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Before You Withdraw from Your RRSP: What Canadians Need to Know

Updated

Short Answer

Withdrawing from an RRSP triggers immediate withholding tax, adds the full amount to your taxable income, and permanently eliminates your contribution room. Before withdrawing, exhaust alternatives — and if you must withdraw, do it in a low-income year.

Before you act, it is worth reading this beside the full RRSP withdrawal rules, the RRSP withdrawal tax calculator, what happens if you cash out an RRSP early, whether you can withdraw from an RRSP for an emergency, and the guide to whether it is worth keeping your RRSP in retirement.

The Two Costs Most People Underestimate

1. Withholding Tax Is Not Your Final Tax

Withdrawal amountWithholding rate (non-Quebec)Withholding rate (Quebec)
Up to $5,00010%21% (5% federal + 16% provincial)
$5,001 – $15,00020%26%
Over $15,00030%31%

Withholding is a prepayment, not a final settlement. At filing, the entire withdrawn amount is added to your income and taxed at your marginal rate.

Example: You withdraw $30,000 from your RRSP. Your financial institution withholds 30% = $9,000. At tax time, if you are in the 43% combined marginal bracket, you owe 43% × $30,000 = $12,900 total tax. You have already paid $9,000, so you owe an additional $3,900 at filing.

2. The Contribution Room Is Gone Forever

AccountWithdrawn amountContribution room restored?
TFSA$30,000Yes (next January 1)
RRSP$30,000No — permanently lost

The $30,000 withdrawn from your RRSP cannot go back in unless you have new earned income generating new RRSP room. The compounding effect of that lost room over 20–30 years can far exceed the original withdrawal amount.

The Real Cost of an Early RRSP Withdrawal

ScenarioWithdrawalTax at 43% marginalLost future value*
$10,000 RRSP withdrawal$10,000~$4,300~$43,000 in 20 years
$25,000 RRSP withdrawal$25,000~$10,750~$107,000 in 20 years
$50,000 RRSP withdrawal$50,000~$21,500~$215,000 in 20 years

*Approximate future value impact assuming 6% annual growth over 20 years. Actual results vary.

Alternatives to Try First

Before withdrawing from your RRSP, consider:

AlternativeWhen to useCost
TFSA withdrawalHave funds in TFSANo tax, room restored next year
HELOCHave home equity, short-term needInterest cost only, typically 5–8%
Unsecured line of creditShort-term gapInterest cost only
RRSP loan strategyTo pay down RRSP early in yearBorrow against RRSP assets, then repay
Reduce RRSP contribution this yearRetain cash flowForegone deduction, not a withdrawal
Negotiate payment planCRA debt or billBetter than triggering tax on RRSP

The Two Legitimate Exceptions

Home Buyers Plan (HBP)

FeatureDetail
Maximum withdrawal$60,000 per person ($120,000 for couple, both first-time buyers)
90-day seasoning ruleFunds must have been in RRSP for at least 90 days before withdrawal
Qualifying purchaserMust be a first-time home buyer (no home owned in past 4 years)
Repayment term15 years — 1/15th of the total per year, starting 2 years after withdrawal
Missing repaymentUnprepaid portion added to income for that year

Lifelong Learning Plan (LLP)

FeatureDetail
Maximum annual withdrawal$10,000
Maximum lifetime withdrawal$20,000 per person
Qualifying conditionFull-time enrollment at a designated educational institution
Repayment term10 years — 1/10th per year
90-day seasoning ruleAlso applies

When Withdrawal Makes Strategic Sense

ScenarioWhy it can work
Year with very low income (parental leave, sabbatical, study)Marginal rate at withdrawal may be only 20–25%, potentially lower than rate at contribution
Retirement or early retirement — low-income yearsConvert at controlled marginal rates before CPP/OAS begin at higher income
Stranded RRSP (over-contributed situation)Withdraw excess contributions to avoid ongoing penalty

The ideal RRSP withdrawal strategy for most Canadians is to withdraw in years when total income is below the first or second federal tax bracket.

Before You Withdraw from Your RRSP: Checklist

  • Confirmed all TFSA funds have been used first (no-tax option)
  • Checked if a line of credit or HELOC at lower cost is available
  • Calculated actual marginal tax rate at withdrawal (not just withholding)
  • Accounted for permanently lost contribution room in the decision
  • Checked if this is a low-income year — if not, considered delaying
  • Confirmed whether HBP or LLP applies and whether funds meet 90-day seasoning
  • Checked if withdrawing in multiple smaller amounts reduces withholding bracket (still same total tax at filing, but manages cash flow)
  • Confirmed impact on income-tested benefits (OAS clawback, CCB, GIS) if applicable

Bottom Line

An RRSP withdrawal is almost never free — the tax cost plus the permanent loss of compounding contribution room make it one of the most expensive ways to access funds. Exhaust TFSA, lines of credit, and other options first. If you must withdraw, do it in the lowest-income year available.


→ Back to: Complete RRSP Guide