Canadian ETF income planning

ETF income and dividend simulator

By Gourav KumarLast updated: April 22, 2026Reviewed for planning assumptions

Compare popular Canadian dividend ETFs, test a custom yield assumption, and see how much capital and reinvestment it may take to reach practical income goals inside a TFSA or taxable account.

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Important: educational information only

EasyFinanceTools provides calculators, examples, and articles for general education only. Nothing on this site is personal financial, investment, tax, legal, mortgage, or accounting advice.

Results are estimates based on the inputs and assumptions shown. Investment returns, dividends, interest rates, tax rules, contribution room, and government benefit amounts can change. Always verify numbers with official sources such as CRA, your financial institution, or a qualified professional before making decisions.

Investing involves risk. Past performance, advertised yields, and calculator examples do not guarantee future results.

Estimated annual income now

$1,075

Based on the current yield assumption inside a TFSA.

Income in year 15

$15,166

$1,264 per month under the current assumptions.

Projected balance

$232,931

Includes reinvested distributions over 15 years.

Comparison table

Illustrative Canadian dividend ETF snapshot

Use these rows to autofill the simulator, then change the yield or growth assumptions if your shortlist differs. This is an illustrative planning table, not a live quote feed.

ETFFocusYieldMERFrequencyAction
XEI
iShares Core S&P/TSX High Dividend Index ETF
Canadian dividend core4.8%0.2%Monthly
VDY
Vanguard FTSE Canadian High Dividend Yield Index ETF
Canadian dividend core4.3%0.2%Monthly
ZDV
BMO Canadian Dividend ETF
Canadian dividend core4.6%0.4%Monthly
CDZ
iShares S&P/TSX Canadian Dividend Aristocrats Index ETF
Dividend growth tilt3.9%0.7%Monthly
HDIV
Hamilton Enhanced Multi-Sector Covered Call ETF
Higher-yield covered call income9.0%0.7%Monthly

Illustrative planning snapshot for April 2026. Update the values in src/config/financial.js when yields or ETF assumptions change.

Interpretation

What the simulator is telling you

This scenario leans on reinvestment to turn monthly cash flow into a larger future income stream. That is often a better long-term fit than chasing the highest current yield.

Selected ETF

VDY

Popular income ETF built around large Canadian dividend payers.

TFSA fit

A common TFSA income option if the account is not being used purely for growth.

Risk reminder

Banks and pipelines can dominate the portfolio during some periods.

Dividend tax source check

Taxable dividend and investment-income treatment depends on account type and should be verified with CRA for taxable accounts.

Decision support

Why this tool exists

This tool exists because dividend planning often starts with a yield target and skips the harder question: whether the payout, account type, and total-return tradeoff fit the goal.

Uncertainty check

What can break this estimate

Distribution cuts, covered-call upside limits, return of capital, sector concentration, taxes, and a price decline can all make the income result less useful.

Scenario discipline

Stress-test your inputs

Test yields at 3%, 5%, and 7%, then lower price growth. If the plan only works at high yield, the income target may be carrying too much risk.

Output

Income and growth over time

DRIP enabled

Income goals

How much capital is needed for common monthly targets?

$100 per month

$27,907

Based on the current yield assumption and tax-free TFSA income.

$500 per month

$139,535

Based on the current yield assumption and tax-free TFSA income.

$1,000 per month

$279,070

Based on the current yield assumption and tax-free TFSA income.

Result insight

Dividend income needs a quality check, not just a yield input

The income estimate is useful only if the payout source is sustainable enough for the goal. For Canadian dividend ETFs, compare the yield with sector concentration, covered-call use, MER, distribution history, and whether the TFSA should be used for income or broader long-term growth.

What high-yield investors underestimate

A higher yield can lower the capital target and still make the plan weaker

The calculator shows the math. This framework shows the tradeoffs that the yield input can hide.

Covered-call drag

Tradeoff

Covered-call income can trade away some upside.

