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How to Reduce Taxes in Retirement Canada 2026

Updated

Tax-Reduction Strategies for Retirees

Strategy 1: TFSA Withdrawals (Tax-Free Income)

Feature Details
Tax on withdrawal $0
Impact on OAS None
Impact on GIS None
Best for Supplementing income without tax consequences

Example: $200,000 in TFSA generating 4% = $8,000/year completely tax-free and invisible to CRA for benefit calculations.

Strategy 2: Pension Income Splitting

Feature Details
Who qualifies Couples where one spouse receives eligible pension income
How much Up to 50% of eligible pension income
Eligible income RRIF (age 65+), company pension, annuity income
Not eligible CPP, OAS, RRSP withdrawals (under 65)
Annual savings $2,000-15,000+ depending on income gap

Example:

Without Splitting With Splitting
Spouse A income $80,000 $55,000
Spouse B income $20,000 $45,000
Combined tax ~$18,500 ~$14,500
Annual savings ~$4,000

Strategy 3: RRSP Meltdown (Withdraw Before 72)

Action Timeline
Convert RRSP to RRIF early or make RRSP withdrawals Ages 65-71
Withdraw in low-income years Before CPP/OAS begin
Claim $2,000 pension income tax credit Age 65+ on RRIF income
Reduce future mandatory RRIF minimums Lower balance = lower forced withdrawals
Avoid OAS clawback Keep income below $90,997

Example: $500K RRSP. Withdrawing $30K/year from age 65-71 reduces the balance to ~$290K, meaning much smaller mandatory RRIF withdrawals at 72+.

Strategy 4: Avoid OAS Clawback

Income Threshold Impact
Under $90,997 Full OAS
$90,997-$148,000 Partial OAS (15% recovery tax)
Above ~$148,000 No OAS

Strategies to stay under threshold:

  • Withdraw from TFSA instead of RRSP/RRIF
  • Split pension income with spouse
  • Defer capital gains realizations
  • Use prescribed rate loans for income splitting

Strategy 5: Timing CPP and OAS

Start Age CPP Impact OAS Impact
60 (CPP only) -36% permanent reduction N/A
65 (standard) Baseline amount Baseline amount
70 +42% permanent increase +36% permanent increase

Tax consideration: Deferring CPP/OAS to 70 means larger payments, which could push you into higher brackets or trigger OAS clawback. Model both scenarios.

Strategy 6: Pension Income Tax Credit

Feature Details
Amount Up to $2,000 (federal) + provincial
Tax savings ~$600-850/year combined
Eligible income RRIF withdrawals (65+), company pension
Not eligible CPP, OAS, employment income
Strategy Convert small RRSP to RRIF at 65 to claim this credit

Withdrawal Order Strategy

Optimal withdrawal sequence for typical retiree:

Priority Source Tax Treatment
1 Non-registered capital gains 50% taxable
2 RRIF/RRSP (up to low bracket) Fully taxable
3 TFSA (to fill gaps) Tax-free
4 CPP/OAS (as needed) Fully taxable

Key principle: Deplete RRSP/RRIF before the balance forces large mandatory withdrawals at 72+. Use TFSA to avoid triggering higher tax brackets or OAS clawback.

RRIF Minimum Withdrawal Rates

Age Minimum % On $500K On $1M
72 5.28% $26,400 $52,800
75 5.82% $29,100 $58,200
80 6.82% $34,100 $68,200
85 8.51% $42,550 $85,100
90 11.92% $59,600 $119,200

Risk: Large RRIF minimums at older ages push income above OAS clawback threshold.

Tax-Free Income Sources in Retirement

Source Tax OAS impact
TFSA withdrawals Tax-free None
Principal residence sale gain Tax-free None
GIS/GAINS supplement Tax-free N/A
Return of capital distributions Tax-deferred None (until cost base reaches $0)
Life insurance death benefit Tax-free N/A