You must convert your RRSP to a RRIF by December 31 of the year you turn 71 — but the optimal time to convert is often earlier. Converting in your 60s lets you start pension income splitting with a spouse (potentially saving $5,000+ per year in combined taxes) and claim the $2,000 pension income tax credit. It also lets you execute an “RRSP meltdown” strategy: drawing down your RRSP over more years to stay in lower tax brackets and reduce OAS clawback. The worst move is doing nothing until 71 and then facing mandatory minimums on a large balance. For the full retirement-income context, pair this with our retirement planning hub.
Key Deadlines
Milestone
Timing
Must convert RRSP
By Dec 31 of year you turn 71
Last contribution
Year you turn 71
First RRIF withdrawal
Year after conversion
Annual minimums begin
At 72
RRSP to RRIF Timeline
Standard Path
Age
Event
71
Can still contribute (if contribution room)
71
Must convert by year end
72
First mandatory minimum withdrawal
72+
Annual minimum withdrawals
Example Timeline
Date
Action
January (71)
Make final RRSP contribution
Throughout 71
Can open RRIF anytime
December 31 (71)
Deadline for conversion
2026 (72)
Minimum withdrawal required
RRIF Minimum Withdrawals
Use the RRIF calculator once you know your expected balance and age.
Minimum Withdrawal Rates
Age
Minimum %
On $500,000
71
5.28%
$26,400
72
5.40%
$27,000
75
5.82%
$29,100
80
6.82%
$34,100
85
8.51%
$42,550
90
11.92%
$59,600
94+
20.00%
$100,000
Understanding Minimums
Rule
Details
Minimum is mandatory
Must withdraw at least this
Maximum
No limit
Withdrawals taxable
Added to income
Can withdraw in-kind
Securities, not just cash
Spouse’s age
Can use younger spouse’s age
When to Convert Early
Before 71 - Reasons to Convert
Situation
Benefit
Need income
RRIF provides regular payments
Pension splitting
Split RRIF income at 65+
Lower OAS clawback
Spread income over more years
Estate planning
Named beneficiaries
Health concerns
Simplify finances
Pension Income Splitting
Rule
Details
Age 65+
Can split up to 50% of RRIF income
Benefit
Lower family taxes
Works best
When spouses in different brackets
If you are using a spouse-based strategy before conversion, see the spousal RRSP guide.
Example: Splitting at 65
Without Splitting
With Splitting
Spouse A: $80,000
Spouse A: $55,000
Spouse B: $30,000
Spouse B: $55,000
Tax: ~$26,000
Tax: ~$21,000
Savings
~$5,000
Why Wait Until 71
Benefits of Delaying
Benefit
Explanation
Tax-deferred growth
More years compounding
Flexibility
Can withdraw any amount
No minimums
No forced withdrawals
OAS timing
Less clawback risk
Other income
Use other sources first
When Waiting Makes Sense
Situation
Why Wait
Still working
Have employment income
Good pension
Don’t need RRSP yet
Other savings
TFSA, non-reg available
Lower future income
Tax rate may be lower
RRIF Conversion Strategy
Year Before 71
Action
Reason
Make final contribution
Last chance
Review portfolio
Prepare for withdrawals
Calculate future income
Plan withdrawal strategy
Consider annuity vs RRIF
Evaluate options
At Conversion
Decision
Options
RRIF
Most flexibility
Life annuity
Guaranteed income
Some to each
Split approach
Lump sum
Rarely advisable
Tax Implications
RRIF Withdrawals are Taxable
Income Level
Marginal Rate (ON)
$0-$51,000
~20-25%
$51,000-$102,000
~30-35%
$102,000-$155,000
~37-43%
$155,000+
~45-53%
OAS Clawback
Income
OAS Impact
Under $90,997 (2025)
Full OAS
$90,997-$148,451
15% clawback
Over $148,451
OAS fully clawed back
The OAS clawback calculator is the quickest way to test whether an earlier conversion helps preserve benefits.
Meltdown Strategy
The RRSP meltdown is one of the most valuable retirement tax strategies, yet most Canadians have never heard of it. The idea is simple: if you have a large RRSP and expect to be pushed into a high tax bracket by mandatory RRIF minimums at 72+, start withdrawing in your 60s when your income is lower. By spreading withdrawals over 10–15 years instead of being forced to take larger amounts later, you stay in lower brackets and avoid triggering OAS clawback ($90,997 threshold in 2025). The trade-off is you pay tax earlier — but the math usually favours the meltdown approach for anyone with $300,000+ in RRSPs.
Strategy
How It Works
RRSP meltdown
Withdraw before 71
Why
Stay in lower brackets
Benefit
Reduce OAS clawback
Trade-off
Pay tax earlier
RRIF Alternatives
RRSP Conversion Options
Option
Features
RRIF
Most flexible, minimums
Life annuity
Guaranteed income, no control
Term annuity
Fixed period payments
Lump sum
Rarely advisable
Annuity Considerations
Pros
Cons
Guaranteed income
No flexibility
No market risk
Inflation risk
Simplicity
No estate value
Longevity protection
Rates vary
Using Spouse’s Age
Younger Spouse Rule
If your spouse is younger than you, you can base your RRIF minimum withdrawal on their age instead of yours. This significantly reduces the amount you’re forced to take out, keeping more money growing tax-deferred. On a $500,000 RRIF, using a 65-year-old spouse’s rate instead of your own at 72 saves $7,000–10,000 per year in forced withdrawals. You must elect this option at the time of conversion — you can’t change it later.
Your Age
Spouse Age
Use Rate
72
65
65-year rate lower
75
70
70-year rate lower
80
75
75-year rate lower
Benefit Example
Age
Your Rate
Using Spouse 65
Difference
72
5.40%
4.00%
-1.40%
75
5.82%
4.00%
-1.82%
80
6.82%
4.76%
-2.06%
On $500,000: Saves $7,000-$10,000/year in forced withdrawals.
Conversion Checklist
Before Converting
Task
Done
☐ Review all income sources
☐ Project future taxes
☐ Check OAS impact
☐ Consider pension splitting
☐ Name beneficiaries
☐ Choose investment strategy
At Conversion
Task
Done
☐ Convert before Dec 31 deadline
☐ Set up payment schedule
☐ Update tax withholding
☐ Plan first year withdrawal
The Bottom Line
Don’t wait until 71 by default. Run the numbers with a tax professional to determine whether an early conversion and RRSP meltdown in your 60s could save tens of thousands in lifetime taxes. Use your younger spouse’s age for minimum calculations, and consider pension income splitting as soon as either spouse turns 65.