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RRSPs let you deduct contributions from taxable income and grow investments tax-free until retirement. Here’s everything you need to know.
Table of Contents
RRSP Basics
Feature
Details
Contribution deducted from income
Yes
Investment growth
Tax-deferred
Withdrawals
Taxed as income
Best for
Higher earners, retirement
Age limit
December 31 of year you turn 71
2026 Contribution Limits
Calculation
Amount
Annual RRSP limit
$31,560
As percentage of income
18% of previous year
Carry forward
Unlimited
Your limit: Lesser of $31,560 or 18% of previous year’s earned income, plus unused room.
Tax Savings Example
$80,000 Income, $10,000 RRSP Contribution (Ontario)
Item
Before RRSP
After RRSP
Income
$80,000
$70,000
Federal tax
$12,300
$10,300
Provincial tax
$5,100
$4,100
Total tax
$17,400
$14,400
Tax saved
$3,000
30% marginal rate = 30% tax savings on RRSP contribution.
Tax Savings by Income Level
Income
Marginal Rate
Tax Back per $10K
$30,000
~25%
$2,500
$50,000
~30%
$3,000
$75,000
~32%
$3,200
$100,000
~37%
$3,700
$150,000
~44%
$4,400
Higher income = bigger RRSP benefit.
Finding Your Contribution Room
Source
How
Notice of Assessment
After filing taxes
CRA My Account
Online, current
Call CRA
1-800-959-8281
RRSP Investments
What You Can Hold
Investment
Allowed
Stocks (Canadian, US, international)
✓
Bonds
✓
GICs
✓
Mutual funds
✓
ETFs
✓
REITs
✓
Cash
✓
What You Can’t Hold
Investment
Allowed
Real estate directly
✗
Private company shares (usually)
✗
Collectibles
✗
Cryptocurrency (directly)
✗
Spousal RRSP
Feature
Details
How it works
You contribute, spouse owns
Deduction
In your name
Withdrawal
In spouse’s name
Purpose
Income splitting in retirement
Spousal RRSP Example
Scenario
Without Spousal
With Spousal
Your retirement income
$80,000
$40,000
Spouse’s retirement income
$20,000
$60,000
Combined tax
$23,000
$18,000
Tax saved
$5,000/year
Attribution rules: Spouse must wait 3 years to withdraw to avoid attribution.
Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP)
Feature
Details
Amount
Up to $60,000/person
Requirement
First-time home buyer
Repayment
Over 15 years
Tax if not repaid
Added to income
HBP Repayment Schedule
Year
Minimum Repayment
Year 1-2
Grace period
Year 3-17
1/15 of total/year
Example: Withdrew $60,000 → Repay $4,000/year.
Lifelong Learning Plan (LLP)
Feature
Details
Amount
Up to $10,000/year, $20,000 total
Purpose
Education for you or spouse
Repayment
Over 10 years
When
At least 3 months in qualifying program
Withdrawal Rules
Before Retirement
Withdrawal Type
Tax
Regular withdrawal
Full withholding + income tax
HBP
No tax (if repaid)
LLP
No tax (if repaid)
Withholding Tax on Withdrawals
Amount
Withholding Rate
Up to $5,000
10%
$5,001-$15,000
20%
Over $15,000
30%
This is just withholding — actual tax may be higher.
Converting to RRIF
Requirement
Details
Convert by
December 31 of year you turn 71
Minimum withdrawal
Starts year after conversion
Tax
Withdrawals taxed as income
RRIF Minimum Withdrawals
Age
Minimum % of Portfolio
72
5.40%
75
5.82%
80
6.82%
85
8.51%
90
11.92%
RRSP vs TFSA
Factor
RRSP
TFSA
Contribution tax deduction
Yes
No
Withdrawal tax
Yes (income)
No
Best for high earner
Yes
Less so
Best for low earner
Less so
Yes
Access flexibility
Limited
Any time
Retirement income splitting
Yes
N/A
Decision Matrix
Income
Primary Account
Under $50,000
TFSA first
$50,000-$100,000
Both, slight RRSP preference
Over $100,000
RRSP first
Near retirement
Depends on expected retirement income
Catch-Up Strategy
Have unused RRSP room?
Strategy
Details
Lump sum
If you have savings
RRSP loan
Deduct now, repay with refund
Gradual increase
Extra each year
RRSP for Small Business Owners
Strategy
Benefit
Pay yourself salary
Creates RRSP room
Contribute before year-end
Reduce taxable income
Spousal RRSP
Split retirement income
Key Dates
Date
Event
March 3, 2026
RRSP deadline for 2025 tax year
December 31
End of year contributions
Year you turn 71
Must convert to RRIF
RRSP Account Types
Type
Best For
Bank RRSP
GICs, simplicity
Brokerage RRSP
Self-directed investing
Group RRSP
Employer matching
Robo-advisor RRSP
Hands-off investing
Low-Cost RRSP Providers
Provider
Fees
Wealthsimple
0.4-0.5%
Questrade
$0 ETF purchases
TD Direct Investing
Varies
Common RRSP Mistakes
Mistake
Solution
Contributing when income is low
Use TFSA instead
Withdrawing early
Lose room permanently
Not claiming spousal
Use for income splitting
Missing deadline
Contribute by early March
Over-contributing
1%/month penalty
Bottom Line
Situation
Strategy
High income now, lower in retirement
Max RRSP (best ROI)
Low income now
Prioritize TFSA
First home buyer
Use HBP ($60K)
Returning to school
Use LLP ($20K)
Self-employed
Create RRSP room with salary
Key tips:
Higher income = bigger RRSP benefit
Don’t withdraw before retirement if possible
Use spousal RRSP for income splitting
TFSA may be better for lower earners
RRSP deadline is ~60 days after year-end
Written by
WealthVieu
WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.
The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy