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Savings Goal Calculator for Canadians

Calculate how long to reach a savings goal in Canada, using TFSAs, RRSPs, or regular savings accounts with Canadian interest rates.

Verified against Financial Consumer Agency of Canada - Savings Tools on 28 Feb 2026 Updated 28 February 2026 4 min read
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Summary

A savings goal calculator answers: “How much do I need to save each month to reach my target?” or “How long will it take at my current contribution rate?” For Canadian savers, the choice of account (TFSA, RRSP, FHSA, or non-registered) significantly affects the effective growth rate, since tax-sheltered accounts let compound interest work without annual tax drag.

How it works

Two modes

Mode 1 — Monthly contribution needed: Given a target amount, current savings, time horizon, and expected return, the calculator solves for the required monthly payment.

Mode 2 — Time to reach goal: Given a target, current savings, fixed monthly contribution, and expected return, the calculator simulates month-by-month growth until the balance hits the target.

The formula

PMT = (Target - PV x (1 + r)^n) x r / ((1 + r)^n - 1)

Where:

  • PMT = required monthly contribution (C$)
  • Target = savings goal (C$)
  • PV = current savings (C$)
  • r = monthly rate (annual rate / 12)
  • n = total months (years x 12)

Canadian savings rates context

Account typeTypical rate (2025)
Big-5 bank savings0.50% - 1.00%
High-interest savings (online banks)1.50% - 3.50%
TFSA (equity index funds)6% - 8% (historical)
RRSP (balanced portfolio)5% - 7% (historical)

At the current average savings rate of 1.50%, a cash savings goal takes considerably longer than an invested goal. The TFSA’s tax-free compounding amplifies this advantage over time.

Common Canadian savings goals

GoalTypical target
Emergency fund (3-6 months)C$15,000 - C$30,000
Home down payment (10% of avg)C$65,294
Home down payment (20% of avg)C$130,588
Car purchaseC$35,000 - C$50,000
TFSA max-out (cumulative)C$102,000

Worked example

Goal: C$65,000 home down payment, C$10,000 already saved, 5% annual return in a TFSA, 5-year horizon:

  1. Monthly rate: 5% / 12 = 0.4167%
  2. Total months: 5 x 12 = 60
  3. Future value of C$10,000 over 5 years: C$10,000 x (1.004167)^60 = C$12,834
  4. Remaining needed from contributions: C$65,000 - C$12,834 = C$52,166
  5. Annuity factor: [(1.004167)^60 - 1] / 0.004167 = 68.01
  6. Required monthly contribution: C$52,166 / 68.01 = C$767/month
  7. Total contributions: C$10,000 + (C$767 x 60) = C$56,020
  8. Interest earned: C$65,000 - C$56,020 = C$8,980 (tax-free in TFSA)

Key differences from other markets

  • TFSA contribution room accumulates. Unlike the UK ISA (use-it-or-lose-it annual allowance), unused TFSA room carries forward indefinitely and withdrawn amounts are restored the following year. This makes TFSAs ideal for medium-term savings goals where you may need to withdraw and re-contribute.
  • The FHSA provides a double tax benefit for home savers not available in other markets: contributions reduce taxable income (like an RRSP) and qualifying withdrawals are completely tax-free (like a TFSA). UK and US first-time buyer schemes offer bonuses or penalties, but not this dual deduction.

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