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Canadian Bitcoin ETF Review

Fidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF
FBTC — Complete Canadian Review 2026

Canada's lowest-cost major Bitcoin ETF, backed by Fidelity Digital Assets. Here's exactly what you're buying, what it costs you, and whether it belongs in your registered accounts.

Updated: May 2026  ·  Exchange: TSX  ·  By: BalanceBitcoin

Ticker
FBTC
Toronto Stock Exchange
MER
~0.39%
Per year, all-in
Issuer
Fidelity
Fidelity Investments Canada
Registered Accounts
✓ All
TFSA, RRSP, FHSA

FBTC: What It Is and How It Works

The Fidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF (FBTC) is a physically-backed Bitcoin ETF managed by Fidelity Investments Canada ULC. It holds actual Bitcoin — not futures contracts or derivatives — and lists on the Toronto Stock Exchange in Canadian dollars.

Bitcoin in the fund is custodied by Fidelity Digital Assets, Fidelity's institutional-grade crypto arm. Unlike ETFs that rely on third-party custodians like Coinbase or Gemini, Fidelity controls its own custody infrastructure — a meaningful structural difference for investors who care about custodial risk.

Detail Value
Full NameFidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF
TickerFBTC (TSX)
IssuerFidelity Investments Canada ULC
CustodianFidelity Digital Assets
StructurePhysically-backed (spot Bitcoin)
MER~0.39% per year
CurrencyCanadian dollars (CAD)
ExchangeToronto Stock Exchange (TSX)
TFSA/RRSP/FHSA EligibleYes — all three
InceptionDecember 2023
The key number: At 0.39% MER, FBTC is the most cost-efficient Canadian-domiciled Bitcoin ETF available. On a $50,000 position, you're paying roughly $195/year to get registered-account-eligible Bitcoin exposure.

TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA Eligibility

FBTC is listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, a designated stock exchange under Canada's Income Tax Act. That designation is what makes ETFs eligible for registered accounts. Because FBTC is a TSX-listed Canadian-domiciled security, it qualifies for:

Direct Bitcoin (bought through Wealthsimple Crypto or a Canadian exchange) cannot be held inside any of these accounts. This is the single biggest practical advantage of Bitcoin ETFs for Canadian investors.

TFSA math: If Bitcoin appreciates 10x from your purchase price inside a TFSA, you pay zero tax on the gain — ever. The MER (0.39%) is the price of that tax shelter. For most Canadians holding for 10+ years, this trade-off strongly favors the ETF in a TFSA over direct Bitcoin in a taxable account.

The calculus changes for very long holds (15-20+ years) where the compounding MER drag can exceed the capital gains tax you'd pay on direct Bitcoin. See our Bitcoin ETF vs direct ownership guide for the full analysis.

FBTC Pros and Cons for Canadian Investors

Pros
  • Lowest MER of major Canadian Bitcoin ETFs (~0.39%)
  • Fidelity Digital Assets custody — institutional-grade, in-house
  • Eligible for TFSA, RRSP, FHSA, and all registered accounts
  • CAD-denominated — no currency conversion required
  • Available on WealthSimple, RBC Direct, TD, all major brokerages
  • Backed by one of the world's largest and most trusted asset managers
  • Physically-backed spot Bitcoin — not futures
Cons
  • 0.39% MER compounds against your Bitcoin position every year
  • You don't own Bitcoin — you own shares in a fund that does
  • No self-custody option; can't withdraw to a personal wallet
  • Counterparty risk: Fidelity Digital Assets, ETF structure
  • Premium/discount risk — shares can trade above or below NAV
  • Newer fund (2023 inception) — shorter track record than BTCC or BTCX

The core trade-off: FBTC gives you regulated, registered-account-eligible Bitcoin exposure at a cost of 0.39%/year and custodial intermediation. For investors who want Bitcoin inside a TFSA or RRSP without managing crypto custody, FBTC is the most cost-efficient tool available.

How to Buy FBTC Through WealthSimple

WealthSimple Trade is the most accessible platform for most Canadians. FBTC is available on WealthSimple in both TFSA and RRSP accounts.

1

Open a WealthSimple account

If you don't already have one, open a WealthSimple account. TFSA and RRSP accounts are available. Verification typically takes minutes.

