RRSP Beneficiary in Canada — Tax Rules & Best Practices (2026)

Last updated: March 2026

Key Rule: When you die, your RRSP is fully included in your income for the year of death — unless it rolls over tax-free to a qualifying beneficiary (spouse, common-law partner, or financially dependent child/grandchild). For most married Canadians, naming your spouse is the single most important RRSP beneficiary decision.

What Happens to Your RRSP When You Die?

At death, your RRSP is deemed to have been collapsed. The full fair market value is included in your income on your terminal tax return for the year of death. On a $400,000 RRSP, this could mean a tax bill of $150,000–$180,000 at the highest marginal rate — payable by your estate even if beneficiaries receive the cash directly.

This is the "RRSP tax bomb" that estate planners talk about. The solution for most married Canadians is the spousal rollover.

Spousal Rollover — Tax Deferral Strategy

If you name your spouse or common-law partner as beneficiary of your RRSP, the full value can roll over directly into their RRSP or RRIF with no immediate tax. Tax is deferred until your spouse withdraws the funds. See our full guide: Spousal Rollover in Canada.

Qualifying Beneficiaries by Tax Outcome

BeneficiaryTax ResultProbate?
Spouse / common-law partnerFull deferral via rolloverNo
Dependent child/grandchild (disability)Rollover to RRSP or RDSPNo
Dependent child (financially dependent)Annuity to age 18No
Adult child (non-dependent)Full value taxed in deceased's returnNo
Estate / no beneficiaryFull value taxed; probate appliesYes
Estate Named as Beneficiary: If you name your estate as RRSP beneficiary or leave the designation blank, the RRSP collapses into your estate — full income inclusion with no rollover, subject to probate fees, and exposed to estate creditors. Almost always the worst outcome.

RRIF Beneficiary Rules

The same rules apply to RRIFs. If you name your spouse as RRIF beneficiary, they can become the "successor annuitant" — continuing RRIF payments as if it were their own RRIF, which is simpler than a full rollover. Review your RRIF beneficiary separately from your RRSP, as they may be held at different institutions.

Naming Minor Children as RRSP Beneficiaries

Naming a minor child directly on an RRSP creates problems: financial institutions cannot pay directly to minors. Funds are held by a court-appointed trustee until the child turns 18. Better approaches:

Common RRSP Beneficiary Mistakes

How to Change Your RRSP Beneficiary

  1. Contact your financial institution
  2. Request a Change of Beneficiary form
  3. Provide full legal name, date of birth, and SIN of beneficiary
  4. Specify primary and contingent beneficiaries with percentages
  5. Sign, submit, and keep a copy

RRSP Beneficiary and Probate Savings

A named beneficiary means the RRSP passes outside the estate, avoiding probate fees. On a $500,000 RRSP in Ontario, that saves $6,750 in probate fees — plus any tax deferral benefit from a spousal rollover.

Best Practice: Name your spouse as primary RRSP beneficiary (spousal rollover), and your children equally as contingent beneficiaries. If you have minor children or a disabled beneficiary, consult an estate lawyer about trust structures.

🏦 Protect Your Financial Legacy

Estate planning starts with good financial habits. KOHO's free account makes it easy to track spending, save automatically, and build the wealth you'll one day pass on.

Get KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYA

Related Guides

Disclaimer: Not legal advice — consult an estate lawyer or tax advisor. RRSP rules are governed by the Income Tax Act (Canada).