What Canadians Need to Know About Holding U.S. Stocks in a TFSA

Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG) is a great U.S. stock and one that’s the right fit for a TFSA, especially compared to more bountiful dividend payers.

| More on:
Key Points
  • Even if Canada has been outperforming lately as value/dividends lead and the S&P 500 cools, it still makes sense to own select best-in-class U.S. growth businesses—especially now that volatility has improved entry points.
  • Alphabet is positioned as a TFSA-friendly U.S. growth pick because its dividend is tiny (~0.28%), so the 15% U.S. withholding tax barely matters, while any capital gains in a TFSA stay tax-free (and ~27.8x trailing P/E is framed as attractive after the drop).

A lot of Canadians look to U.S. stocks as a source of long-term growth for their portfolios and for good reason: there’s more selection and more exciting tech (think AI), and, of course, it’s home to the Magnificent Seven. No doubt, a major reason why the U.S. stocks have been a major draw for Canadian investors has been the relative outperformance through the years. More recently, though, the tables have turned, and Canada might be the place for Americans to invest as growth cools and value (as well as dividends) becomes more fashionable.

While I think Canadian investors should strive to have a good mix of U.S. and Canadian stocks, I do think the puck seems to be headed in Canada’s direction, at least for the time being. Of late, commodities and hard assets seem to be a good place to be, rather than software or CapEx-intensive technology players who risk a lot by going big on the AI boom for 2026. Though home-country bias, which sees investors overweight their portfolios in domestic stocks, isn’t a good thing, I do think that the incentive to invest in a TSX stock has risen in recent months.

Though Canadian markets look like the new place to be as the S&P 500 stalls out (it has had a rough 2026 so far), I do think that some of the best-in-breed U.S. businesses are worth going after, even overweighting, especially now that volatility has set in. Some powerful multi-trillion-dollar companies offer Canadian investors something that one can’t find on this side of the border.

senior couple looks at investing statements

Source: Getty Images

U.S. stocks are staples for Canadians, but are they worth stashing in a TFSA?

And right now, names like Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG) really do stand out as more or less must-owns, if not for the incredible AI innovation, for the very talented management led by the great CEO Sundar Pichai.

With GOOG stock plunging below $300 per share, you’re getting the name at 27.8 times trailing price-to-earnings (P/E), which screams a great deal, especially when you consider Google’s odds of landing on the AI podium once the race finishes. For such a powerful AI force in a market where size could offer an edge, I’d argue the current valuation is a bargain. But is it worthy of a spot in one’s TFSA portfolio? It really depends.

The number-one thing to think about when buying U.S. stocks for a TFSA is the 15% dividend withholding tax. It comes right off your dividend payment, so if you’re betting on a dividend stock with a fat yield, it might not be optimal to stash away such a name in your TFSA. The RRSP is a better fit for such American high-yielders, given that such an account will allow you to dodge the 15% dividend withholding tax.

When it comes to a growth stock with a nearly negligible dividend, though (GOOG has a 0.28% yield), I’d argue that the yield isn’t large enough to matter.

Your TFSA is the perfect fit for U.S. growth companies

For a TFSA, it’s more about the capital gains potential. And on that front, U.S. stock gains are completely tax-free. That’s the big thing, not the 15% withholding tax, which is unfortunately the cost of holding U.S. stocks in that TFSA.

When it comes to Alphabet stock, 15% of 0.28% is a very small number. As such, I think deep-value tech darlings or U.S. stocks that don’t pay dividends are fantastic TFSA holdings that can help build your TFSA.

Fool contributor Joey Frenette has positions in Alphabet. The Motley Fool recommends Alphabet. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Tech Stocks

Concept of big data flow, analysis, and visualizing complex information for artificial intelligence
Tech Stocks

Data Centres Are the New Gold Rush: Here’s Where I’d Invest

Celestica is a TSX way to invest in AI’s real-world buildout, supplying the hardware and supply-chain muscle behind data centres.

Read more »

A person's hand cupped open with a hologram of an AI chatbot above saying Hi, can I help you
Tech Stocks

How to Turn the 2026 TFSA Contribution Into $70,000 or More

Understand the factors affecting AI stocks, including 2026 revenue guidance and the anticipated IPOs from OpenAI and Anthropic.

Read more »

Data center woman holding laptop
Tech Stocks

1 Canadian Company Set to Make a Fortune From the US$650 Billion Data Centre Spending Boom

This Canadian tech stock has become a major way to invest in AI infrastructure growth.

Read more »

moving into apartment
Tech Stocks

1 Smart Way to Use a TFSA to Increase Your Contribution

TFSA growth can quietly snowball your future tax shelter, and Shopify shows both the upside and the gut-check volatility.

Read more »

Abstract Human Skull representing AI
Tech Stocks

A Scorching-Hot Stock Worth the Growth Jolt

Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG) could be worth loading up on this month.

Read more »

A worker overlooks an oil refinery plant.
Tech Stocks

2 Canadian Stocks That Could Utterly Destroy a $100,000 Portfolio

AktinsRéalis (TSX:ATRL) has a history of severe ethical problems.

Read more »

canadian energy oil
Stocks for Beginners

3 Canadian Stocks That Could Win Big From Data Centre Growth

Canada’s data-centre buildout is creating real demand in hardware, software, and even industrial safety, not just chip hype.

Read more »

young adult uses credit card to shop online
Tech Stocks

The Best TSX Stock to Buy Before it Recovers

This top TSX stock has dropped significantly but has multiple growth catalysts that could spur a swift recovery in its…

Read more »