Plain English Finance

Should You Use Your TFSA to Buy a House? | Ep. 58

Tre Bynoe Episode 58

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 16:36

Send us Fan Mail

Should you use your TFSA to buy a home, or leave it invested and use a different strategy?

In this episode of the Plain English Finance Podcast, Tré and Sierra work through a real planning puzzle: someone wants to buy a home, has money in both a non-registered investment account and a TFSA, and needs to decide whether using the TFSA creates a better long-term outcome. The answer depends on tax deductibility, investment returns, taxable income, how quickly the TFSA can be replenished, and whether the borrowed money is actually used to invest. 

The key issue is that mortgage interest on a personal home is normally paid with after-tax dollars, whereas interest on money borrowed for investment may be deductible if certain conditions are met. In this case, using the TFSA helped pay off the home purchase fully, then allowed a larger investment loan to be created in a non-registered account. That created a larger potential interest deduction, but it also meant temporarily giving up tax-free TFSA growth. 

In this episode, we discuss:

  •  Whether it makes sense to use a TFSA for a home purchase 
  •  Why mortgage interest for a personal home is different from investment-loan interest 
  •  Why the paper trail matters when borrowing to invest 
  •  Why borrowed money cannot be used inside a TFSA or RRSP for this strategy 
  •  The trade-off between tax-free TFSA growth and deductible investment-loan interest 
  •  Why taxable income and tax bracket matter 
  •  Why investment allocation and risk tolerance matter 
  •  Why tax drag matters in non-registered accounts 
  •  Why active management can change the tax result 
  •  How quickly replenishing the TFSA can change the answer 
  •  Why the result may flip depending on market returns 
  •  Why this kind of decision needs actual planning, not rules of thumb

Website | Youtube | Linkedin

Tre

There are a few times in financial planning where different concepts converge, and I find it really interesting. Today we're gonna talk about whether you should use a TFSA to fund a home purchase, or whether you should leave the TFSA invested and go a different route. Now You know what it's about.

Sierra

That's kind of interesting.

Tre

Yeah.

Sierra

I kind of, I laughed a little and you were like, and I find it interesting. I was like, of course you do. Yeah. Because it's

Tre

interesting.

Sierra

But then I was like, oh, I'm interested.

Tre

Okay. Okay So I'm, first of all, I'm, I'm gonna describe the problem and then, so this is a problem that I had to solve recently. And then we're going to talk through what the. What the solution was. Does that make sense?

Sierra

Yeah. Do you love it when clients come to you and they're like, I have this complicated question and I don't know what the answer is. Are you just like, yes.

Tre

I, yeah, I like it when I also don't know the answer.

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

Right. So when I have to then be like, that's a really interesting problem. Let's, let's take a look and see what makes sense and why that would make sense and

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

Yeah. Absolutely. That's, that's the,

Sierra

I feel like that's your

Tre

favorite, that's the puzzle part. Yeah. Absolutely. Yeah. That's, that's your favorite. That's why I like, like stuff that when it gets complicated and it's like, I, I don't know the answer. Let's find, let's find out together. Is that weird? I don't know.

Sierra

So lame. I love it.

Tre

Okay, so here's the problem. So an individual is looking to purchase a house and they are following a lot of other stuff that I teach. And so they're comfortable with holding a mortgage. Which is great for them, but we are deciding whether we leave the tier, so the person doesn't have enough money inside of just their non-registered account to pay for the home outright.

Sierra

Mm-hmm.

Tre

And then do the, the mortgage and

Sierra

debt,

Tre

things like that.

Sierra

structured tax efficiencies.

Tre

Yeah. That stuff.

Sierra

Hey. Hype me up.

Tre

Oh, we're done. Yay. You just say random words and you're like, I know there was something vaguely about this at one time in the past.

Sierra

I know something. so

Tre

Please describe it then.

