Withholding rates, grossing up for income, and strategic timing to minimize tax
Estimated Net After-Tax Withdrawal:
When you make an RRSP withdrawal, your financial institution is required to withhold a portion for income tax before sending you the funds. These are withholding rates — not the final tax. Your actual tax owing will be determined when you file your return. The withholding rates for 2026 (outside Quebec) are:
| Withdrawal Amount | Withholding Rate | Tax Withheld |
|---|---|---|
| Up to $5,000 | 10% | Up to $500 |
| $5,001 – $15,000 | 20% | $1,000 – $3,000 |
| Over $15,000 | 30% | $4,500+ |
Quebec residents face higher withholding because both federal and provincial withholding applies: 15% federal + 16% provincial for amounts up to $5,000, scaling up for larger withdrawals.
Every dollar withdrawn from an RRSP is added to your taxable income for the year. The withdrawal gets reported on a T4RSP slip issued by your financial institution. Unlike capital gains or dividends, there is no preferential tax treatment — RRSP withdrawals are taxed at your full marginal rate, just like employment income.
This is the key trade-off of the RRSP: you get an upfront deduction when you contribute, but every dollar you eventually withdraw is taxable. The strategy is to contribute when your marginal rate is high (saving more tax) and withdraw when your rate is lower (paying less tax). For most Canadians, that means contributing during peak working years and withdrawing in retirement.
Any year your income drops — a sabbatical, parental leave, early retirement before CPP/OAS, a gap year, or a business loss year — is an opportunity to withdraw RRSP funds at a low marginal rate. In Ontario, the first ~$15,705 of income is tax-free (basic personal amount for 2026). Withdrawing up to the bottom of the 20.5% federal bracket (~$57,375 in 2026) may make sense if you'd otherwise be forced into higher brackets later.
Your RRSP must convert to a RRIF by December 31 of the year you turn 71. At that point, mandatory minimum withdrawals begin. For large RRSPs, these mandatory withdrawals can push retirees into high marginal brackets and trigger OAS clawback. A systematic strategy of planned RRSP withdrawals (the "RRSP meltdown") in your 60s — before CPP and OAS begin — can dramatically reduce lifetime tax.
Some people try to stay in the 10% withholding bracket by making multiple withdrawals of $5,000 or less. This doesn't reduce your actual tax — only the upfront withholding. Your total income for the year determines your tax bill at filing time, regardless of how many individual RRSP withdrawals you made.
If your spouse earns little or no income in a given year, consider how spousal RRSP withdrawals can be timed to use their lower bracket. For spousal RRSP withdrawals to be taxed in the spouse's hands (not yours), the attribution rules require 3 calendar years with no contributions to the spousal RRSP. See our spousal RRSP guide.
RRSP withdrawals under the Home Buyers' Plan (HBP) — up to $60,000 — and the Lifelong Learning Plan (LLP) — up to $100/year, $20,000 lifetime — are not immediately taxable. You must repay the amounts over defined periods. These are the only RRSP withdrawal mechanisms that avoid immediate income inclusion.
| Taxable Income | Federal Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to $57,375 | 15% |
| $57,376 – $114,750 | 20.5% |
| $114,751 – $158,519 | 26% |
| $158,520 – $220,000 | 29% |
| Over $220,000 | 33% |
Provincial tax stacks on top of federal, bringing combined rates to 20–54% depending on province and income level.
You cannot stay in an RRSP forever. At age 71, you must choose one of:
After-tax RRSP proceeds can earn 4.5% in KOHO's high-interest savings while you decide your next move. No fees, no minimums.