Works better when: income stability matters more than maximum growth potential.

Watch out when: the ETF is compared only by headline yield.

Sector concentration

Risk

Canadian dividend funds can lean heavily on banks, energy, telecom, and utilities.

Works better when: the rest of the portfolio offsets that concentration.

Watch out when: the dividend sleeve becomes the whole portfolio.

Distribution cuts

Income

A target income plan should survive lower payouts.

Works better when: you test 3%, 5%, and 7% yield scenarios instead of one number.

Watch out when: fixed spending depends on a variable distribution.

Account location

Tax

TFSA, RRSP, and taxable accounts can treat the same cash flow differently.

Works better when: account room and tax treatment are checked before yield chasing.

Watch out when: the ETF is chosen before the account decision.

Compare outcomes

Income, compounding, and account fit

Income now

$1,075

Estimated first-year income using the current yield and account-type assumptions.

Income later

$15,166

DRIP is helping future income by reinvesting distributions.

Account value

$232,931

Projected value after contributions, income treatment, and price-growth assumptions.

Before you act

Questions to answer before relying on the income

Can the yield survive?

High yield should trigger a review of covered-call policy, holdings, distribution history, and whether the fund is paying from income or other sources.

Does DRIP still fit?

DRIP can build future income, but cash distributions may be better if you need spending money, rebalancing control, or tax cash.

Is TFSA room being used well?

Tax-free income is attractive, but long-term investors should still compare income ETFs against broad growth ETFs.

What happens if price growth is lower?

A high monthly payout can hide weak capital growth. Test a lower price-growth assumption before treating the plan as stable.

What yield means

Yield is an income clue, not a verdict

Yield estimates the cash distribution relative to the ETF price. It helps you model income, but it does not tell you whether the payout is stable, whether the ETF is expensive, or whether the strategy is the best fit for a TFSA.

That is why this simulator pairs yield with growth, DRIP, and account type instead of treating the highest payout as the automatic winner.

How to use this in a TFSA

Put the account job first

If the TFSA job is long-term growth, a broad-market ETF may still beat an income ETF even if the cash flow looks less exciting today. If the TFSA job is tax-free cash flow or a staged transition into income, a dividend ETF can make more sense.

Use this page to see the tradeoff clearly, then compare it with the broader ETF guidance in the TFSA ETF guide.

ETF comparison explanation

The table is built to help you compare different income styles: broad Canadian dividend exposure, dividend-growth tilts, and higher-yield covered-call income.

Risk reminders

High yield can come with slower growth, more concentration, or capped upside. Total return still matters, especially if the TFSA is supposed to compound for years.

What to compare next

Once the yield and DRIP assumptions make sense, compare the ETF idea against your account choice, platform, and broader asset mix.

How this calculator works

Start with yield, then test whether the income is sustainable

The simulator begins with your selected ETF or custom yield, estimates current annual income, and then projects income over time using your dividend-growth, price-growth, contribution, DRIP, and tax-account assumptions. The goal is not to crown the highest-yield ETF. It is to show whether the income target still makes sense after reinvestment, account type, and total-return tradeoffs are visible.

Common mistakes

Avoid chasing the biggest payout without checking the tradeoff

  • - Treating current yield as a guaranteed future payout.
  • - Ignoring MER, covered-call drag, concentration, or falling unit prices.
  • - Comparing dividend ETFs without checking whether the TFSA should prioritize growth instead.
  • - Forgetting that taxable-account dividend treatment is more complex than this simplified planning model.

Real Canadian scenario

Investor testing a $500/month Canadian dividend target

A Canadian investor wants $500 per month from dividend ETFs but is deciding whether the portfolio should sit in a TFSA, RRSP, or taxable account and whether the yield assumption is realistic.

