The RRSP contribution deadline is one of the most important dates on the Canadian financial calendar. Miss it and you lose the chance to reduce this year’s tax bill.
The 2026 RRSP deadline
March 2, 2026 — this is the last day to make contributions that count toward the 2025 tax year.
The standard rule is the first 60 days of the calendar year, which falls on either March 1 or March 2 depending on whether it is a leap year. 2026 is not a leap year, so the deadline is March 2.
The contribution window explained
| Contribution Date | Which Tax Year It Counts For |
|---|---|
| January 1 – December 31, 2025 | 2025 tax year |
| January 1 – March 2, 2026 | Also counts for 2025 tax year |
| March 3, 2026 onward | 2026 tax year |
The “first 60 days” window means you have two chances to reduce last year’s taxes: making the contribution before December 31, and a second window through early March.
2025 RRSP contribution limit
| Factor | Amount |
|---|---|
| 2025 annual maximum | $32,490 |
| Percentage of earned income | 18% of 2024 net earned income |
| Maximum income to hit the cap | $180,500 |
Your personal limit is on your 2024 Notice of Assessment (NOA) from the CRA, and also in My CRA Account under “RRSP.” It already accounts for:
- Any unused room carried forward from prior years
- Pension adjustments from a workplace pension
What counts as “earned income” for RRSP room?
RRSP room is based on prior year earned income. Earned income includes:
| Included | Not Included |
|---|---|
| Employment income | Investment income (dividends, interest) |
| Self-employment net income | OAS, CPP, GIS |
| Rental income (net) | Capital gains |
| Alimony received | RRSP withdrawals |
The $2,000 over-contribution buffer
You can contribute up to $2,000 over your official limit without penalty. This buffer is not deductible — but it does grow tax-sheltered inside the RRSP. Any amount over $2,000 above your limit triggers a 1% per month penalty.
Should you rush to contribute before the deadline?
If you have contribution room and tax owing, yes — even a smaller contribution reduces your balance owing and may eliminate or reduce any late-payment interest.
If you are unsure whether to deduct the contribution this year vs. a future year:
- Deduct this year if you are in a higher bracket now
- Carry forward the deduction if you expect to be in a higher bracket in future years (e.g., your income will rise, or you plan to make a large RRSP withdrawal in the future)
The contribution itself should go in as soon as possible — tax-sheltered compounding starts immediately regardless of when you claim the deduction.
Missing the deadline: what it actually means
| Your Situation | Impact |
|---|---|
| Missed March 2, 2026 | Contribution counts toward 2026 tax year instead |
| Have unused 2025 room | Room carries forward — you don’t lose it |
| Owe CRA for 2025 | You lose the chance to reduce 2025 taxes specifically |
| Expect higher income in 2026 | May work in your favour — deduction is worth more |
Key takeaway
March 2, 2026 is the RRSP deadline for the 2025 tax year. Contributions made through that date reduce your 2025 taxable income. If you miss it, your room doesn’t disappear — but the opportunity to lower last year’s taxes does.