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Bitcoin ETF Review — Canadian Investors

iShares Bitcoin Trust
IBIT — What Canadians Need to Know

Lowest MER of any major Bitcoin ETF at 0.25%. But IBIT is NASDAQ-listed in USD. Before you buy, here's the complete picture on eligibility, FX costs, and whether it actually makes sense for your TFSA or RRSP.

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

Ticker
IBIT
NASDAQ (USD)
MER
0.25%
Lowest among major Bitcoin ETFs
Issuer
BlackRock
World's largest asset manager
Registered Accounts
✓ Eligible
FX costs apply on WealthSimple

IBIT: What It Is and How It Works

The iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) is a physically-backed spot Bitcoin ETF managed by BlackRock's iShares division — the world's largest asset manager with over $10 trillion in AUM. IBIT launched on January 11, 2024, the day the US Securities and Exchange Commission finally approved spot Bitcoin ETFs after years of rejections. It rapidly became the largest Bitcoin ETF globally by assets under management.

IBIT holds actual spot Bitcoin. No futures contracts, no derivatives — each share represents a fractional ownership stake in the fund's Bitcoin holdings. The underlying Bitcoin is custodied by Coinbase Custody Trust Company, the institutional custodian arm of Coinbase.

IBIT trades on the NASDAQ in US dollars. This is the key constraint for Canadian investors — IBIT is a US-listed, USD-denominated product, and accessing it from Canada involves currency conversion costs that must be weighed against its MER advantage.

Detail Value
Full NameiShares Bitcoin Trust ETF
TickerIBIT
IssuerBlackRock (iShares)
CustodianCoinbase Custody Trust Company
StructurePhysically-backed (spot Bitcoin)
MER0.25% per year
CurrencyUSD (US dollars)
ExchangeNASDAQ (US)
TFSA/RRSP/FHSA EligibleYes — with FX cost considerations
InceptionJanuary 11, 2024
The headline number: IBIT's 0.25% MER is the lowest of any major Bitcoin ETF globally — 0.14% cheaper than FBTC (0.39%) and 0.15% cheaper than BTCX.B (0.40%). On a $500,000 position, that's $700–$750 per year in fee savings. Whether those savings survive the FX conversion cost depends entirely on how you buy.

TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA Eligibility — The Full Picture

IBIT is listed on the NASDAQ, a designated stock exchange recognized under Canada's Income Tax Act. This makes it a qualified investment eligible for TFSA, RRSP, FHSA, and all other registered accounts in Canada.

So you can hold IBIT in your TFSA or RRSP. The question is whether you should — and the answer depends on how you handle the USD conversion.

The WealthSimple FX Problem

WealthSimple charges a 1.5% foreign exchange fee on every buy and sell of USD-denominated securities. On a $10,000 IBIT purchase, that's $150 going in. When you sell, another $150 going out. Round trip: $300 in FX fees alone.

Compare that to IBIT's MER advantage: IBIT saves you 0.14% per year vs. FBTC. On $10,000, that's $14 per year. It takes over 21 years of MER savings just to break even on a single round trip through WealthSimple's FX fee.

For most WealthSimple users: IBIT's MER advantage is completely erased by FX fees. A CAD-denominated ETF like FBTC (0.39%) or BTCX.B (0.40%) is the more cost-efficient choice for regular registered account contributions on WealthSimple.

When IBIT Does Make Sense for Canadians

The break-even math: IBIT saves 0.14% per year over FBTC. WealthSimple's FX fee is 1.5% each way (3% round trip). Break-even via WealthSimple: 21+ years per trade. Break-even via Norbert's Gambit (~0.2% round trip): 1.4 years. The access method completely changes the calculus.

IBIT Pros and Cons for Canadian Investors

Pros
  • Lowest MER of any major Bitcoin ETF globally (0.25%)
  • BlackRock institutional credibility — world's largest asset manager
  • Enormous liquidity — largest Bitcoin ETF by AUM globally
  • Eligible for TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA accounts
  • Coinbase Custody — regulated, institutional-grade custodian
  • No distributions (Bitcoin pays no dividends) — no withholding tax risk
  • Cost-efficient with Norbert's Gambit or existing USD accounts
Cons
  • USD-denominated — 1.5% FX fee per trade on WealthSimple
  • Norbert's Gambit workaround adds friction for regular DCA purchases
  • Only launched January 2024 — no track record through a full cycle
  • Requires USD account setup for cost-efficient access
  • US regulatory jurisdiction — different than Canadian-domiciled ETFs
  • You own fund shares, not Bitcoin itself — no self-custody path

IBIT is the right choice for sophisticated Canadian investors who can efficiently manage the USD conversion — through Norbert's Gambit, an existing USD account, or a discount brokerage that allows USD registered accounts. For the majority of Canadians making regular DCA purchases through WealthSimple, FBTC or BTCX.B deliver a better all-in result without the currency friction.

How Canadians Can Access IBIT Efficiently

There are two main approaches for Canadians who want IBIT's low MER without paying WealthSimple's FX premium:

1

Open a self-directed account at Questrade or TD Direct Investing

Questrade and TD Direct offer USD TFSA and USD RRSP accounts. Once you hold USD inside the account, you can buy IBIT without paying a currency conversion fee on each trade.

