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Transferring an RRSP to a Spouse on Death in Canada | Step-by-Step Guide

Updated

Transferring an RRSP to a Spouse on Death in Canada

When a married Canadian dies with an RRSP, the entire balance can typically pass to the surviving spouse tax-free through a process called the spousal rollover. Understanding how the transfer works — and who needs to do what — helps executors and surviving spouses avoid costly delays.

Core Rules

Rule Details
Who qualifies Spouse or common-law partner at date of death
Separated (not divorced) spouses May still qualify — depends on provincial family law
RRSP contribution room required ❌ No — rollover is above-and-beyond room
Tax on deceased’s terminal return $0 (offset by rollover deduction)
Tax on surviving spouse’s receipt $0 at time of receipt
Future tax ✅ Surviving spouse pays tax on future withdrawals
Quebec Beneficiary designations recognized; process same as other provinces

Step-by-Step Process

Step Who acts What happens
1. Death occurs Date of death established for FMV purposes
2. Executor notified Executor Obtains certified copy of death certificate
3. Financial institution notified Executor Provides death certificate; institution freezes account
4. FMV established Institution RRSP value determined at date of death
5. Beneficiary designation confirmed Institution Reviews what is on file — spouse named as beneficiary?
6. Rollover elected Executor / surviving spouse Surviving spouse agrees to receive as “refund of premiums”
7. T4RSP issued Institution Box 18 shows rollover amount; Box 28 shows amount to estate if applicable
8. Transfer initiated Institution Funds transferred directly to surviving spouse’s RRSP or RRIF
9. Terminal T1 filed Executor / accountant T4RSP amount appears as income; s.146(8) deduction applied — net zero
10. Surviving spouse files Schedule 7 Surviving spouse / accountant Claims the rollover amount; no contribution room needed

What the T4RSP Shows

T4RSP box Meaning
Box 18 — Refund of premiums Amount designated to qualifying survivor (spouse or dependent child)
Box 28 — Other income or deductions Amount going to estate (taxable on terminal return)

If the entire RRSP goes to the surviving spouse, only Box 18 is used. If it is split (partial rollover), both boxes are used.

Terminal T1 Return Treatment

Item How it appears
T4RSP Box 18 income Included in deceased’s income on terminal return
s.146(8) deduction Claimed as deduction — exactly offsets Box 18 income
Net income from RRSP $0
Tax payable on RRSP $0

The terminal T1 return still reports the RRSP amount as income, then claims the rollover deduction. The net effect is zero. This is handled by the executor and accountant preparing the return.

Surviving Spouse’s Tax Return

Item How it appears
Schedule 7 Surviving spouse claims the “refund of premiums” received
RRSP deduction May claim contribution to own RRSP for the rollover amount
Contribution room consumed ❌ No — the rollover does not use existing contribution room
Year to file Can be claimed in the year of death or within 60 days of year-end

Transfer Method: Institution to Institution vs Cheque

Transfer method Considerations
Direct institution-to-institution Cleanest; funds go directly into surviving spouse’s RRSP/RRIF
Cheque payable to the RRSP Payable to “The RRSP of [surviving spouse]”; must be deposited within required timeframe
Cash out to estate ❌ Triggers income inclusion; lose rollover eligibility — avoid

Never instruct the institution to pay the RRSP proceeds directly to the surviving spouse personally (not to an RRSP). That is treated as a withdrawal, not a rollover, and the income inclusion applies.

Timing and Deadlines

Event Deadline
Ideal transfer window Within year of death
CRA extended window Within 60 days after end of year of death
Discretionary CRA extension Available under s.146(8.1) — not guaranteed
File terminal T1 return Due date depends on date of death; typically April 30 or 6 months after death, whichever is later

What If There Is No Surviving Spouse?

Situation Outcome
No spouse, named beneficiary (adult child) Full FMV included in deceased’s income on terminal return
Financially dependent child (income ≤ $16,129) May roll to annuity (to age 18) — partial tax deferral
Financially dependent disabled child May roll to RRSP or RDSP of child
No beneficiary named RRSP goes through estate — probate applies; same tax result

Bottom Line

Transferring an RRSP to a surviving spouse on death is automatic only if the designated beneficiary is on file at the financial institution and the rollover is properly elected. The process requires the executor to notify the institution, coordinate the T4RSP slip showing Box 18 refund of premiums, and ensure the transfer goes institution-to-institution rather than going to the estate first. The surviving spouse then files Schedule 7 — no RRSP contribution room needed. Acting within the year of death or 60 days after is important. When in doubt, use an accountant experienced with estate tax work.