The RRSP or RRIF you spent decades building can generate a tax bill larger than any single payment in your lifetime — unless you plan for it.
Tax treatment at death: comparison by beneficiary type
| Who receives the RRSP/RRIF | Tax in terminal return | Tax deferred to |
|---|---|---|
| Spouse (proper rollover election) | $0 | Surviving spouse’s withdrawals |
| Spouse as successor annuitant (RRIF) | $0 | Surviving spouse’s withdrawals |
| Adult child (no disability) | Full FMV included as deceased’s income | No deferral — immediate tax |
| Dependent child under 18 | Partial deferral via term annuity | Child’s income over annuity term |
| Dependent disabled child/grandchild | Rollover to RDSP available | RDSP withdrawal rules apply |
| Estate (no named beneficiary) | Full FMV included as deceased’s income | No deferral |
| Registered charity (named beneficiary) | Full inclusion — offset by charitable donation credit | No deferral but tax neutralized |
Estimated terminal tax on RRSP/RRIF (Ontario rates, 2026)
| RRSP/RRIF value | Other income in year of death | Approx. additional tax |
|---|---|---|
| $100,000 | $40,000 | ~$30,000–$38,000 |
| $300,000 | $40,000 | ~$105,000–$130,000 |
| $500,000 | $40,000 | ~$185,000–$225,000 |
| $1,000,000 | $40,000 | ~$420,000–$480,000 |
Combined federal + Ontario marginal rate on top income layer: 53.53% in 2026. Actual tax depends on deductions, credits, and province.
RRIF successor annuitant: setup checklist
- Contact your RRIF carrier directly — not your financial advisor’s generic form
- Complete the carrier’s successor annuitant form (separate from beneficiary form)
- Confirm your spouse has accepted in writing
- Verify the designation is on file — request written confirmation
- Review after any change in marital status
The RRSP meltdown strategy (pre-death planning)
The most effective way to reduce terminal tax on a large RRSP is to draw it down at lower marginal rates during your lifetime:
| Strategy | How it works |
|---|---|
| Retire early before CPP/OAS starts | Low income years — RRSP withdrawals at 20–29% rate |
| Convert to RRIF at 65, withdraw above minimum | Take more than minimum while income is still low |
| Contribute withdrawn RRSP funds to TFSA | Re-shelters after-tax dollars; TFSA passes tax-free at death |
| Spousal RRSP contributions (pre-retirement) | Equalizes account sizes; reduces single large inclusion on first death |