RRSP for Non-Residents of Canada 2025

Millions of Canadians have accumulated significant Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) balances over their working years. When they leave Canada and become non-residents, the RRSP does not disappear — but the rules change significantly. This guide explains what happens to your RRSP as a Canadian non-resident in 2025.

Can Non-Residents Keep Their RRSP?

Yes. Becoming a non-resident of Canada does not force you to close or collapse your RRSP. You can maintain your existing RRSP indefinitely as a non-resident. The RRSP is exempt from the deemed disposition rules that apply to other assets when you leave Canada — it is not treated as if you sold it on your departure date.

RRSP Contributions as a Non-Resident

Once you become a non-resident, you generally cannot make new RRSP contributions and receive a deduction. You cannot generate new RRSP contribution room because contribution room is based on earned income reported on Canadian tax returns — which non-residents typically do not have (unless they have Canadian-source earned income).

If you contribute to your RRSP as a non-resident — using leftover contribution room from when you were a resident — those contributions are subject to a 25% non-resident tax on the amount contributed. This makes additional contributions while a non-resident generally a bad idea. Confirm with a tax professional before contributing.

RRSP Withdrawals as a Non-Resident

When you withdraw from your RRSP as a non-resident, Canada withholds non-resident withholding tax on the gross withdrawal amount. The withholding rate depends on the amount and whether a tax treaty applies:

ScenarioWithholding Rate
No tax treaty (default)25% on all withdrawals
Canada-US Treaty (lump sum)25% if lump sum over certain threshold
Canada-US Treaty (periodic payments)15% if structured as periodic payments
Canada-UK Treaty25% standard; periodic may be lower
Other treaty countriesVaries — check specific treaty

The Canada-US Treaty Benefit for RRSP Withdrawals

Under the Canada-US Tax Treaty, RRSP withdrawals made by Canadians living in the US may be subject to a reduced withholding rate if the withdrawals qualify as periodic annuity-type payments. However, the rules for what qualifies as "periodic" are strict — regular periodic payments from a converted RRIF may qualify, while lump-sum withdrawals typically face the full 25% rate.

Strategy tip for Canada-US snowbirds and expats: Converting your RRSP to an RRIF (Registered Retirement Income Fund) before or after becoming a US resident and taking regular minimum RRIF payments may qualify for the 15% treaty withholding rate rather than 25%. This requires careful planning and professional advice.

Tax Treatment in Your New Country

In addition to Canadian withholding tax, you may owe tax on RRSP withdrawals in your country of residence. The treatment varies:

Converting RRSP to RRIF as a Non-Resident

You can convert your RRSP to an RRIF as a non-resident. RRIF minimum withdrawals will be subject to the same non-resident withholding tax as RRSP withdrawals. Converting to an RRIF may allow you to benefit from the lower treaty withholding rates available on periodic annuity payments in certain tax treaties.

Can You Leave Your RRSP Invested?

Yes — you can leave your RRSP invested and growing without withdrawals for as long as you wish. The growth inside the RRSP is sheltered from annual Canadian tax even as a non-resident. However:

Spousal RRSPs

If you have a Spousal RRSP and your spouse becomes a non-resident, the same rules apply. The attribution rules (where withdrawals within 3 years are attributed back to the contributing spouse) continue to apply even after becoming a non-resident if the contributions were made while resident in Canada.

Free Everyday Banking Before You Travel

Before your trip, make sure your home banking has zero fees. KOHO gives Canadians a no-fee account with cash back on everyday spending — so you have more money for travel. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a sign-up bonus.

Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYA

Key Points for Non-Resident RRSP Holders