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Last updated: May 25, 2026Verified against official sources

For your first year in Canada

New here? Start here.

Forty articles is a lot. If you just landed (or you’re about to), this is the order I’d read them in. Each step takes 5-10 minutes.

I wrote this site because my parents never had a guide. They figured out the Canadian financial system the hard way — paying fees nobody warned them about, missing benefits they qualified for, building credit a year late. This is the path I wish they had.

Most newcomers spend their first year reacting to whatever lands in their mailbox — a bill, a tax notice, a bank letter, a CRA assessment. By the time you understand what each one means, you’ve already paid for the lesson. The ten guides below flip the order: read them first, then the mail makes sense when it shows up.

You don’t need to read them all in one sitting. Bookmark this page and work through them over your first month. Each one takes 5–10 minutes.

The order matters. Steps 1–4 are foundation (SIN, bank account, how chequing works, how your money is protected). Steps 5–6 are credit (the score that decides your rent and phone plan). Steps 7–10 are growth and protection (TFSA, taxes, government benefits, tenant insurance). Skipping ahead is fine if you already have steps 1–3 done.

By the end of step 10 you’ll know more about Canadian money than most people who’ve been here a decade. Not because the system is hard. Because nobody bothered to explain it.

Before you begin

If you have your SIN and bank account already, jump to step 3. If you have a Canadian credit card already, jump to step 7. The list adapts to where you are.

Past your first year? Browse by topic.

The ten steps above are the foundation — the things that get every newcomer family on solid ground. Past your first year, your questions get more specific. Investing for retirement, sponsoring your parents, life insurance for your kids, estate planning for the home you bought, sending money back to family when interest rates move. Every Canadian money topic has its own pillar on this site, organized by life stage.