2

Navigate to your TFSA or RRSP

Once logged in, select the account where you want to hold FBTC. For most Canadians, the TFSA is the first choice for Bitcoin ETF allocation.

3

Search for ticker "FBTC"

Use the search bar to find the Fidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF. Confirm you're looking at the TSX-listed CAD version (not a US-listed fund).

4

Place your buy order

Enter your dollar amount or number of shares. FBTC trades during TSX market hours (9:30 AM – 4:00 PM ET on business days). Market orders execute at the current price; limit orders let you set a maximum price.

5

Set up recurring purchases (optional)

WealthSimple allows automatic recurring buys. Setting a monthly auto-invest in FBTC is a practical DCA strategy that removes timing decisions from the equation.

Open your WealthSimple account

Commission-free trades on Canadian ETFs including FBTC. TFSA and RRSP available.

Open WealthSimple →

FBTC vs Other Canadian Bitcoin ETFs

There are four main Canadian-domiciled Bitcoin ETFs. Here's how they stack up:

ETF Ticker MER Custodian TFSA/RRSP Verdict
Fidelity Advantage FBTC ~0.39% Fidelity Digital Assets Lowest cost
CI Galaxy BTCX.B ~0.40% Coinbase Custody Near-identical
Evolve Bitcoin EBIT ~0.75% Gemini / EY-enforced Higher cost
Purpose Bitcoin BTCC 1.50% Gemini Hard to justify

Bottom line: FBTC and BTCX.B are the two lowest-cost options — nearly identical on MER. The choice between them comes down to preference for Fidelity vs. CI Galaxy as the fund manager, and custodian (Fidelity Digital Assets vs. Coinbase Custody). Both are strong choices. EBIT at 0.75% costs roughly twice as much annually with no clear offsetting advantage. BTCC at 1.50% is very hard to justify in 2026.

If you're currently holding BTCC, switching to FBTC in a registered account is straightforward: sell BTCC (no tax event inside TFSA/RRSP), buy FBTC. The MER savings compound significantly over time.

Get the Free ETF Comparison Guide

Which Canadian Bitcoin ETF is right for your situation? We break down FBTC vs BTCX.B vs EBIT with real numbers based on account type and time horizon.

Ready to buy FBTC? Open your WealthSimple account — commission-free trades on all Canadian ETFs.

Open WealthSimple →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the MER for FBTC?

FBTC has a management expense ratio of approximately 0.39% per year. This is deducted from the fund's assets and silently reduces your effective Bitcoin position — you don't receive a bill, but the drag is real and compounds over time.

Can I hold FBTC in my TFSA, RRSP, or FHSA?

Yes. FBTC is listed on the TSX (a designated stock exchange under the Income Tax Act), making it eligible for all registered accounts including TFSA, RRSP, RRIF, RESP, RDSP, and FHSA.

Who holds the Bitcoin in FBTC?

Fidelity Digital Assets holds the underlying Bitcoin in cold storage. This is Fidelity's own institutional digital asset custodian — a structurally stronger arrangement than ETFs that rely on third-party custodians, in the view of many investors.

Is FBTC better than BTCX.B?

They're nearly identical in cost (0.39% vs 0.40% MER). The main differences: FBTC uses Fidelity Digital Assets as custodian; BTCX.B uses Coinbase Custody. Fidelity is a larger, more established firm. Coinbase Custody is a regulated, institutional-grade custodian. Either is a defensible choice — this is a preference call, not a clear winner.

Should I buy FBTC instead of buying Bitcoin directly?

Depends on your account type. In an RRSP, FBTC is your only option — direct Bitcoin isn't eligible. In a TFSA, the zero-tax benefit often justifies the 0.39% MER for investors with a 5-15 year horizon. In a taxable account with a 20+ year horizon, the MER drag can exceed capital gains tax on direct Bitcoin. Our ETF vs direct guide walks through the math.

Not Sure Which Account to Use?

TFSA vs RRSP vs FHSA — the right account for Bitcoin ETFs depends on your situation. Our free assessment models the optimal structure for your specific numbers.

Important Disclaimer

This content is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. Bitcoin and ETF investments carry significant risk, including potential loss of principal. MER figures are approximate and may change — always verify current fund documents at Fidelity.ca. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions. BalanceBitcoin is not a registered investment dealer or portfolio manager.