The Canadian Stocks I’d Hold in a TFSA and Never Feel the Need to Sell

Here’s how to ensure that the Canadian stocks you’re buying in your TFSA are the best long-term investments on the market.

| More on:
Key Points
  • Prioritize buying high‑quality Canadian stocks in your TFSA that you can hold long‑term — pick businesses you won’t feel compelled to sell, not just ones you can force yourself to hold.
  • Focus on predictable, cash‑generating, defensive blue‑chips with long‑term contracts and growth potential (e.g., Brookfield Infrastructure Partners TSX:BIP.UN and Enbridge TSX:ENB) to withstand market volatility.
  • Build your TFSA core with these reliable holdings, let compounding do the work, and only consider selling if the company’s fundamentals materially change.

If you’re buying Canadian stocks in your TFSA, there’s no question that you want to take a long-term approach.

Not only does that strategy align with the tax-free nature of the TFSA, where you buy high-quality businesses, hold them for years, and let compounding do the work, but it’s also what investing gurus like Warren Buffett have been talking about for decades.

For example, one of Buffett’s most famous investing quotes says, “Our favourite holding period is forever.”

That idea of holding stocks forever, or in other words, stocks that you never need to sell, is often misunderstood, though.

Most people take that to mean you just need to be disciplined, hold through volatility, and avoid panic selling no matter what. And while that’s certainly a major part of looking for stocks to buy and hold forever, it’s not really the full picture.

Piggy bank with word TFSA for tax-free savings accounts.

Source: Getty Images

How to think about buying Canadian stocks in your TFSA

The goal of long-term investing isn’t just to force yourself to hold stocks. Instead, it’s to buy the kind of businesses that you never feel the need to sell in the first place.

And that’s a very different way of thinking about investing, because most investors do the opposite. For example, investors will often buy a stock first, then later decide whether they should keep holding it.

They start second-guessing, reacting to headlines, worrying about short-term performance, and constantly re-evaluating their decisions.

And that’s exactly what you want to avoid because if you’re always questioning whether you should sell, you probably didn’t buy the right stock to begin with.

Why the best investors focus on what they buy, not when they sell

There’s no question that successful investing requires staying disciplined, not panic selling, and managing emotions when things get volatile.

However, it’s not the entire story because that line of thinking assumes you’re constantly going to be put in situations where you have to make those decisions.

Instead, you ideally want to avoid that as much as possible.

That’s why the best long-term investors are not looking for stocks that might perform well; they’re looking for businesses they can own for years.

That’s why the best Canadian stocks to buy in your TFSA are businesses that don’t depend on perfect conditions, can perform through different economic cycles and generate consistent cash flow, allowing them to continue growing over time.

That’s how you buy stocks that you never feel the need to sell. Not blindly holding no matter what, but having enough conviction when you make the investment that selling isn’t part of the plan.

It’s only something you consider if the business actually changes.

The types of Canadian stocks that are easiest to hold long term

Once you understand the mindset of what stocks make the best long-term investments and what businesses you’ll ideally never feel the need to sell, it’s clear that many of the top picks share some major characteristics.

For example, the best investments are businesses that are highly predictable, highly defensive, can consistently generate significant cash flow, and have decades of growth potential.

That’s why one of my top holdings is Brookfield Infrastructure Partners (TSX:BIP.UN).

Brookfield owns a global portfolio of essential assets like utilities, pipelines, and data infrastructure that the global economy depends on every day, generating stable cash flow backed by long-term contracts and a proven long-term growth strategy.

Enbridge (TSX:ENB) is another top pick too, since it operates critical energy infrastructure, generates predictable revenue through long-term contracts, and continues to produce strong cash flow year after year.

It’s not dependent on short-term commodity prices the way many people think. It’s a cash cow that pays a sustainable dividend and offers moderate but, more importantly, consistent growth.

It may not always be the best-performing stock in any given year, but over time, it continues to grow and expand its operations, making it a top Canadian stock to buy in your TFSA.

And that’s what matters most because at the end of the day, it’s not about finding stocks that never decline or face challenges. The goal is to find businesses that you trust enough to hold anyway.

Because when you build a TFSA around those kinds of reliable Canadian stocks, that’s what gives you the confidence to stay invested and let compounding do the work.

Fool contributor Daniel Da Costa has positions in Brookfield Infrastructure Partners and Enbridge. The Motley Fool recommends Brookfield Infrastructure Partners and Enbridge. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

a person watches stock market trades
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian Dividend Stocks That Look Built to Hold Up Through a Recession

Given their resilient business model, visible growth pipeline, and reliable income streams, these three dividend stocks can help investors navigate…

Read more »

chart reflected in eyeglass lenses
Dividend Stocks

This Canadian Dividend Stock Is Down 36% and Worth Holding Forever

Boyd Group Services stock is down 36% from its highs, but strong earnings, margin growth, and a transformative acquisition make…

Read more »

diversification is an important part of building a stable portfolio
Dividend Stocks

A 6.4% Dividend Stock Paying Out Monthly

A high-yield stock operating within a specialized niche in the real estate sector pays monthly dividends.

Read more »

pig shows concept of sustainable investing
Dividend Stocks

How to Use a TFSA to Bring in $1,000 a Month Completely Tax-Free

Are you wondering how you can turn your TFSA into $1,000/month of tax-free income? Here's one strategy you could follow.

Read more »

Middle aged man drinks coffee
Dividend Stocks

Here’s the Average Canadian TFSA at Age 50

You might not be where a TFSA user should ideally be at the age of 50, but there are ways…

Read more »

Female raising hands enjoying vacation, standing on background of blue cloudless sky.
Dividend Stocks

My 2 Favourite Stocks for Monthly Passive Income

If you like monthly passive income and growth, these two dividend stocks could be a perfect fit for your portfolio…

Read more »

shopper chooses vegetables at grocery store
Dividend Stocks

TFSA Investors: 1 Set-it-and-Forget-it Stock for 2026

Loblaw stock is a perfect addition to a set-it-and-forget-it TFSA portfolio, though it's recommended to dollar-cost average into a position…

Read more »

Partially complete jigsaw puzzle with scattered missing pieces
Dividend Stocks

A Canadian Dividend Pick Down 37%: A Forever Hold

A 4.4% dividend yield and improving profitability make this dividend-paying Canadian stock worth considering today.

Read more »