Your personal RRSP contribution limit depends on your income, pension plan membership, and accumulated unused room. The 2026 maximum of $32,490 is the ceiling — your actual limit may be higher (from unused room) or lower (from pension adjustments).
2026 RRSP Contribution Limit
| Figure | 2026 Amount |
|---|---|
| Annual dollar maximum | $32,490 |
| Contribution rate | 18% of 2025 earned income |
| Income to reach the maximum | $180,500 |
| RRSP contribution deadline (for 2025 taxes) | March 1, 2026 |
| RRSP contribution deadline (for 2026 taxes) | March 1, 2027 |
Historical RRSP Contribution Limits
| Tax Year | RRSP Limit | Income to Max Out |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | $27,230 | $151,278 |
| 2021 | $27,830 | $154,611 |
| 2022 | $29,210 | $162,278 |
| 2023 | $30,780 | $171,000 |
| 2024 | $31,560 | $175,333 |
| 2025 | $32,490 | $180,500 |
| 2026 | $33,810 (projected) | ~$187,833 |
2026 limit is CRA projected — confirm on your 2025 NOA when filed.
Your Personal Limit: The Calculation
Your RRSP deduction limit is not simply the annual maximum. It is:
RRSP Limit = (18% × 2025 earned income, max $32,490) + Unused room from prior years − Pension adjustment (PA)
What Is “Earned Income”?
Earned income for RRSP purposes includes:
| Counts | Does Not Count |
|---|---|
| Employment income | Investment income (dividends, interest) |
| Self-employment income | Capital gains |
| Net rental income | OAS, CPP, GIS |
| Spousal support received | RRSP withdrawals |
| Royalties | Pension income |
What Is a Pension Adjustment?
If you belong to an employer pension plan (RPP) or deferred profit sharing plan (DPSP), your RRSP room is reduced by a Pension Adjustment (PA) — the estimated value of pension benefits you earned that year.
Your PA is reported in box 52 of your T4 slip. A high PA (from a generous DB pension) can reduce RRSP room to near zero even if you have significant earned income.
| Pension Type | Typical PA Effect |
|---|---|
| Defined benefit (DB) pension | Large PA — often $10,000–$20,000+ |
| Defined contribution (DC) pension | Equals employer + employee contributions |
| No pension | PA = $0, full 18% room available |
Unused Room: The Carry-Forward Advantage
Every year you do not use your full RRSP room, the unused portion accumulates indefinitely.
Example:
| Year | Room | Contributed | Unused Room Added |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $30,780 | $15,000 | $15,780 |
| 2024 | $31,560 | $20,000 | $11,560 |
| 2025 | $32,490 + $27,340 carry-forward | $0 | $59,830 total available |
| 2026 | $59,830 available | Contribute large lump sum | — |
This is why a windfall year (inheritance, business sale, large bonus) combined with a lump-sum RRSP contribution is so powerful — decades of unused room can shelter hundreds of thousands from tax.
How to Find Your Exact RRSP Limit
| Source | Where to Find |
|---|---|
| Notice of Assessment (NOA) | Line “RRSP deduction limit” — most accurate |
| CRA My Account | RRSP section — live figure including prior year contributions |
| T1028 slip | Mailed by CRA if you have a large accumulated balance |
| Tax return software | Calculated automatically from imported T4/T4A data |
Your 2025 NOA (issued after you file your 2025 taxes) shows your 2026 RRSP limit — the maximum you can contribute for the 2026 tax year.
RRSP Deadline: First 60 Days Rule
The RRSP contribution deadline for claiming a deduction on your prior year’s tax return is approximately March 1 of the current year.
| Action | Deadline |
|---|---|
| Contribute and deduct on 2025 taxes | On or before March 1, 2026 |
| Contribute and deduct on 2026 taxes | January 1–December 31, 2026 (or by March 1, 2027) |
Contributions made January 1 – March 1, 2026 can be applied to either 2025 or 2026 taxes — your choice.
RRSP Over-Contribution Rules
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Lifetime buffer | $2,000 over-contribution permitted without penalty |
| Penalty above buffer | 1%/month on the excess |
| Form required | T1-OVP (Individual Tax Return for RRSP and PRPP Excess Contributions) |
| Resolution | Withdraw excess or wait for new room in January |