Updated: March 2025 | bremo.io financial guides
Can Low-Income Canadians Benefit from an RRSP? 2025
The RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan) is one of Canada's most promoted savings vehicles — but it is not the right tool for everyone. For low-income Canadians, an RRSP can sometimes do more harm than good. Understanding when an RRSP helps and when it doesn't is one of the most valuable pieces of financial knowledge you can have.
Short answer: For most low-income Canadians, a TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account) is a better savings vehicle than an RRSP. The RRSP's tax advantages depend heavily on your tax bracket — and if you expect to receive GIS in retirement, RRSP withdrawals can actually reduce your GIS payments significantly.
How an RRSP Works
An RRSP allows you to:
- Contribute money and deduct it from your taxable income in the year you contribute
- Have the money grow tax-sheltered inside the plan
- Pay tax when you withdraw the money in retirement
The tax benefit of an RRSP comes from the difference between your tax rate when you contribute (high, ideally) and when you withdraw (low, ideally in retirement). The RRSP works best when you contribute at a high tax rate and withdraw at a low rate.
The Problem for Low-Income Canadians
The GIS clawback problem. The Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS) is a tax-free monthly payment for low-income seniors 65+. GIS is income-tested — for every dollar of income you have in retirement, your GIS is reduced by approximately 50 cents. RRSP withdrawals count as income. This means that if you expect to receive GIS in retirement, every dollar you withdraw from an RRSP effectively costs you 50 cents in lost GIS. The effective tax rate on RRSP withdrawals can be 50% or higher for low-income seniors — far worse than if you had never used an RRSP.
When an RRSP Still Makes Sense at Low Income
There are situations where an RRSP can benefit lower-income Canadians:
- First Home Buyers' Plan (HBP): You can withdraw up to $35,000 from your RRSP tax-free to buy a first home (must repay within 15 years). If you plan to buy a home, contributing to an RRSP then using the HBP can be smart.
- Lifelong Learning Plan (LLP): You can withdraw up to $100/year ($20,000 total) tax-free for qualifying education
- Years with unusually high income: If you had a higher-income year (severance, capital gain, extra work), contributing to an RRSP that year can reduce your taxes meaningfully
- Spousal RRSP contributions: If your partner earns significantly more, they can contribute to a spousal RRSP in your name to shift income in retirement
Better Alternatives for Low-Income Savers
TFSA — The Better Choice for Most Low-Income Canadians
The Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) is generally a far better savings vehicle for low-income Canadians:
- Contributions are made with after-tax dollars (no deduction)
- Growth inside the TFSA is completely tax-free
- Withdrawals are completely tax-free and do not count as income
- TFSA withdrawals do not affect GIS, Ontario Works, ODSP, or most other income-tested benefits
- Contribution room accumulates at $7,000/year (2024–2025)
- Total room available as of 2025: $95,000 if you have never contributed
For most low-income Canadians saving for retirement, the TFSA eliminates the GIS clawback problem entirely.
RDSP: For Canadians with Disabilities
The Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP) is an extremely valuable savings vehicle for Canadians with disabilities who qualify for the Disability Tax Credit. Key benefits:
- Canada Disability Savings Grant: up to $3,500/year in government matching contributions
- Canada Disability Savings Bond: up to $1,000/year for low-income individuals with no personal contribution required
- Completely exempt from ODSP asset limits (up to certain amounts)
If you have a qualifying disability, the RDSP should be a top priority. Ask your bank or a financial counsellor about getting started.
Practical Summary for Low-Income Canadians
- Open a TFSA first — use it for emergency savings and long-term savings
- If you have a disability, prioritize an RDSP — the government grants are exceptional
- Consider an RRSP only if you are in a higher tax bracket this year, plan to use the HBP, or have a specific tax strategy
- File your taxes every year — even with no income, to accumulate TFSA room and access all benefits
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