Sierra

You have to. Like use the mortgage amount to reinvest. You can't, like if you take out a loan and it's for your house, you have to pay tax on it. Tax on it a certain way. But if you pay that off,

Tre

So you pay for the mortgage with, you pay for the interest with after tax dollars. If it's for your home, if it's for, if the loan is for personal consumption, you pay for it after tax dollars, you pay the interest. And keep going.

Sierra

Is that what I said or

Tre

Kind of, yeah.

Sierra

Okay. You're just clarifying. Yeah. Okay. Because I was like, I have no idea. And then so what you do is the old CRA switcheroo, that's what I'm calling it now. They should just take that as the new name anyways, Uh, so you just pay off your mortgage with the money you have. In your like non-registered account or whatever, like you said, and then you take out that same amount that you paid. It's just a paper trail. You just take it back out. But you say this is for investing.

Tre

No, you actually need to invest it. Why the wink? It's not, you're not tricking the government.

Sierra

You kind, I feel like you are. No. You're not, but it's just stupid.

Tre

You need to borrow the money to invest. Yes, and the investment needs to,

Sierra

but it's like I have, it's just a, it's stupid. It's like you, they need that specific like trail.

Tre

Yeah, you need to borrow to invest.

Sierra

But you do you know what I'm saying? It's

Tre

like I understand what you're saying but the paper trail is important 'cause otherwise.

Sierra

You just didn't like the wink. You don't like it when I wink anyways. Like

Tre

You you a weird, weird moments. It's a little creepy. Nope. Okay. Okay. I didn't expect this. The, the problem. Oh gosh. Okay. So the pro,

Sierra

I told myself I was gonna be serious in this one. I'm like, oh, I just wanna be like professional.

Tre

Here you are. hahh...

Sierra

Okay. Keep going. Okay.

Tre

So the problem, let me reiterate. The problem was that the individual didn't have enough in their non-registered accounts to pay for the home outright. Uh, but they did have enough if they combine into their non-registered accounts and their TFSAs.

Sierra

Okay.

Tre

Okay.

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

So the question was, do we only half do it? So do we only use a non-registered account that will leave a small amount owing on the mortgage. Well, not a small amount, like 250, $300,000 is left owing on the mortgage. And then do that strategy with a smaller part of the mortgage, or do we utilize all of the TFSAs and the non-registered account, pay the mortgage off entirely, and then you'll be pulling money out of the mortgage during the mortgage switcheroo". But that has to go into a non-registered account. Which means that that individual doesn't have TFSAs until they replenish it.

Sierra

And when would that be?

Tre

Well, okay, so that was, that's the, that's the base of the problem.

Sierra

Right. 'cause there's those other little pieces. It's like eventually it will be replenishable.

Tre

Yes.

Sierra

Right.

Tre

You'd be able to replenish it. But how long?

Sierra

But you'd need to know how long.

Tre

Right. So this is where the, a convergence of multiple different concepts in financial planning really come together. Because if they, so the first route we, we would call it the TFSA inclusive route. That's where they use TFSAs. Then, we'll call it the, the non-registered only route when they don't use TFSAs. Okay. Okay. So if they go with the TFSA inclusive route, it means that the amount that they'll be able to deduct from their income due to the interest owing on the mortgage is going to be higher. And that higher amount is gonna be for as long as they're investing those funds. Okay. Okay. If they go for the non-registered only route, it means that the money that's left in their TFSAs is growing tax free forever.

Sierra

Mm-hmm.

Tre

And but the amount that they'll be able to deduct in interest is lower.

Sierra

Okay.

Tre

Okay.

Sierra

The amount we would be able to deduct in interest for their mortgage,

Tre

for their mortgage will be lower. Okay. Yeah, yeah. Because $300,000 of it will be for the purchase of the home, so there's no, there's no offsetting that interest. Okay.

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

So the things that mattered in this situation was how quickly this individual would be able to replenish their TFSAs. That was a key, a key concept. The second one was how were the funds invested?

Sierra

Okay.

Tre

So in order for this to work, you have to have a, a much higher risk tolerance and you should be, if not a hundred percent equity, you should be like almost a hundred percent equity, for it to make sense.

