Beneficiary designations are one of the most powerful — and most neglected — tools in Canadian financial planning. They allow your registered accounts and insurance policies to pass directly to named individuals, bypassing your will, avoiding probate, and transferring funds far faster than an estate can be settled. But outdated or incorrect designations are also one of the leading causes of estate disputes in Canada.
A beneficiary designation is a legal instruction you give to a financial institution directing who should receive the funds in an account or policy when you die. Unlike assets that must go through probate, designated assets pass directly to the named beneficiary — typically within days or weeks of death, with just a death certificate and claim form.
Non-registered investment accounts and regular bank accounts do not have beneficiary designations in most provinces (Quebec allows it for bank accounts in some cases). For these, joint ownership or a will is required.
The tax treatment of RRSP and RRIF beneficiaries varies significantly depending on who you name:
If you name your spouse or common-law partner as beneficiary, they can roll the RRSP or RRIF proceeds into their own RRSP or RRIF — completely tax-deferred. No immediate income tax is triggered. This is called a spousal rollover. It's almost always the optimal choice for married or common-law couples.
A financially dependent minor child can receive RRSP proceeds and have them used to purchase a term certain annuity to age 18 — spreading out the tax impact. A financially dependent child with a disability can roll funds into their own RDSP (Registered Disability Savings Plan). These are important exceptions to know about.
When an RRSP or RRIF is paid to any other beneficiary, the full value is included in your income in the year of death. This creates a potentially massive tax bill on your final return. On a $500,000 RRSP left to an adult child, your estate could owe over $200,000 in tax. The child receives the money tax-free, but your estate pays the tax — meaning other assets in the estate are reduced to pay it.
TFSAs have two types of designations, and they work very differently:
When you die, the TFSA funds are paid to the named beneficiary. However, the TFSA loses its tax-free status from the date of death. Any growth between death and when the funds are paid out is taxable to the beneficiary. The beneficiary also does not gain additional TFSA contribution room from the inherited amount (they already have their own room).
A successor holder designation (available in most provinces) is superior for married couples. The surviving spouse takes over the TFSA itself — keeping the tax-free status, keeping the room, and treating it as their own account. No tax at all. If you're married, naming your spouse as successor holder rather than beneficiary can mean meaningful tax savings if the TFSA is large.
Life insurance proceeds paid to a named beneficiary (other than the estate) are received tax-free by the beneficiary and completely bypass probate. This is one of the most efficient wealth transfer mechanisms in Canada. Key considerations:
Employer pension plans have their own beneficiary designation forms. A defined benefit pension may offer a survivor benefit to a spouse; your designation determines whether this applies and who receives any death benefit. Group life insurance through an employer also requires its own designation. Don't assume your pension beneficiary is correctly set from when you first enrolled — review it annually.
Naming your estate means the funds go through probate, potentially triggering fees and delays. The funds may also become accessible to estate creditors. Always name a specific person (or persons) if possible.
Unlike a will (which in most provinces automatically revokes gifts to a former spouse upon divorce), beneficiary designations on registered accounts and insurance typically are NOT automatically revoked by divorce. Your ex-spouse could receive your RRSP if you don't update the designation. This is one of the most common estate planning errors in Canada.
If your primary beneficiary dies before you and you have no contingent beneficiary named, the funds default to your estate — probate applies. Always name a backup.
Your will and beneficiary designations must work together. If your will attempts to equalize an inheritance but all your registered assets are designated to one person, the outcome will be unequal regardless of the will.
Process varies by institution, but generally:
Review designations annually — set a calendar reminder. Review immediately after: marriage, divorce, death of a named beneficiary, birth of a child, or major change in assets.
KOHO offers a free account with no monthly fees and no minimum balance — easy to use and works anywhere in Canada. Use code 45ET55JSYA to get a small bonus when you sign up.
Open KOHO Free — No Fees — Code 45ET55JSYA