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First RRSP Contribution Guide Canada 2026 | How to Start Your RRSP

Updated

Your first RRSP contribution is one of the most impactful financial moves you can make. This guide walks you through everything — contribution limits, where to invest, and how to get the maximum tax refund.

What Is an RRSP?

A Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) is a government-registered account that lets you:

  1. Contribute pre-tax dollars (reducing your taxable income)
  2. Invest and grow money tax-deferred
  3. Withdraw in retirement at a (hopefully) lower tax rate
RRSP Feature Detail
Tax deduction on contributions Yes — reduces income taxes owing
Growth inside account 100% tax-sheltered
Tax on withdrawal Yes — but ideally at a lower rate in retirement
2026 contribution limit $32,490 or 18% of prior year income, whichever is less
Deadline for 2025 return March 1, 2026

How the RRSP Tax Deduction Works

Your RRSP contribution reduces your taxable income dollar for dollar. The value of this depends on your marginal tax rate.

Province Income Tax Saved on $5,000 Contribution
Ontario $60,000 ~$1,500
Ontario $90,000 ~$2,150
British Columbia $75,000 ~$1,850
Alberta $80,000 ~$2,050
Quebec $65,000 ~$1,800

The higher your income, the more valuable each RRSP dollar. This is why many advisors suggest contributing more to your RRSP as your income grows.

How Much Contribution Room Do You Have?

Finding Your Room

  1. Log into CRA My Account
  2. Look for “RRSP/PRPP Deduction Limit” — this is the maximum you can contribute this year
  3. Alternatively, check your Notice of Assessment from last year’s tax return

How Room Accumulates

Year Income Room Added (18%) Notes
2023 $50,000 $9,000 Unused room carries forward
2024 $55,000 $9,900
2025 $60,000 $10,800 Max $32,490 applies
Total by 2026 $29,700 (if none was ever used)

Over-Contributing

Contributing more than your limit triggers a 1%/month penalty on the excess. You have a $2,000 lifetime buffer before the penalty kicks in.

See our RRSP contribution limit guide for full details.

RRSP vs TFSA: Which First?

Situation Recommendation
Income under $55,000 Max TFSA first — smaller RRSP deduction not worth the locked-in effect
Income $55,000–$75,000 Split between both or lean TFSA
Income over $75,000 Prioritize RRSP — higher deduction value
Saving for a home in under 5 years FHSA first, then TFSA, then RRSP
Employer matches RRSP Always match first, regardless of income

See our TFSA vs RRSP calculator for a personalized comparison.

Where to Open Your RRSP

Online Brokerages (Best for Self-Directed)

Institution Annual Fee Commissions Best For
Wealthsimple $0 $0 Beginners
Questrade $0 $0 buy / $4.95 sell Regular investors
Interactive Brokers $0 $0 Advanced
BMO InvestorLine $0 $9.95 BMO customers

Robo-Advisors (Managed)

Service MER Best For
Wealthsimple Invest 0.20% + 0.20% fund Set-and-forget, small balances
Questrade Portfolios 0.25% Low-cost managed option

Bank RRSPs

Convenient, but often push high-fee mutual funds. If using a bank, choose their index mutual funds or switch to ETFs at a discount brokerage.

Best choice for most beginners: Open a Wealthsimple RRSP and buy XEQT.

What to Invest in Your RRSP

The Simple Choice: All-in-One ETFs

ETF Allocation MER Best For
XEQT 100% global stocks 0.20% 20+ years to retirement
XGRO 80% stocks / 20% bonds 0.20% 10–20 years to retirement
XBAL 60% stocks / 40% bonds 0.20% 5–10 years to retirement

What to Avoid in an RRSP

Investment Why to Avoid
Savings accounts (RRSP GIC/HISA) 4% return is outpaced by inflation over decades
High-MER mutual funds (2%+) Fees destroy long-term returns
Speculative stocks Too much risk for core retirement savings

One exception: Canadian dividend stocks and ETFs lose the withholding tax benefit in a TFSA but not RRSP. US-listed ETFs are generally best held in an RRSP to avoid dividend withholding tax.

The RRSP Tax Refund Cycle

A common strategy is to contribute to your RRSP before the deadline and reinvest the refund.

Example: $5,000 Contribution, $80K Income in ON

Step Amount
RRSP contribution $5,000
Approximate tax refund ~$2,000
Re-invest refund next year $2,000 additional contribution
New refund from that ~$800

Reinvesting your refund each year dramatically accelerates your RRSP balance.

RRSP Contribution Deadline

Tax Year RRSP Contribution Deadline
2025 March 1, 2026
2026 March 1, 2027

You can contribute and claim the 2025 deduction up to March 1, 2026. If you contribute after March 1, it counts toward 2026.

Making Your First Contribution: Step by Step

  1. Calculate your room — check CRA My Account or prior year NOA
  2. Choose an institution — Wealthsimple recommended for beginners
  3. Open RRSP account — takes 10–15 minutes online
  4. Transfer money — bank transfer or bill payment
  5. Buy an ETF — search XEQT, place order
  6. Save your contribution receipt — needed for tax filing
  7. Enter on the tax return — claim the deduction under RRSP contributions

RRSP Strategies for Beginners

Strategy How It Works
Contribute early in the year Room to grow tax-sheltered longer
Automate monthly contributions Dollar-cost averaging, avoids lump sum pressure
Spousal RRSP Income-split in retirement if one spouse earns more
RRSP First 60 Days (Home Buyers Plan) Use up to $60,000 toward first home
Save deduction for high-income year Contribute now but claim deduction later

See our RRSP calculator to project your balance at retirement.