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

Especially where with interest rates when they're a little bit higher, et cetera. The other thing about it was the, the more guaranteed nature of the of being able to write off the interest. So that is a almost a gain that's offset by your taxable income.

Sierra

Yeah, this is getting complicated.

Tre

Right? There's lots to it. So with the taxable income side, so that's now another piece of the puzzle that depending on what your taxable income is and your tax bracket depends on in this scenario what the right decision would be. Oh, there's more.

Sierra

Look at how happy you're though. You're like, oh, there's more. Oh, there's more. You're happy. I'm like, okay, that's enough. I'm just picking one out of a, it's like eeny meeny miny moe.

Tre

Absolutely. Then the other thing is the way that this money is invested. So we talked about tax drag in the last episode.

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

So if you are picking an investment with high tax drag, that also becomes an issue. If you're doing this type of. Doing this type of strategy because high tax investments should be in non-registered accounts. Sorry, shouldn't be in non-registered accounts. They should be in the TFSA and the RSP.

Sierra

Oh yes. Right.

Tre

So it means that there, if this person was using. Like active management, well then it would mean more, it changes things. Because, because of this thing.

Sierra

Yep.

Tre

So there were a few things there, that made a big difference. Ultimately though, do you wanna know what the answer was for this person?

Sierra

No. Just kidding, of course!

Tre

Okay. Well you see you guys in the next one. Bye. Bye.

Sierra

Can you imagine the viewership is just

Tre

Nope.

Sierra

Unsubscribe.. Unsubscribe.

Tre

Yeah. So in, in this specific case, it made more sense, which actually surprised me. It made more sense to utilize the TFSAs and replenish them over the following three years.

Sierra

I kind of was okay. I originally, that was my first thought, because you get the room back. But yeah, then when you added all those other things, I was like.

Tre

Well, I actually thought that the, the earnings from the TFSA would outpace it.

Sierra

Oh.

Tre

Like if you have $300,000 in your TFSA. I mean, you, you never get those years back, right? Yeah, because, so with this individual, it was because they could replenish it within a pretty short amount of time. It made a lot more sense. If this was replenishment over 10 years, I don't think it would've made as much sense.

Sierra

What is, what do you mean by replenishing over three years? Is that how long it takes for them to get the room back?

Tre

No, that's just how long it takes.

Sierra

How they would take

Tre

They would take to re... To max out their TFSA.

Sierra

But then. If they're taking the money back out from a mortgage or not a mortgage, sorry.

Tre

But it is a mortgage. But you're gonna ask, why wouldn't they just put it back in the TFSA?

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

Because in order for the investment, in order for you to be able to deduct the interest as an expense, you need to have to pay tax on the income from that investment. So within, you cannot borrow to invest inside of a RSP or a TFSA, because there's no income on it.

Sierra

Gotcha.

Tre

So it has to be inside of a non-registered account

Sierra

for specifically that,

Tre

for that strategy to work for, you'd better deduct the interest as an expense.

Sierra

Okay.

Tre

Because imagine, everyone would do that.

Sierra

Yeah. I was like, that sounds great.

Tre

This is a great idea.

Sierra

This is easy. Why doesn't everybody just do financial planning? That's

Tre

Because you would borrow the money, put it into a TFSA, make your 7-8% a year tax free, and then deduct all the interest. Great.

Sierra

Sounds good to me.

Tre

CRA would have an issue with that and people like me would exploit that to the ninth. Holy. Yeah. No, so you can't do that, so,

Sierra

okay.

Tre

It, it's up to them. So there's, but there is two ways. This is was an interesting part as well. There were two ways that that individual could replenished there T TFSAs. One of them is through income, but the other one was actually through the income that the non-registered account,

Sierra

oh my gosh

Tre

generates. Right. So once you pay tax on that, that's fair game. You don't have to keep that, that income invested. So if you're using a dividend paying, like the dividends that are coming off the investment, you can take that money and put it into your TFSA and that's absolutely fine.

