That post offers an explanation of ‘buying the market’ instead of paying someone to try and beat the market. Spoiler, they don’t beat, they underperform.

In a Globe & Mail post, Ian McGugan said that Canadian investors are bananas for not going the index-based route.

Canadians should avoid most mutual funds.

With Canadian mutual funds, the fees are too high, the returns are too low.

How to invest this RRSP season

You can buy and own a well-diversified global portfolio by way of a low-cost ETF – exchange traded fund. You enter one ticker symbol at your discount brokerage to purchase thousands of companies in North America and around the world. The total fees are in the 0.18% to 0.25% range. That’s about a 90% off sale compared to most Canadian mutual funds.

Check out the asset allocation ETF page. The portfolios are available at various risk levels. That post will offer some help on how to select the appropriate level of risk. If you have questions or need some guidance, feel free to contact me (Dale) via the contact form at the top of this page.

These ETFs trade like stocks. You would open a discount brokerage account. It is a very simple process. You might open an account with Questrade where you can buy ETFs and stocks for free. Wealthsimple is another very good option. I use both for my TFSA account. The big Canadian banks all offer discount brokerages.

Build it and retirement will come

You can build your own ETF portfolio. Those are simple but effective models that use these portfolio building blocks. You’d buy an ETF for each of these quadrants.

Others will choose to build a very simple and sensible Canadian stock portfolio. You can then add in the much-needed U.S. and global diversification by way of ETFs.

Keep your fees super low

Canadians pay some of the highest investment fees in the world. Fees are wealth destroyers. ETFs allow you to invest in well-diversified global portfolios with fees in the range 0f 0.10% to 0.28%. The typical Canadian mutual fund carries total fees in the range of 2.0% to 2.5%.

Lower fees could help you generate double or triple the returns over decades. There is a negative compounding that occurs as time amplifies the effect of high fees. Even a 1% fee will decrease your returns by 30% over 30 years. Imagine what happens with 2% and more.

Have a look (and play around) with the investment fee calculator on the site of Larry Bates. Fees are wealth destroyers Larry offers.

Larry is the author of Beat the Bank: The Canadian Guide to Simply Successful Investing.

Low fee investing with advice and managed portfolios

I get it. You don’t care much about investing, but you want to build wealth over time. You want to end up here one day.

Wealth building, final destination

Instead of high fee mutual funds, you might consider a Canadian Robo Advisor such as Justwealth.

Justwealth knows when to get personal.

A Robo Advisor will conduct a risk assessment to put you in the appropriate ETF portfolio(s). At Justwealth you’ll have access to investment advice, financial planning and low-fee ETF portfolios. Yes, Canadians can have it all.

Many Cut The Crap Investing readers have moved to Justwealth.

The greater financial plan

Most Canadians will benefit from a financial plan. You’ll need to make sure that you are protecting your wealth and your family. You will need to know how and where to build that wealth (RRSP vs TFSA vs non registered vs other income). And you’ll need a retirement funding plan, estate plan and more. There is a whole host of financial planning considerations.

Consult with a fee-for-service financial planner, where you’ll receive conflict-free advice. There are many options from a lower fee checkup to the full and detailed financial plan. Not everyone needs robust advice and financial planning. You can choose what is right for you.

Please share this post with friends and family. And feel free to reach out with any questions – click on Contact Dale at the top of this blog.

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Here’s Canada’s top-performing Robo Advisor, Justwealth. You can get advice, planning and low-fee ETF portfolios all at one shop. Canadians can have it all.

Consider Justwealth for RESP accounts. That is THE option in Canada with target date funds that adjust the risk level as the student approaches the College or University start date.

Join Retirement Club 2026

Do retirement right. … a series of monthly Zoom Presentations, newsletters, plus a secure and private online space where we learn, share ideas and connect with members. Here’s the Retirement Club overview page. There are just a few spots remaining for the 2026 retirement-changing sessions. You can join us for a Zoom Tour of Retirement Club this coming week. We’ll offer a couple of time slots.

Hit Contact Dale at top right of this page for details.

We’ll take you through the three pillars of Retirement Club.

Make sure you’re doing retirement right. It’s also suitable for those who are approaching retirement, we need to prepare in advance and understand what we’re ‘getting into’.

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