Last updated: March 2026
A beneficiary designation is an instruction on a financial account or insurance policy that directs where the funds go when you die — completely outside of your will and the probate process. These designations are legally binding contracts between you and the financial institution or insurer.
Assets that can carry beneficiary designations in Canada:
For most Canadian families, registered accounts and life insurance represent the majority of their wealth. If those assets have incorrect, outdated, or missing beneficiary designations, the consequences can be severe:
| Scenario | Consequence |
|---|---|
| No beneficiary named on RRSP | Full value included in estate, subject to probate and taxes immediately |
| Beneficiary predeceased you, no contingent named | Falls into estate — probate, potential tax acceleration |
| Minor child named directly | Court-appointed trustee required; funds frozen until age 18 |
| Outdated designation (ex-spouse) | Ex-spouse receives the funds in most provinces |
| Estate named as beneficiary | Subject to probate, creditors, and delay |
The first person(s) to receive your account or policy proceeds. You can name multiple primary beneficiaries with percentage splits (e.g., 50% to each child).
Receives the funds only if all primary beneficiaries predecease you or cannot receive the funds. Always name a contingent beneficiary. If you name "my children" equally, specify what happens if one child predeceases you — do their share go to their children (per stirpes) or to the surviving children (per capita)?
For TFSAs, a spouse or common-law partner can be named as "successor holder" rather than just beneficiary. This is more powerful: the successor holder inherits your TFSA as their own TFSA, preserving its tax-free status and not using up their own TFSA room. See TFSA beneficiary guide.
Most designations are revocable — you can change them anytime. An irrevocable beneficiary designation (common in some insurance policies and Quebec mandated by law in some cases) requires the beneficiary's consent to change. Irrevocable designations are unusual but important to understand if you have them.
When a spouse or common-law partner is the named beneficiary (or successor holder) of an RRSP/RRIF, the funds can roll over to the surviving spouse's RRSP/RRIF on a tax-deferred basis — no immediate tax hit. This is one of the most powerful estate planning tools available to Canadians. See spousal rollover guide.
Naming a minor child directly as beneficiary of an RRSP or life insurance policy triggers a significant problem: financial institutions cannot pay directly to a minor. The funds will be held by the provincial public trustee or require a court-appointed trustee until the child turns 18 (or 19 in some provinces). The child then receives the full lump sum at that age — not always ideal.
Better approach: Name a testamentary trust (created in your will) as beneficiary, with instructions for how and when funds are distributed to your children. Requires a well-drafted will and estate lawyer input.
Naming a beneficiary who receives government disability benefits (ODSP in Ontario, AISH in Alberta, etc.) can inadvertently disqualify them from those benefits if they receive a lump sum inheritance. Solutions include:
Contact each financial institution directly:
In Ontario and some other provinces, you can also change RRSP/RRIF and insurance beneficiary designations in your will — but designating directly with the financial institution is cleaner and avoids ambiguity.
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