Sierra

Yeah. Again, it's like, it's crazy. This is just a game.

Tre

Oh yeah. Pretty

Sierra

much. This is literally just a board game, a strategy game sometimes. I really do think that I'm like. No wonder you like it so much. Everybody knows how annoying you are at those games. Everyone knows how annoying you are at Monopoly.

Tre

Yeah, I'm sorry. If The thing about Monopoly is that it was made to be unfair.

Sierra

That's why it's called Monopoly.

Tre

Yeah. It was made to be, it was made to be unfair. It was. So,

Sierra

but you've made some people very mad at I, wow. Maybe they're listening.

Tre

That's why I don't... I don't play

Sierra

I refuse. I've, I've actually refused to play.

Tre

Yeah. I don't play anymore.

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

It's not worth it.

Sierra

But sometimes you bring it up, you're like, anybody wanna play? And I'm like,

Tre

Yeah. cause I still like the game. I just don't play it with people. It's just not worth the fallout.

Sierra

Oh boy.

Tre

Yeah. Okay. So yeah, that was, so that was a, a really interesting, interesting little case for me, I guess to,

Sierra

Yeah. Like a little case study... puzzle.

Tre

Yeah. To work through. It sounds way easier than it took me a lot longer than it sounds like to, to, to figure this out. What you, what ended up happening though, when you projected it out like 20, 30 years, is that the individual with that left the TFSA. That didn't use a TFSA, So left the TFSA in there to grow. They ended up with slightly higher, like TFSA over that, that time. So they, they ended up with, with a higher TFSA, which meant that their. Spending, I guess in retirement could potentially be more. But the, potentially be more part, I can't underestimate how important that is. So when you, when you compared it, the individual that did use the TFSA, they simply had more money to invest over the course of their lifetime. Because I did it in a, in an environment where the choice was simple. They didn't, both people spent exactly the same amount. So if it wasn't, if it didn't go to taxes. It was invested and saved. Because you have that tax deduction, it meant that that individual could just save more.

Sierra

Mm-hmm.

Tre

And that made up for that, that gap in the TFSA, but that's heavily dependent on the returns of the TFSA. So I'm assuming that. You know, everything was great for those years, and it was, it was great.

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

Then it was, it was leaning more towards just not using the TFSA. As soon as you say, okay, let's say we have one of those three years is not a great year, or then the math completely

Sierra

flips

Tre

completely, flips because the, the interest side. Being able to write that off was, was for a significant amount of time, and that really adds up. It's, it's almost like a, you can suddenly do a $20,000 RSP contribution every single year to reduce your income by $20,000 for the as long as you have that mortgage. It makes a big difference when it comes to the amount of money that you have to spend and stuff like that. So

Sierra

Yeah.

Tre

Yeah. That was the, that was, that was my findings, so it was an interesting one. I was pleasantly surprised, so I thought we'd talk about it.

Sierra

Fair enough.

Tre

It's my podcast. I get to talk about whatever I want.

Sierra

It's my,

Tre

Even if it's a little nutty.

Sierra

If I can't even speak. My podcast, my rules.

Tre

Exactly. Yeah. Okay. Anything else from that one?

Sierra

Nope.

Tre

All right. Well I guess this is a shorter episode then.

Sierra

Yeah, it was good.

Tre

It was good 'cause it was shorter.

Sierra

It was just good.

Tre

All right, we'll see you guys in the next one.

Sierra

Bye.

Tre

Bye. Thanks for listening to this episode of the Plain English Finance Podcast. Tre Bynoe certified Financial Planner. Chartered Investment Manager is a financial planner with TCU Wealth Management and Aviso wealth. You should always consult with your financial, legal, and tax advisors before making changes. This podcast is provided as a general source of information and should not be considered personal investment advice or solicitation to buy or sell any securities. The views expressed are those of the individual and are not necessarily those of Aviso Financial Inc. Mutual funds and other securities offered through Aviso wealth, a division of Aviso Financial, Inc.