5 reasons why TFSAs are a smart retirement investment

It took a couple years to work out the kinks, but tax-free savings accounts are proving to be a rabidly popular savings option for Canadians, with some financial advisers now recommending them over the stalwart RRSP.

Among the top reasons for the rise in popularity of TFSAs is their flexibility. Money can be pulled out without penalty in case of a financial emergency, TFSAs don't have to converted into a RRIF upon retirement, and they can contain a variety of different types of investments. Investors don't get an immediate tax break the way they do with an RRSP contribution, but investments inside a TFSA grow tax-free.

And now that the total contribution room has expanded to a healthy chunk of cash - $20,000 in principle as of 2012 — TFSAs are becoming a viable way for investors to play the stock market, tax-free.

But be careful: While the rules governing TFSAs are simpler than those for RRSPs, there are still regulations around withdrawing and transferring funds that can snare the unwary. And there are penalties on excess contributions, too.

When the TFSA was launched in 2009, the Conservative government heralded it as "the single most important savings vehicle for Canadians since the launch of the RRSP" in 1957. But federal officials didn't anticipate the bumpy road they would face in the early years as people familiarized themselves with TFSAs. Too many savers thought the TFSA — which allows a person to put up to $5,000 a year of after-tax money into GICs, mutual funds, bonds, stocks or savings accounts and earn profit tax-free — worked like a bank account with a maximum balance, for example. In 2009 about 70,000 people withdrew money from one of their TFSA accounts and then redeposited it the same year.

But when you withdraw funds in one year, TFSA rules don't let you redeposit them until the next, so the Canada Revenue Agency levied penalties of one per cent per month on redeposits that were classed as excess contributions. The government eventually relented because of the widespread confusion, and rescinded the penalties in 2010 for people who accidentally put too much into their accounts during the TFSA's debut year.

The amnesty is over now, however, and savers can't expect that kind of pity from the tax collector anymore. If you want to move your money from one account or institution to another within the same calendar year, you have to use a formal transfer process that requires filling out forms and, with most banks, paying a fee.

Another headache for the government was the fact that some devious investors pumped their accounts full of penny stocks and used other schemes designed to take advantage of the TFSA's tax breaks. The government cracked down on that swiftly, closing the loophole.