2

Convert CAD to USD using Norbert's Gambit

Purchase DLR.TO (iShares Core S&P/TSX Capped Composite in CAD) and journal it to DLR.U.TO (USD equivalent). Hold for the settlement period (1–2 days), then sell DLR.U.TO for USD. The all-in FX cost is typically 0.1–0.2% — far below WealthSimple's 1.5%.

3

Buy IBIT in your USD registered account

Search "IBIT" on NASDAQ. Confirm you're buying the US-listed iShares product. Place your order in USD. Your annual MER is now 0.25%, with no recurring FX friction.

4

For regular DCA: consider FBTC instead

Norbert's Gambit adds friction to each regular purchase. If you're making monthly contributions, the setup cost per trade may outweigh the MER savings. FBTC on WealthSimple at 0.39% MER, zero FX friction, is often the simpler and equally cost-efficient choice for recurring purchases.

Want to compare all your options?

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IBIT vs Canadian Bitcoin ETFs — Full Comparison

ETF Ticker MER Currency Exchange WealthSimple All-In
iShares Bitcoin Trust IBIT 0.25% USD NASDAQ ~3.25%+ (FX + MER)
Fidelity Advantage FBTC ~0.39% CAD TSX ~0.39% (MER only)
CI Galaxy BTCX.B ~0.40% CAD TSX ~0.40% (MER only)
Evolve Bitcoin EBIT ~0.75% CAD TSX ~0.75% (MER only)
Purpose Bitcoin BTCC.B 0.75% CAD TSX 0.75% (MER only)

The "WealthSimple All-In" column is the key column for most Canadian retail investors. IBIT's 0.25% MER becomes a rough 3%+ first-year cost once WealthSimple's 1.5% FX fee applies each way. FBTC at 0.39% with zero FX friction is dramatically cheaper in practice for regular WealthSimple users.

The calculus flips if you use a discount brokerage with a USD registered account and Norbert's Gambit — in that scenario, IBIT becomes the cheapest long-term hold by a meaningful margin, especially on large positions held for years.

Get the Free ETF Comparison Guide

IBIT vs FBTC vs BTCX.B — which Bitcoin ETF makes sense for your account type? We break down the real numbers including FX costs and long-term MER drag.

Ready to start? Open your WealthSimple account — commission-free trades on Canadian ETFs including FBTC, BTCX.B, and EBIT.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can Canadians hold IBIT in a TFSA or RRSP?

Yes. IBIT is listed on the NASDAQ, which is a designated stock exchange under Canada's Income Tax Act, making it a qualified investment for TFSA, RRSP, and FHSA accounts. However, IBIT trades in USD, and buying it through WealthSimple triggers a 1.5% FX fee per transaction that significantly raises the all-in cost compared to a CAD-denominated alternative like FBTC.

Is IBIT better than FBTC for Canadian RRSP investors?

Through WealthSimple, no. FBTC's 0.39% MER with zero FX friction beats IBIT's 0.25% MER plus WealthSimple's 1.5% FX fee on every purchase. The only scenario where IBIT is clearly superior is if you use a USD RRSP at a discount brokerage and convert CAD once via Norbert's Gambit — then IBIT's lower MER compounds in your favour indefinitely.

Does IBIT have any tax complications inside a Canadian registered account?

IBIT currently distributes no income — Bitcoin pays no dividends — so the 15% US withholding tax that affects dividend-paying US ETFs inside Canadian RRSPs is not a current concern. However, US-listed ETFs held in Canadian registered accounts are subject to different reporting considerations than Canadian-domiciled ETFs. Consult a tax advisor if you have questions about your specific situation.

What is Norbert's Gambit and how does it help with IBIT?

Norbert's Gambit is a technique to convert CAD to USD at near-interbank rates by buying a Canadian-listed ETF that has a USD equivalent (e.g., DLR.TO → DLR.U.TO), waiting for settlement (1–2 days), then selling the USD version. The all-in cost is typically 0.1–0.2% — far below WealthSimple's 1.5%. After converting, you hold USD inside your registered account and can buy IBIT without further FX fees. This works at Questrade, TD Direct, CIBC Investor's Edge, and other discount brokerages that support USD registered accounts.

Who custodies the Bitcoin held by IBIT?

IBIT's underlying Bitcoin is custodied by Coinbase Custody Trust Company, the institutional custody arm of Coinbase and one of the most widely used custodians for institutional Bitcoin holdings. BlackRock selected Coinbase Custody when structuring IBIT, the same custodian used by CI Galaxy's BTCX.B and Evolve's EBIT.

Not Sure Which Bitcoin ETF Is Right for You?

IBIT, FBTC, BTCX.B, or direct Bitcoin — the right choice depends on your accounts, how you access them, and your time horizon. Our free assessment gives you a personalized recommendation.

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 and FX fee estimates are approximate — always verify current fund documents and brokerage fee schedules. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions. BalanceBitcoin is not a registered investment dealer or portfolio manager.