Yes, you can leave your Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) to your children by naming them as beneficiaries on your account documentation or in your will. The funds are transferred to them tax-free up to the fair market value at the time of your death.
Can I open a TFSA for my kids? No, you can't open a TFSA for your child. Your children can open their own TFSAs when they reach age 18, at which point, you can give them the funds to put in the account. However, there are other ways to save money for your children's future.
The five key mistakes to avoid in a TFSA are over-contributing (and re-depositing withdrawals in the same year), treating it like a basic savings account (missing out on investment growth), failing to track your room (relying solely on CRA data), improperly moving funds (withdrawing and redepositing instead of transferring), and investing in non-qualified assets or high-risk trades (like day trading or certain foreign stocks that incur withholding tax).
You can designate a beneficiary (your adult child or anyone else) on the TFSA contract or in your Will. Your beneficiary will not have to pay tax on payments made out of the TFSA as long as the total payments do not exceed the FMV of your TFSA at the date of death.
There's no limit on how much money you can give or receive as a gift! However, there are some occasions where tax may be payable, or capital gains tax (CGT) may apply. For example, in some instances when gifting property, shares or crypto assets, or when receiving money or an asset from a non-resident trust.
Can my parents give me $100,000? Your parents can each give you up to $19,000 in 2025 without triggering a gift tax return. However, any amount that exceeds that will need to be reported to the IRS by your parents and will count against their lifetime limit.
Step-Up in Basis for Inherited Assets
One tax advantage of leaving assets after death is the step-up in basis. This provision allows heirs to inherit assets at their fair market value at the time of death, effectively resetting the capital gains tax to zero for any appreciation during the decedent's lifetime.
Tax implications for the beneficiary. A designated beneficiary does not have to pay tax on any amount they receive from a TFSA as long as the total amount is not more than the fair market value (FMV) of the property held in the TFSA on the date of death.
There are several ways to transfer property to a child tax-free, including leaving it in a will, gifting it using lifetime and annual exclusions, selling it, or placing it in an irrevocable trust.
Roughly 7% to 9% of American households have $500,000 or more in retirement savings, though figures vary slightly by source, with data from late 2025 suggesting around 7.2% and older 2022 data indicating about 9%, showing it's a significant milestone achieved by less than one in ten families, despite higher averages driven by wealthy individuals.
Here are four you should consider.
You can gift as much money as you want to your children in theory, but large gifts may be subject to tax. For the 2025/26 tax year , every UK citizen has an annual tax-free gift allowance of £3,000. This enables you to give money to your children in lump sums without worrying about inheritance tax (IHT).
You have to be at least 18 years of age (or the age of majority in your province) to be eligible for a TFSA; there is no set minimum age for an RRSP. Unlike an RRSP where contributions are not permitted after Dec 31 of the year you turn 71, you can keep contributing to a TFSA past age 71.
The 7-3-2 rule is a financial strategy for wealth building, suggesting it takes 7 years to save your first major financial goal (like a crore), then accelerating to achieve the next goal in 3 years, and the third goal in just 2 years, leveraging compounding and disciplined, increased investments (like a 10% annual SIP hike). It highlights how returns compound faster over time, drastically reducing the time needed for subsequent wealth targets, emphasizing patience and consistent, growing contributions.
The "7-year inheritance rule" (primarily a UK concept) means gifts you give away become exempt from Inheritance Tax (IHT) if you live for seven years or more after making the gift; if you die within that time, the gift may be taxed, often with a reduced rate (taper relief) applied if you die between years 3 and 7, but at the full 40% if you die within 3 years, helping people reduce their estate's taxable value by giving assets away earlier.
Drawbacks:
You can typically inherit a very large amount from your parents without paying federal tax, as the federal estate tax exemption is around $15 million per person for 2026, meaning only estates larger than that pay tax, not you directly. While you generally don't pay income tax on inheritances (except for pre-tax retirement funds like IRAs/401(k)s, which are taxed as income when withdrawn), some states have their own estate or inheritance taxes with much lower thresholds, affecting a smaller portion of wealth.
What happens to your TFSA at the time of death? TFSA legislation allows you to name a “successor holder” who would inherit your TFSA at the time of your death.
The U.S. tax code makes it fairly easy to give your children money, stocks or other investments or a piece of the family business. You can transfer up to a certain amount during your lifetime as a gift or at death through a will or revocable trust, free from federal gift and estate taxes.