Successor Annuitant vs Beneficiary on a RRIF in Canada
This designation question is easiest to understand in context with what happens to your RRIF when you die in Canada, retiring on RRSP and TFSA only in Canada, and what to do with money after retirement in Canada. If you are reviewing a spouse-first retirement plan, also pair it with how much you need to retire in Canada and retirement income strategies in Canada.
For married Canadians with a RRIF, the designation choice between successor annuitant and beneficiary is one of the most consequential estate planning decisions you can make — and most people do not know the difference.
Core Comparison
| Feature | Successor annuitant | Beneficiary (spouse) | Beneficiary (non-spouse) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Who can be named | Spouse / common-law only | Anyone | Anyone |
| What happens at death | RRIF continues in spouse’s name | RRIF collapses; funds transferred | RRIF collapses; full income inclusion |
| Tax on deceased’s return | ❌ None | ❌ None (if rollover elected) | ✅ Full value included as income |
| Account disruption | None — continues intact | Account must be recreated | Account closed |
| Administrative complexity | Very low | Moderate | Low (for beneficiary) |
| Probate bypass | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes (most provinces) |
| Investments sold and re-bought | ❌ Not required | ✅ Often required | ✅ Account collapsed |
| Minimum withdrawal continues | ✅ Based on spouse’s age | Based on new RRIF setup | N/A |
Successor Annuitant: What Actually Happens
At the moment of death
| Step | What happens |
|---|---|
| 1 | RRIF holder dies |
| 2 | Financial institution notified with death certificate |
| 3 | Successor annuitant designation confirmed |
| 4 | Account ownership transferred to surviving spouse |
| 5 | Spouse becomes new annuitant — account continues |
| 6 | Same holdings, same institution, same withdrawal schedule |
| 7 | Minimum withdrawal recalculated using spouse’s age |
No income is reported on the deceased’s terminal return for the RRIF value. The surviving spouse continues paying income tax on RRIF withdrawals as normal — exactly as before.
Spousal Beneficiary (Rollover Route): What Actually Happens
| Step | What happens |
|---|---|
| 1 | RRIF holder dies |
| 2 | RRIF collapsed — financial institution pays out proceeds |
| 3 | T4RIF issued to estate showing amount |
| 4 | Surviving spouse elects qualifying rollover |
| 5 | Proceeds transferred to spouse’s RRSP or RRIF |
| 6 | Deduction claimed on deceased’s return to offset T4RIF income |
| 7 | No net tax — but significant administrative effort required |
The end result is similar — the spouse eventually has the same RRIF value in their own account. But the path involves:
- Closing and reopening accounts
- Potential sale and re-purchase of investments (market timing risk)
- Forms T2220 / T2030 filed with CRA
- Possible delays if estate is complex
When Each Option Makes Sense
| Scenario | Best choice |
|---|---|
| Spouse is primary beneficiary | Successor annuitant — cleanest, no tax, no disruption |
| Want to back-stop with a secondary beneficiary | Name spouse as successor annuitant + adult child as contingent beneficiary |
| No spouse | Beneficiary designation — name a person to bypass probate |
| Spouse predeceased you | Contingent beneficiary kicks in |
| Quebec residents | Neither available — RRIF must go through estate |
The Contingent Beneficiary: Essential Planning
Most RRIF holders focus only on the primary designation and forget the contingent.
| Scenario | Without contingent beneficiary | With contingent beneficiary |
|---|---|---|
| Primary (spouse) predeceases you | RRIF goes through estate | RRIF passes directly to named contingent |
| Primary (successor annuitant) and you die together | Estate — probate, tax | Named contingent — bypasses estate |
Best practice: Name spouse as successor annuitant (primary) + adult children as beneficiaries (contingent), with equal split.
Minimum Withdrawal After Transfer to Successor Annuitant
When a surviving spouse becomes the new RRIF annuitant:
| Factor | Effect |
|---|---|
| Surviving spouse is younger than deceased | Minimum percentage is lower — less forced income |
| Surviving spouse is older | Minimum percentage is higher |
| Surviving spouse can rebase to their own age | Generally yes — recalculated from Jan 1 of next year |
| Year of death minimum | Still owed before or at transfer — executor confirms with institution |
Making Sure the Designation Is on File
The designation must be on file at the financial institution — it cannot exist only in a will.
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| Check current designation | Contact financial institution and request confirmation |
| Update after life changes | Marriage, divorce, death of named person |
| Naming requires completion of institution’s form | Not just a will instruction |
| Will cannot override RRIF designation | The designation on file controls |
Bottom Line
If you have a RRIF and a surviving spouse, naming your spouse as successor annuitant is the simplest and most tax-efficient designation available. The RRIF continues intact — no tax, no paperwork, no investment disruption. Add a contingent beneficiary (adult child or another person) as a backup in case your spouse predeceases you. If you have a RRIF and no spouse, naming any person as beneficiary bypasses probate fees. Reviewing these designations after every major life event — marriage, divorce, death of a named person — is one of the most valuable and least-discussed elements of estate planning.
Related Reading
- LIRA vs RRSP Canada: Key Differences Explained
- Defined Benefit vs Defined Contribution Pension: Key Differences in Canada
- Can You Use FHSA and RRSP Home Buyers Plan at the Same Time?
→ Back to: Complete RRSP Guide