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Comparison · 6 min

ETF Investing Course for Canadian Beginners (Honest Review)

By Harry Vadalkar, CFA · Updated 2026-05-31

This is the question I get most often from Canadian students starting their licensing journey: ETF investing course Canada beginner? Here's the short, honest answer — followed by the detail you actually need.

The 60-second answer

  • Most don't — Couch Potato strategy is 3 ETFs, no expertise needed
  • XEQT or VEQT — one fund, fully diversified
  • One-fund wins for 95% of Canadians; multi-fund needed only at high net worth

Why this matters for your wallet

Most Canadians lose more money to not knowing this than to bad investments. The marginal cost of getting it right is one evening of focused reading. The marginal cost of getting it wrong compounds for decades.

If you're studying for a CIRO exam — IFC, CSC, CIRE, RSE, ISE, or Derivatives — this topic shows up. If you're just trying to grow your TFSA and RRSP without paying $200 to a robo-advisor, this still saves you money. Either way, take 5 more minutes.

The deeper take

The Canadian regulatory landscape changed dramatically in 2023 with the IIROC + MFDA merger into CIRO. What this means in practice: many of the licensing exams you've heard about are being consolidated, retired, or renamed. If you're looking at older guides, double-check the date — content from 2021 or earlier may reference exams that no longer exist or have changed structure.

For exam-bound readers, the practical impact is this: stick to courses and instructors that have been actively updated for 2024–2026. Outdated content costs marks and money.

For investors, the impact is reassurance: the new CIRO framework holds advisors to a tighter Client-Focused Reform (CFR) standard. If you're working with an advisor, you should expect annual KYC reviews, documented KYP analysis, and a clear conflict-of-interest disclosure.

Ready to pass on first try?

The IFC Masterclass — 18 chapters, 6 mock exams, lifetime access. $99.99 CAD.

Frequently asked

Do I need a course for ETFs?

Most don't — Couch Potato strategy is 3 ETFs, no expertise needed

Best beginner ETF strategy

XEQT or VEQT — one fund, fully diversified

One-fund vs multi-fund

One-fund wins for 95% of Canadians; multi-fund needed only at high net worth

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