How to Use Your TFSA to Earn $2,916.50 in Annual Tax-Free Income

You can earn a lot of passive income by holding stocks like Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX:TD) in a TFSA.

| More on:
Paper Canadian currency of various denominations

Source: Getty Images

Do you want to earn tax-free income in your Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA)?

In one sense, it’s an easy thing to attain. In another sense, it’s hard to pull off. Although a single share of a dividend stock can pay you “some” passive income in your TFSA, the amount will likely be very small. In order to achieve a substantial amount of tax-free income in your TFSA, you need to either invest a large sum of money, invest in high-yield stocks, or both. The latter strategy is not as simple as it sounds because very high-yield stocks are usually riskier than average.

In this article, I will explore a strategy you can use to generate $2,916.50 per year in passive TFSA income, provided that you were at least 18 years of age or older in 2009.

Invest $95,000

If you invest $95,000 in the TSX stock market, you should get approximately $2,916.50 in annual passive income that’s paid quarterly. That’s based on the index’s weighted average dividend yield, which is 3.07%. A “weighted average yield” is the yield on a stock market index, where each stock’s yield is weighted at that stock’s percentage of the total.

Sum these up, and you will get a figure pretty close to the yield you’d collect by investing in an index fund that tracks that index. Speaking of which, let’s explore how you can actually buy the entire TSX stock market index.

Buy a TSX index fund

The TSX market portfolio can be represented with iShares S&P/TSX Capped Composite Index Fund (TSX:XIC).

The iShares S&P/TSX Capped Composite Index Fund is an index exchange-traded fund (ETF) tracking the TSX Composite — a 240-stock index of Canadian stocks. These are roughly the 240 largest Canadian companies by market capitalization. XIC is quite cheap, with a 0.06% annual management fee, which is tiny. It is well diversified, with 240 stocks. Finally, it is highly liquid, with millions of shares exchanging hands every month. XIC pretty well represents the entire TSX (that is the entire Canadian stock market minus the venture exchange), so buying it is a good way to “invest in Canada” without having to research and make decisions about individual stocks thoroughly.

COMPANYRECENT PRICENUMBER OF SHARESDIVIDENDTOTAL PAYOUTFREQUENCY
iShares TSX Index Fund$35.162,700$0.27 per quarter ($1.08 per year).$729.125 per quarter ($2,916.50 per year).Quarterly.
XIC: Passive-income math.

Higher yields make more income possible

If you invest in individual stocks or high-yield funds, you can get even higher yields than you can get by investing in index funds. Consider Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX:TD), for example. It’s a Canadian bank stock that pays $1.02 in dividends per quarter or $4.08 per year. Today’s stock price is $75.30, which provides a yield of 5.41%.

With its 5.41% dividend yield, TD stock can generate $5,139.50 in dividends per year in a fully maxed-out TFSA.

COMPANYRECENT PRICENUMBER OF SHARESDIVIDENDTOTAL PAYOUTFREQUENCY
TD Bank$75.301,260$1.02 per quarter ($4.08 per year).$1,284.875 per quarter ($5,139.50 per year).Quarterly
TD Bank: Passive-income math.

As you can see, TD Bank has quite a bit of dividend potential. If the dividend keeps rising, it may have even more dividend potential than it appears to have. Of course, you shouldn’t just go out and invest all of your money in an individual stock like TD Bank. Such stocks have more risks than diversified portfolios do.

In TD’s case, there is a money-laundering investigation that could cause it to take a lot of fines. You’ll want to diversify your exposure here somewhat. Nevertheless, TD stock helps to illustrate that it’s possible to earn a fairly substantial income supplement in your TFSA.

Fool contributor Andrew Button has positions in Toronto-Dominion Bank. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

Yellow caution tape attached to traffic cone
Dividend Stocks

The CRA Is Watching This January: Don’t Make These TFSA Mistakes

January TFSA mistakes usually aren’t about stocks; they’re about rushing contributions and accidentally triggering CRA penalties.

Read more »

Canadian Dollars bills
Dividend Stocks

The TFSA Paycheque Plan: How $10,000 Can Start Paying You in 2026

A TFSA “paycheque” plan can work best when one strong dividend stock is treated as a piece of a diversified…

Read more »

A Canada Pension Plan Statement of Contributions with a 100 dollar banknote and dollar coins.
Dividend Stocks

Retirees, Take Note: A January 2026 Portfolio Built to Top Up CPP and OAS

A January TFSA top-up can make CPP and OAS feel less tight by adding a flexible, tax-free income stream you…

Read more »

senior couple looks at investing statements
Dividend Stocks

The TFSA’s Hidden Fine Print When It Comes to U.S. Investments

There's a 15% foreign withholding tax levied on U.S.-based dividends.

Read more »

young people stare at smartphones
Dividend Stocks

Is BCE Stock Finally a Buy in 2026?

BCE has stabilized, but I think a broad infrastructure focused ETF is a better bet.

Read more »

A plant grows from coins.
Dividend Stocks

Start 2026 Strong: 3 Canadian Dividend Stocks Built for Steady Cash Flow

Dividend stocks can make a beginner’s 2026 plan feel real by mixing income today with businesses that can grow over…

Read more »

senior relaxes in hammock with e-book
Dividend Stocks

2 High-Yield Dividend Stocks for Stress-Free Passive Income

These high-yield Canadian companies are well-positioned to maintain consistent dividend payments across varying economic conditions.

Read more »

Senior uses a laptop computer
Dividend Stocks

Below Average? How a 70-Year-Old Can Change Their RRSP Income Plan in January

January is the perfect time to sanity-check your RRSP at 70, because the “typical” balance is closer to the median…

Read more »