RRSP Withdrawal Tax Guide

Withholding tax rates, full tax implications, and strategies to minimize the tax hit when you take money out of your RRSP

Withdrawing money from your RRSP before retirement triggers immediate tax consequences. Unlike a TFSA, every dollar you pull out of an RRSP is added to your taxable income for that year. Understanding the withholding tax tiers and planning your withdrawals carefully can save you thousands of dollars.

RRSP Withdrawal Tax Estimator

Withdrawal Amount
Withholding Tax Rate
Withholding Tax Withheld at Source
Estimated Combined Marginal Rate
Estimated Total Tax Owing on Withdrawal
Net Cash Received After Tax

RRSP Withholding Tax Rates — The Three Tiers

When you make an RRSP withdrawal, your financial institution is required by law to withhold a portion and remit it directly to the CRA. This is a prepayment of tax, not the final amount. The withholding rates are:

Withdrawal AmountWithholding Rate (Outside Quebec)Withholding Rate (Quebec)
Up to $5,00010%21%
$5,001 – $15,00020%26%
Over $15,00030%31%
Important: The withholding tax is NOT the final tax. It is a prepayment. Your actual tax owing depends on your total income for the year. If your marginal rate is higher than 30%, you will owe additional tax when you file your return.

Why Withholding Tax Is Just the Beginning

The withholding tax system is designed to collect a portion of expected taxes upfront, but it does not account for your full tax picture. Here is why you often owe more:

The RRSP Withdrawal is Added to Your Total Income

When you withdraw $30,000 from your RRSP, that $30,000 is included on your T4RSP slip as income. It is added to every other source of income you have — employment, business, pension, investment — and your entire income is taxed at the applicable marginal rates.

Example: If you earned $70,000 in employment income and withdrew $20,000 from your RRSP, your total income for tax purposes is $90,000. The RRSP withdrawal is taxed at the rate applicable to the $70,001–$90,000 income bracket — not a separate rate.

The T4RSP Slip

Your financial institution will issue a T4RSP slip by February 28 of the following year for any RRSP withdrawals made during the tax year. Box 22 shows the amount withdrawn, and box 30 shows the withholding tax deducted. Both amounts must be reported on your T1 tax return.

Warning: Early RRSP withdrawals permanently destroy contribution room. Unlike TFSA withdrawals, the room is NOT restored next year. Once you withdraw from your RRSP, that contribution room is gone forever.

Strategies to Minimize RRSP Withdrawal Tax

1. Withdraw in a Low-Income Year

If you take a sabbatical, reduce your hours, or have a year between jobs, that is the ideal time to make strategic RRSP withdrawals. With lower total income, a larger portion of your RRSP withdrawal may fall in the lower tax brackets (20.5% federal on income $57,375–$114,750 for 2026).

2. Spread Withdrawals Over Multiple Years

Rather than taking a large lump sum (taxed at the highest marginal rate), spreading withdrawals over 5–10 years keeps each year's income in lower brackets. This is especially relevant for RRIF planning in retirement.

3. Convert to RRIF and Use Minimum Withdrawals

When you convert to a RRIF at 71, the mandatory minimum withdrawals start relatively small (5.28% at age 71) and give you a controlled, predictable withdrawal strategy. See the RRIF guide for minimum withdrawal rates by age.

4. Use the Home Buyers' Plan or Lifelong Learning Plan

These programs allow you to withdraw from your RRSP without withholding tax and without adding to your taxable income — as long as you repay the amount over the required period. The Home Buyers' Plan allows up to $35,000; the Lifelong Learning Plan allows up to $20,000 total.

5. Income Splitting with a Spousal RRSP

If you contributed to a Spousal RRSP, your spouse can withdraw those funds in retirement at their (typically lower) tax rate. The 3-year attribution rule must be respected — withdrawals within 3 years of a spousal contribution are attributed back to the contributor.

6. Pension Income Splitting

RRIF withdrawals (and certain annuity income from age 65+) qualify for pension income splitting, allowing couples to split up to 50% of eligible pension income and reduce their combined tax burden.

RRSP Withdrawal Before Retirement — Is It Ever Worth It?

In most cases, early RRSP withdrawal is a significant financial mistake. Here is why:

  1. Permanent loss of contribution room — you cannot re-contribute the withdrawn amount
  2. Immediate tax hit — the full amount is added to this year's income
  3. Loss of tax-sheltered growth — every dollar withdrawn stops compounding tax-free
  4. Benefit clawbacks — higher income can reduce GIS, CCTB, and other income-tested benefits

The only cases where early withdrawal may make sense: you are in an extremely low income year (first-year student, career break), you are using the HBP or LLP programs, or you face a genuine financial emergency with no other option.

RRSP Withdrawal at Age 71 — Mandatory Conversion

You must convert your RRSP to a RRIF (or annuity) by December 31 of the year you turn 71. If you do not, the CRA treats the entire balance as a lump-sum withdrawal — this would be fully taxed as income in one year, which is almost always the worst possible outcome.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I avoid withholding tax on RRSP withdrawals?

Only through the Home Buyers' Plan or Lifelong Learning Plan. All other direct withdrawals are subject to mandatory withholding. You cannot instruct your bank to skip the withholding.

Is the withholding tax the only tax I pay?

No. The withholding is a prepayment. If your marginal rate exceeds the withholding rate, you owe additional tax when you file. If it is lower (e.g., you had no other income), you may get a refund.

Are there penalties for RRSP withdrawals?

No formal penalty beyond income tax. But the permanent loss of contribution room is a significant hidden cost.

What if I need the money urgently?

Consider exhausting all other options first: TFSA withdrawals (tax-free, room restores next year), line of credit, or emergency fund. RRSP should be a last resort before retirement.