Example$90,000 income · Ontario · No employer match · Renter · $25k RRSP room · $42k TFSA room
Combined Marginal Tax Rate · Ontario · 2026
RRSP refund potential
$5,930
on $20,000 contribution
FHSA refund potential
$2,372
on $8,000 FHSA contrib.
Monthly surplus
$1,000
$12,000/yr to invest
Priority actions
4
top: HISA / TFSA
You have ~2 months of expenses saved. Target at least 3 months ($10,500) in a high-interest savings account before investing.
Best tool for first-time buyers: tax-deductible contributions (like RRSP) + tax-free growth and withdrawal (like TFSA). You have $40,000 room remaining.
Tax-free growth, flexible withdrawals, no impact on government benefits. Best all-around account - especially at your tax bracket where RRSP refund is modest.
At 29.6% marginal rate, RRSP deductions give a smaller refund. Consider saving RRSP room for higher-income years and using TFSA now.
General guidance only - not personalized financial advice. Contribution room and limits are for 2026; verify at canada.ca. Consult a qualified financial advisor for your specific situation.
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The account priority optimizer ranks the order you should contribute to employer RRSP match, FHSA, RRSP, TFSA, high-interest debt, and non-registered based on your income, goals, and time horizon. It's the Canadian answer to 'where does my next $100 go?' - the question most people get wrong by maxing TFSA before touching an employer RRSP match.
The optimizer scores each account by expected after-tax, after-inflation return per dollar, adjusted for your marginal rate today and expected marginal rate at withdrawal. Employer RRSP match scores highest (immediate 50–100% return). High-interest debt is ranked by interest rate. Registered accounts are ranked by your tax-rate differential and tax-free growth benefit. Non-registered comes last.
For most Canadians earning $55,000–$100,000, the order is: (1) employer RRSP match, (2) high-interest debt above 12%, (3) FHSA if buying a first home, (4) RRSP up to the 30% marginal rate threshold, (5) TFSA, (6) additional RRSP, (7) non-registered.
RRSP is generally better if your income (and marginal tax rate) today is higher than it will be in retirement - the deduction is most valuable in a high bracket. TFSA is better if you expect similar or higher retirement income, or if you need flexibility to withdraw without tax. The Account Optimizer ranks this automatically based on your inputs.
An employer RRSP match is an immediate 50–100% return on that dollar before it's even invested. No other account or debt payoff can compete with that guaranteed return. The optimizer always ranks employer match as the top priority - skipping it is leaving free money on the table.
High-interest debt (credit cards at 19.99%+) almost always beats RRSP investing - a guaranteed 20% return from eliminating debt is hard to match. But debt below 6–7% is a closer call, especially with an RRSP refund. The optimizer compares your debt interest rate against your net RRSP return and ranks them accordingly.
The conventional threshold is around $55,000–$65,000 in Ontario where your marginal rate is roughly 33–43%. Below that, TFSA is often better (lower marginal rate = smaller RRSP benefit). Above that, RRSP deductions are worth significantly more. If your FHSA is open and you're buying a first home, FHSA typically beats both.
Yes. FHSA and RRSP have separate contribution limits and can be maximized independently. For 2026, FHSA allows $8,000/year (up to $40,000 lifetime) and RRSP allows up to $33,810. Using both is the optimal strategy for first-time home buyers with higher incomes - you get the deduction on both and the FHSA withdrawal is fully tax-free.
The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) is for first-time home buyers who are Canadian residents aged 18–71. Contributions are tax-deductible like RRSP, and qualifying first-home withdrawals are tax-free like TFSA. You can contribute $8,000/year ($40,000 lifetime) and must use the account within 15 years of opening. Unused funds can be transferred to RRSP.
Yes. Employer RRSP matching is always ranked first because it is an immediate 50–100% return on that contribution. The optimizer shows this as your highest-priority action before other accounts.
Each account or action is scored by expected after-tax, after-inflation return per dollar, adjusted for your marginal rate today and expected marginal rate at withdrawal. Employer RRSP match scores highest (guaranteed immediate return). High-interest debt is ranked by interest rate. Registered accounts are ranked by tax-rate differential. Non-registered comes last.
For most Canadians earning $55,000–$100,000, the order is: (1) employer RRSP match to the full match cap, (2) high-interest debt above 12%, (3) FHSA if eligible for a first home, (4) RRSP up to the 30% marginal rate threshold, (5) TFSA, (6) additional RRSP, (7) non-registered. The optimizer personalizes this for your income, province, and situation.
Long-form explainers that pair with this calculator.