Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP)

An RRSP is a retirement savings plan that you establish, that the CRA registers, and to which you or your spouse or common-law partner contribute. Deductible RRSP contributions can be used to reduce your tax.

Any income you earn in the RRSP is usually exempt from tax as long as the funds remain in the plan. You generally have to pay tax when you receive payments from the plan.

Services and information

Setting up an RRSP

How to set up an RRSP

Contributing to an RRSP, PRPP or SPP

Making contributions to an RRSP, PRPP or SPP for you or for your spouse or common-law partner and claiming the deduction

Transferring

Retiring allowances, lump-sum payments, transfer of property, commutation payments

Making withdrawals

Withdrawing funds from an RRSP and the tax implications

Receiving income from an RRSP

Getting and reporting income from an RRSP

Death of an RRSP annuitant

Tax implications when the annuitant of an RRSP dies

Anti-avoidance rules for RRSPs and RRIFs

Anti-avoidance rules are strengthened to prevent aggressive tax planning

RRSP tax-free withdrawal schemes

Questions and answers

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2026-05-07