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RDSP Withdrawal Rules in Canada: Complete Guide (2026)

Updated

RDSP Withdrawal Basics

The Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP) is designed for long-term savings for people with disabilities. Withdrawals have specific rules designed to preserve funds while allowing access when needed.

FeatureDetails
Who can withdrawPlan beneficiary or holder
When to start LDAPsBy December 31 of year turning 60
Tax treatmentGrants/bonds/growth taxable; contributions tax-free
10-year holdbackMay need to repay recent grants/bonds

Types of RDSP Withdrawals

Lifetime Disability Assistance Payments (LDAPs)

FeatureLDAP Rules
WhatRegular recurring payments
When they must startBy December 31 of year turning 60
FrequencyAt least annually
Minimum amountRequired once started
Maximum amountBased on formula

Disability Assistance Payments (DAPs)

FeatureDAP Rules
WhatOne-time or occasional withdrawals
When availableAny time
FrequencyAs needed
Maximum amountBased on formula
Grant/bond repaymentMay trigger holdback

The 10-Year Holdback Rule

When you withdraw from an RDSP, you may need to repay government grants and bonds received in the previous 10 years.

Assistance Holdback Amount (AHA)

ComponentHow It Works
DefinitionTotal grants + bonds from past 10 years
Repayment ratio$3 repaid for every $1 withdrawn
Maximum repaymentAHA amount
TimingRepaid from RDSP, not out-of-pocket

Example

SituationAmount
Grant/bonds in past 10 years (AHA)$20,000
Withdrawal requested$10,000
Repayment required ($3:$1)$20,000 (capped at AHA)
Net to beneficiaryLess than requested

Holdback Exceptions

ExceptionResult
Shortened life expectancyAHA may be reduced or waived
RDSP primarily funded memberRepayment may not apply

Maximum Withdrawal Limits

LDAP Maximum Formula

Once LDAPs begin, the maximum annual withdrawal is calculated as:

Maximum LDAP = Fair Market Value of RDSP ÷ (83 − Age at start of year)

If plan contains AHA, additional limits apply.

Example LDAP Calculation

FactorValue
RDSP value$200,000
Beneficiary age55
Formula$200,000 ÷ (83 − 55)
Maximum LDAP$7,143/year

DAP Withdrawals

SituationMaximum DAP
Plan mostly contributionsGreater flexibility
Plan has AHALimited by holdback rules
After age 59LDAP formula applies

Tax Treatment of Withdrawals

Taxable Portion

ComponentTax Treatment
Government grants (CDSGs)Taxable
Government bonds (CDSBs)Taxable
Investment growthTaxable
Your contributionsTax-free (return of capital)

Withdrawal Ratio Formula

Each withdrawal includes a proportional mix of taxable and non-taxable amounts:

If RDSP ContainsWithdrawal Breakdown
60% grants/bonds/growth60% taxable
40% contributions40% non-taxable

Tax Form

FormPurpose
T4A slipReports taxable portion of withdrawal
Line 12500Where to report on tax return

RDSP Primarily Funded Member Rules

If your RDSP is “primarily funded” by your own contributions (and family’s), different rules may apply:

StatusWhen It Applies
Primarily fundedFMV on Jan 1 minus AHA > $0, and ratio test met
BenefitMay withdraw without full holdback repayment
PurposeAllows access to your own money

Shortened Life Expectancy

If a medical professional certifies that the beneficiary has a shortened life expectancy (likely to live 5 years or less), special rules apply:

FeatureShortened Life Expectancy Rules
AHA repaymentReduced or eliminated
Withdrawal limitsMay be removed
LDAP requirementsMore flexibility
DocumentationMedical certificate required

What Happens at Different Ages

Before Age 59

ActionRules
DAP withdrawalsAllowed, subject to holdback
LDAPsNot required yet
ContributionsCan continue until age 59
GrantsAvailable until age 49

Age 60

RequirementDetails
LDAPs must beginBy December 31 of year turning 60
Minimum paymentAt least $1/year once started
Maximum paymentBased on formula
ContributionsNo more contributions allowed

After Death

OutcomeWhat Happens
Plan closesMust close by December 31 of following year
Grants/bonds (past 10 years)Repaid to government
Remaining fundsPaid to estate
TaxesTaxable portion reported

Provincial Benefit Interaction

ProvinceTreatment of RDSP
Most provincesRDSP assets exempt from social assistance calculations
WithdrawalsMay affect monthly disability benefits
CheckWith provincial disability program for specifics

Strategic Withdrawal Planning

Minimize Holdback Repayment

StrategyHow It Helps
Wait 10+ years after last grantAHA will be $0
Withdraw graduallySpread over multiple years
Front-load contributionsBuild own money vs. grants

Tax Planning

StrategyBenefit
Time withdrawalsLower income years = lower tax
Coordinate with other incomeStay in lower brackets
Spread withdrawalsAvoid pushing into higher brackets

Step-by-Step: Making a Withdrawal

Process

  1. Contact your RDSP provider (bank, credit union, broker)
  2. Request withdrawal form — specify DAP or LDAP
  3. Calculate holdback — provider determines AHA impact
  4. Tax withholding — may be withheld at source
  5. Receive payment — to beneficiary

Documentation Needed

DocumentPurpose
Withdrawal request formInitiates process
Identity verificationStandard security
Medical certificateIf shortened life expectancy

Common Questions

Can I withdraw my original contributions tax-free?

Yes, but each withdrawal contains a proportional mix of contributions (not taxed) and grants/bonds/growth (taxed). You can’t choose to withdraw only your contributions.

What if I need emergency funds?

You can make a DAP withdrawal at any time, but:

  • May trigger AHA repayment
  • Taxable portion will be taxed
  • Could affect provincial disability benefits

Can someone else receive the payments?

Payments must go to the beneficiary. The holder or a legal representative may help manage funds if the beneficiary cannot.

RDSP vs RRSP Comparison

FeatureRDSPRRSP
ContributionsAfter-taxTax-deductible
WithdrawalsPartially taxableFully taxable
Government matchingYes (grants/bonds)No
Withdrawal age60 for LDAPs71 mandatory
HoldbackYes (10-year rule)None

Key Takeaways

  • LDAPs must begin by end of year you turn 60
  • 10-year holdback may require repaying recent grants/bonds
  • Only grants/bonds/growth are taxable; contributions returned tax-free
  • Strategic timing can minimize taxes and holdback
  • Shortened life expectancy provides more flexibility
  • Consult your RDSP provider before withdrawing

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