Built for Canadians who are tired of American money advice
Most personal finance content online wasn’t written for you. We built something that was.
The problem we kept running into
Search for almost any personal finance question and you’ll find great answers — for Americans. ROTH IRAs instead of TFSAs. 401(k)s instead of RRSPs. Social Security instead of CPP and OAS. Different tax brackets, different rules, different deadlines.
For everyday Canadians trying to make smart decisions with their money, that gap is genuinely frustrating. You’re not looking for a workaround — you need advice that applies to your actual situation, in your actual country.
That’s the only reason BudgetingTips.ca exists.
“Too much personal finance advice online is written for Americans. The rules are different here — and Canadians deserve a resource that reflects that.”
What we cover
Everything on this site is written specifically for the Canadian context — the accounts, the rules, the deadlines, and the strategies that matter if you live and pay taxes in Canada.
TFSA, RRSP & FHSA
Canada’s registered accounts explained in plain language — who should use which, and when.
Budgeting basics
The 50/30/20 rule, zero-based budgeting, and methods that actually stick for Canadian households.
Debt payoff
Avalanche vs. snowball, student loans, credit card debt — practical strategies, no shame.
Retirement planning
CPP, OAS, and how to figure out what you actually need to retire comfortably in Canada.
Free calculators
Interactive tools built for Canadian tax rules and contribution limits — not American ones.
Government benefits
CCB, GST/HST credits, CAIP, and what you may be leaving on the table.
Who this site is for
BudgetingTips.ca is for everyday Canadians at every stage of life — whether you’re just starting out, paying down debt, maxing your TFSA for the first time, or trying to figure out if you’re on track for retirement.
You don’t need a finance degree to read this site. We write in plain language and skip the jargon, because the goal is for you to actually understand and use what you read — not just feel informed.
Everyone’s situation is different. The information here is educational, not personalized financial advice. For decisions that significantly affect your finances, we always recommend speaking with a qualified professional who knows your full picture.
You’ll find our full disclaimer here.