Inputs used

  • Income target: $500 per month
  • Portfolio type: Canadian dividend ETF basket
  • Yield tested: 4% to 6%
  • DRIP: compared on and off

Result and interpretation

The calculator translates the monthly income goal into required capital and shows how DRIP assumptions change the long-term path.

If the plan only works at a very high yield, the risk may be hidden in slower growth, covered-call tradeoffs, or falling unit prices. A lower-yield, better-diversified ETF may require more capital but less concentration risk.

Limitation: ETF distributions are not guaranteed. The calculator does not model exact tax slips, adjusted cost base, foreign withholding, or issuer-specific distribution changes.

How this calculator works: ETF income and dividend assumptions

Last updated: April 22, 2026

This page is built for scenario planning, not live ETF quotes. It combines a yield assumption, optional dividend growth, price growth, and DRIP behavior to show how income and account value could change over time.

Assumptions

  • ETF rows are illustrative planning snapshots and should be refreshed before real investing decisions.
  • Dividend yield, dividend growth, and price growth are treated as stable inputs even though markets move unevenly.
  • If DRIP is enabled, after-tax distributions are reinvested into the same ETF instead of being taken as cash.
  • Tax handling outside a TFSA is simplified and does not model every provincial dividend-credit detail or foreign withholding rule.

Sources and review

Self-reviewed by: Gourav Kumar

Checked against official Canadian source material where applicable; not reviewed by a licensed financial advisor, accountant, mortgage broker, or tax professional unless explicitly stated.

Educational planning tool only. Verify live ETF factsheets, fees, tax treatment, and suitability before acting.

Official sources

Official dividend and account-tax sources to verify

Use these official references to check taxable dividend, investment-income, and TFSA context before relying on a dividend-income scenario.

Source shell

What should be refreshed when ETF data changes

The ETF table is intentionally easy to maintain. Refresh the local ETF data object, then re-check the rest of the page against these reference points.

Local ETF data object

Update sample yields, MERs, growth assumptions, and fit notes in src/config/financial.js when your shortlist changes.

Provider factsheets and ETF pages

Use the issuer factsheet or ETF page to confirm yield, holdings, MER, and distribution frequency before publishing yearly refreshes.

CRA TFSA guidance

Re-check TFSA treatment language whenever the page discusses account location or why tax-free income may matter.

Open source

Internal link review

Keep the related ETF, TFSA, and platform-comparison links aligned so the page continues to act like a decision hub instead of a dead-end calculator.

Manual review needed: confirm ETF product details, current yield context, and whether any covered-call or concentration warnings need to be tightened.

Your next steps

What to do next with the income estimate

Once the income math looks realistic, the next job is deciding whether the ETF belongs in your TFSA, how much concentration risk you can accept, and which platform fits the strategy.

What this result means

$15,166 of projected annual income in year 15 looks useful only if the ETF assumption is realistic and the account job is actually income. Compare the ETF idea against your broader TFSA plan before chasing yield.

Use the result, then act

  • -Decide whether the account should prioritize growth, cash flow, or a blend of both.
  • -Compare the dividend ETF idea against a broader TFSA ETF option before assuming income is the best use of the account.
  • -Choose a platform after the ETF and account strategy are clear, not before.

This may be a referral link. We may earn a commission or bonus, but this does not affect our educational content.

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Logical next step

Start your ETF income plan with Wealthsimple

If this simulator helps you settle on a simple ETF income approach, a low-friction investing account can be a reasonable next step after you compare strategy and account type.

Why this placement makes sense here

  • - You already know the income strategy fits your TFSA or investing plan.
  • - You want an easy way to buy and hold dividend ETFs with recurring contributions.
  • - You have already compared the income ETF idea against a broader growth ETF option.

Provider terms, promotions, eligibility, and fees can change. Verify details with Wealthsimple before opening or funding an account.

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Educational information only

Easy Finance Tools provides educational calculators and general information only. Results are estimates and are not financial, investment, tax, legal, or mortgage advice. Always verify details with official sources or a qualified professional.