In retirement, you typically have income available from multiple account types: a RRIF (converted from RRSP), a TFSA, non-registered investment accounts, CPP, OAS, and possibly a pension or LIF. The order in which you draw these down has a significant impact on your total lifetime tax. There is no universal "right answer" — the optimal sequence depends on your specific income sources, tax brackets, benefit eligibility, and estate goals — but this guide covers the key principles.
| Account | Withdrawal Tax | Affects Income Tests? | Mandatory Withdrawals? |
|---|---|---|---|
| RRSP/RRIF | Fully taxable (marginal rate) | Yes | RRIF from age 71 |
| TFSA | Tax-free | No | No |
| Non-registered | Interest: taxable; dividends: eligible dividend credit; capital gains: 50% included | Yes | No |
| LIF | Fully taxable | Yes | Yes (min and max) |
The standard guidance in many personal finance texts is:
The logic: draw taxable accounts first to realize capital gains at lower rates and reset the adjusted cost base (ACB). TFSA comes last because it compounds tax-free and withdrawals restore contribution room the following year.
However, in Canada, this simple rule ignores several important factors: RRIF mandatory minimums, OAS clawback risk, GIS eligibility, CPP/OAS deferral timing, and the pension income credit. The optimal strategy is much more nuanced.
If you retire before CPP and OAS begin, your income from government sources is zero. This is often the lowest-income window in retirement — a golden opportunity for RRSP/RRIF meltdown.
Once CPP and/or OAS begin, your mandatory government income floors your taxable income higher. Now:
Once RRIF minimums begin, you lose control over the minimum taxable income from your RRIF. The priority shifts to:
If your RRIF mandatory minimum exceeds your spending needs, withdraw the minimum, pay the tax, and immediately deposit the after-tax remainder into your TFSA (up to available room). Over time, this shifts taxable RRIF assets to tax-free TFSA assets. While you can't avoid the tax on the initial withdrawal, all future growth on those funds becomes tax-free.
Non-registered accounts generate different types of income: interest (fully taxable), eligible dividends (with dividend tax credit), and capital gains (50% inclusion). Strategies include:
If you expect to qualify for GIS (income under ~$21,624 for singles), the optimal strategy is the reverse of high-income planning: use TFSA heavily, minimize RRSP/RRIF withdrawals, and keep your net income as low as possible. Every dollar of RRIF income effectively costs 50 cents in GIS reduction plus income tax — making RRIF withdrawals extremely expensive for GIS recipients.
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Open KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYAThe optimal withdrawal order for a Canadian retiree depends on: income level, provincial tax rates, OAS clawback risk, GIS eligibility, estate goals, and whether you have a spouse with whom to split income. Modelling different scenarios with a spreadsheet or retirement planning software — or with a fee-only financial planner — can identify strategies that save $50,000–$100,000 in lifetime tax for a typical Canadian household.