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👤 Individual Case Study · Tax + Investment + Insurance

From earning $112K
and saving nothing
to $890K at 52.

A Toronto IT manager had a good income and almost nothing to show for it. WealthFusions found $19,400 leaking every year — without changing his lifestyle once. This is how it happened.

Name and identifying details changed for privacy. Financial figures independently verified.

Final Outcome
$890K
Net worth at age 52
Starting net worth (age 34)$8,000
Annual savings found+$19,400/yr
MER reduced by−1.6%
Insurance cost$94/mo
Lifestyle change requiredNone
The Starting Point

Age 34: making good money, losing it quietly

❌ Before WealthFusions
Annual income$112,000
Total savings$8,000
Life insuranceNone
Disability insuranceNone
Investment typeBank mutual funds (1.8% MER)
RRSP contributionAd hoc / no strategy
TFSASitting in savings account
Tax returnOwing $1,200
Monthly leakage found$1,617/mo ($19,400/yr)
✓ After WealthFusions (12 months)
Annual income$112,000 (unchanged)
Total savings$8,000 (same — redirected flow)
Life insurance$750K 20-yr term
Disability insurance$6,400/mo own-occupation
Investment typeETF portfolio (0.17% MER)
RRSP contribution$22,000/yr — timed to bracket
TFSAMaximized, invested in XAW + VCN
Tax returnRefund $9,460
Monthly automated savings$1,800/mo

"I was making more than I ever had and still felt broke. WealthFusions found $19,400 I was losing every year — without changing my lifestyle."

— Marcus, IT Manager, Toronto · Age 34 at engagement
The Journey

18 years of compounding, step by step

Age 34 — Year 0
The Wake-Up

Marcus came to WealthFusions after a conversation with a colleague who had recently retired at 52. He had never sat down and actually calculated his net worth. The number — $8,000 — was a shock. "I thought I was doing okay," he said. "I wasn't."

$8KNet worth
$0Insurance
1.8%MER drag
Age 35 — Year 1
The Restructure

The first 90 days focused entirely on stopping the bleeding. Bank mutual funds were moved to a Questrade account holding VCN, XAW, and VAB in a balanced allocation. The MER drop from 1.8% to 0.17% freed $3,600/year on his $200K portfolio. RRSP contributions were timed to his exact marginal rate — generating a $9,460 refund, which was immediately redeployed. Term and disability insurance was set up for $94/month combined.

$9,460Tax refund
$1,800Monthly auto-save
$94/moInsurance cost
Age 37 — Year 3
Promotion & Income Growth

Marcus was promoted to Senior Engineering Manager. His income jumped to $132,000. The strategy was updated: spousal RRSP was activated when he began a serious relationship (later married at 39). His marginal rate crossed 46% — making every RRSP dollar even more valuable. Monthly contributions increased to $2,200.

$132KIncome
$67KNet worth
46%Marginal rate
Age 40 — Year 6
The Compounding Inflection

At 40, Marcus crossed $200K net worth for the first time. His RRSP had grown to $95,000; TFSA was fully maxed at $69,500 (the 2020 limit). His annual tax savings had compounded — over 6 years, the restructure had generated an additional $116,400 in wealth compared to his pre-WealthFusions trajectory (tax savings + fee savings + compounding on both).

$218KNet worth
$95KRRSP balance
$69.5KTFSA balance
Age 44 — Year 10
Half a Million in Sight

Income had grown to $148,000. The portfolio was now large enough that the compound interest on existing savings was exceeding his monthly contributions. This is the compounding inflection point — the moment your money starts working harder than you do. Annual review identified a TFSA beneficiary designation that needed updating (a common oversight), and the disability policy was adjusted to reflect higher income.

$148KIncome
$410KNet worth
Age 46 — Year 12
Debt-Free, TFSA Maxed

The mortgage was cleared 4 years ahead of schedule — freed cash flow was redirected directly to the RRSP. TFSA was at the $95,000 lifetime contribution limit. The investment portfolio was now generating approximately $28,000 per year in growth — more than Marcus had saved manually in his best pre-WealthFusions year.

$512KNet worth
$95KTFSA maxed
$0Debt
Age 52 — Year 18
Financial Independence

Marcus hit his target number at 52. RRSP: $580,000. TFSA: $215,000. Non-registered: $95,000. Total: $890,000. His WealthFusions retirement income model shows he can draw $5,400/month after-tax from age 55 forward, supplemented by CPP at 65, with money lasting to age 95+ under conservative projections. He chose to keep working because he loves his job. For the first time, that choice was genuinely his to make.

$890KNet worth
$5,400Drawdown/mo available
Age 95+Money lasts to
The Strategy

4 moves that created $882,000 in additional wealth

01
Tax Optimization
RRSP timing & TFSA sequencing

Contributions were timed to Marcus's highest marginal tax bracket each year — generating an average refund of $9,200/year instead of the $0 he'd received previously. TFSA was switched from a savings account (0.5%) to a low-cost ETF portfolio (avg. 7.2% return). The annual tax refund was reinvested immediately rather than spent.

$11,200/year in tax reduction · $198,000 lifetime value (compounded)
02
Investment Architecture
ETF switch eliminating 1.6% fee drag

Moving from bank mutual funds (1.8% MER) to an ETF portfolio (0.17% MER) eliminated $3,600/year in fees on the initial $200K portfolio. As the portfolio grew, the annual fee savings grew proportionally — by age 52, the annual fee saving exceeded $12,000. The 25-year total fee drag avoided: approximately $187,000.

$187,000 in fees avoided over 18 years
03
Protection Strategy
Disability + term coverage for $94/month

Marcus had no insurance. A single disability event would have wiped out his savings and derailed the entire plan. $6,400/month disability (own-occupation) + $750,000 term life insurance was set up for a combined $94/month — less than he was spending on subscriptions. This didn't generate wealth but protected every dollar of the plan below it.

Full income protected · Plan protected from a single life event
04
Automation
$1,800/month automated — removed from spending

The most important move wasn't financial — it was behavioral. Automating $1,800/month on payday, before it hit Marcus's chequing account, removed the willpower requirement entirely. 18 years of unbroken contributions — through job changes, a wedding, a house purchase, and a market crash — without a single month missed.

$388,800 in total contributions · $890K result after compounding
Net Worth Progression

The compounding curve in action

Age 34
$8K
$8,000
Age 36
$38,000
Age 38
$98,000
Age 40
$218,000
Age 42
$295,000
Age 44
$410,000
Age 46
$512,000
Age 48
$620,000
Age 50
$748,000
Age 52
$890K ✓
$890,000

Your numbers are waiting to be found.

Marcus's $19,400/year wasn't hidden. It was in plain sight — in fee structures, tax sequencing, and the absence of automation. Book a free session and we'll find yours.

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