Bremo

Retirement Withdrawal Strategy Canada 2025

The tax-smart order for drawing down your RRSP, RRIF, TFSA, and non-registered accounts to make your money last longer.

Save More for Retirement — Fee-Free

KOHO's free banking means more money for your RRSP. Code 45ET55JSYA = $20 bonus.

Open KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYA

Why Withdrawal Order Matters

In retirement you draw income from multiple accounts — RRSP/RRIF, TFSA, non-registered — each with different tax treatments. Choosing the wrong withdrawal sequence can cost tens of thousands in unnecessary taxes over a 25-year retirement. Getting the sequence right minimizes lifetime taxes and maximizes after-tax wealth.

Account Tax Treatment Summary

AccountWithdrawal Tax TreatmentBenefit Impact
Non-registeredCapital gains (50% inclusion) or dividends (grossed-up)Minimal on OAS/GIS
TFSATax-freeNo impact on OAS or GIS
RRSP/RRIF100% taxable as incomeCounts toward OAS clawback, GIS reduction

The General Withdrawal Sequence

For most Canadians, the tax-optimal sequence is:

  1. Minimum RRIF withdrawals (mandatory once RRIF established)
  2. Non-registered accounts (lowest-taxed source — capital gains)
  3. TFSA (fill income gap without adding taxable income)
  4. Additional RRIF withdrawals (only if needed)

The goal is to keep total taxable income below the OAS clawback threshold ($90,997 in 2024) while fully funding your lifestyle from the mix of sources.

RRSP Meltdown Before Age 71

If your RRSP is large, consider beginning withdrawals before the mandatory RRIF age of 71. In early retirement years — when CPP and OAS are not yet in payment — your marginal tax rate may be very low. Withdrawing $15,000–$25,000/year from your RRSP and depositing the after-tax amount into a TFSA is a powerful strategy that reduces future mandatory RRIF income while building tax-free savings.

Coordinating CPP and OAS Timing with Withdrawals

Your CPP and OAS start dates directly affect your withdrawal strategy. If you defer CPP and OAS to 70, your portfolio must cover a larger income gap in the years 65–70. This means drawing more from TFSA and non-registered accounts in those years, while letting RRSP/RRIF compound. Once CPP and OAS begin at 70, portfolio withdrawals can drop significantly.

The Bucket Strategy for Canadian Retirees

The bucket approach divides savings into time-segmented pools:

Bucket 1 is refilled annually from Bucket 2, which is refilled from Bucket 3. This structure prevents panic-selling equities during downturns and provides psychological comfort during market volatility.

Sustainable Withdrawal Rate: 4% and Beyond

The 4% rule (withdraw 4% of initial portfolio, adjusted for inflation annually) has a strong historical track record for 30-year retirements. For 35–40 year retirements (early retirees), 3.5% is more conservative. Canadian-specific research suggests 3.8–4.2% is sustainable for a diversified portfolio held in registered accounts.

Free Banking = More Retirement Savings

Stop paying bank fees — put that money in your RRSP instead. Code 45ET55JSYA = $20 bonus.

Start Saving Free with KOHO