What Happens to Your RRSP When You Die in Canada? 2025

RRSP rules at death, the spousal rollover, tax implications for beneficiaries, and strategies to minimize the tax hit on your estate.

Your RRSP is likely one of your largest assets — and at death, the tax treatment depends entirely on who you've named as beneficiary. Get this right and you can defer the tax for decades. Get it wrong and your estate could owe hundreds of thousands in tax within months of your death.

The Basic Rule: RRSP Becomes Income at Death

Under the Income Tax Act, when you die, the fair market value of your RRSP is included as income on your terminal (final) tax return — in full, in the year of death. There is no capital gains treatment; the entire balance is ordinary income taxed at your marginal rate.

Example: You have a $400,000 RRSP and other income of $50,000 in your final year.
Total income on terminal return: $450,000
Estimated federal + provincial tax (Ontario): ~$200,000+

Your estate would owe approximately $200,000 in income tax on the RRSP alone.

This is why RRSP beneficiary planning is so critical — and why the spousal rollover is the most valuable provision in Canadian tax law for married Canadians.

Spousal Rollover: Tax-Free Transfer to Spouse

If you name your spouse or common-law partner as beneficiary of your RRSP, the entire balance can roll over to their RRSP or RRIF — completely tax-free at the time of transfer. No income is included on your terminal return for the RRSP.

The surviving spouse receives the RRSP proceeds, contributes them to their own RRSP/RRIF, and tax is deferred until they make withdrawals or die. This can defer the tax by decades.

Requirements for spousal rollover: The beneficiary must be a spouse or common-law partner. The proceeds must be transferred directly to their RRSP or RRIF (not paid out as cash and then contributed). The surviving spouse must have sufficient RRSP room, or the transfer must go to an RRIF (no contribution room required for RRIF).

What Happens When Non-Spouse Is Named Beneficiary?

BeneficiaryTax Treatment
Spouse / common-law partnerFull rollover to their RRSP/RRIF — tax deferred
Financially dependent child/grandchild under 18Can purchase a fixed-term annuity to age 18; tax spread over annuity period
Financially dependent disabled child/grandchild (any age)Can roll over to their RDSP or RRSP/RRIF; significant deferral available
Adult child (not financially dependent)Full RRSP value included as income on deceased's terminal return
Estate (or no beneficiary named)Full RRSP value included as income on terminal return; RRSP becomes part of probated estate
Charitable organizationFull value on terminal return; charitable donation credit may offset tax

What "Financially Dependent" Means

A child or grandchild is considered financially dependent if their income in the year before death was below the basic personal amount (approximately $15,705 for 2024). For disabled beneficiaries, the income threshold is higher. This must be established at the time of death.

RRSP vs. RRIF at Death

The same rules apply to RRIFs (Registered Retirement Income Funds). Once your RRSP is converted to a RRIF (mandatory by end of the year you turn 71), beneficiary designations and the spousal rollover work the same way.

One difference: a RRIF has minimum annual withdrawal requirements. If the deceased died partway through the year, the minimum RRIF payment for the year of death may still need to be paid out to the estate (and included as income), even if the remaining balance rolls over to a surviving spouse.

Naming the Estate as Beneficiary: Why to Avoid It

Many Canadians leave their RRSP beneficiary blank or name "my estate." This is almost always the worst option:

Strategies to Minimize RRSP Tax at Death

1. Name Spouse as Beneficiary

The most impactful step most Canadians can take. The spousal rollover defers tax for as long as the surviving spouse lives.

2. RRSP Meltdown During Life

Gradually withdraw from your RRSP/RRIF during retirement rather than leaving a large balance to be fully taxed on the terminal return. Coordinate withdrawals with income splitting (pension income splitting, spousal RRSP contributions) to minimize marginal rates.

3. Spousal RRSP Contributions

Contributing to a spousal RRSP while working builds retirement savings in the lower-income spouse's name — reducing the RRSP balance in the higher earner's estate at death.

4. Life Insurance to Cover the Tax

If you expect a large RRSP to be taxable on the terminal return (e.g., no surviving spouse), life insurance can fund the tax bill without forcing asset liquidation.

5. Charitable Bequest via RRSP

Naming a registered charity as RRSP beneficiary generates a donation tax credit on the terminal return that can offset the income inclusion — potentially making the RRSP bequest nearly tax-neutral.

Keep beneficiary designations current: An outdated RRSP beneficiary designation — naming a deceased person, ex-spouse, or minor child without a trustee — can create significant tax and legal problems. Review designations every few years and after any major life event.

Simplify Your Financial Life — Start with Free Banking

Part of good estate planning is keeping your financial accounts simple. KOHO's no-fee account is easy to manage and easy to include in your estate plan. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a bonus.

Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYA

Frequently Asked Questions

Is an RRSP taxable when you die in Canada?

Yes — the full fair market value of your RRSP is included as income on your terminal return, unless it rolls over to a surviving spouse/common-law partner or qualifies for one of the other limited rollovers (financially dependent child/grandchild).

Can I leave my RRSP to my children tax-free?

Not to adult children — the RRSP will be fully taxable on your terminal return. Only a surviving spouse, qualifying minor dependent, or financially dependent disabled child/grandchild can receive a tax-deferred rollover.

Does the RRSP go through probate if I name a beneficiary?

No. If you name a specific individual as beneficiary, the RRSP passes directly to them outside the estate, bypassing probate. If you name the estate or leave the designation blank, it goes through probate.

Related guides: TFSA at Death | Beneficiary Designations | Estate Tax in Canada | Life Insurance in Estate Planning