Skip to main content

What Happens to Your RRIF When You Die in Canada?

Updated

What Happens to Your RRIF When You Die in Canada?

This page fits into the retirement-estate branch with successor annuitant vs beneficiary on a RRIF, what to do with money after retirement in Canada, and retiring on RRSP and TFSA only in Canada. If you are reviewing beneficiary choices as part of broader retirement planning, connect it with how much you need to retire in Canada and retirement income strategies in Canada.

A RRIF at death creates an important decision point: will the account transfer intact to a successor annuitant, be rolled over to a surviving spouse, or be fully included in the deceased’s income on the terminal return?

The Key Distinction: Successor Annuitant vs Beneficiary

DesignationWho can be namedWhat happens at deathTax to deceased’s estate
Successor annuitantSpouse / common-law onlyRRIF continues in spouse’s name — unchanged❌ None
Beneficiary (spouse)Spouse / common-lawRRIF collapsed; proceeds transferred to spouse’s RRSP/RRIF❌ None if rollover elected
Beneficiary (non-spouse)AnyoneRRIF collapsed; full value in deceased’s income✅ Full income inclusion
No designation / estateN/AGoes through estate; full value in income✅ Full income inclusion + probate

Option 1: Successor Annuitant (Best for Spouses)

The successor annuitant designation is the cleanest outcome for married RRIF holders.

What happensDetails
RRIF continuesThe account does not close — it transfers to the surviving spouse
Spouse becomes new annuitantThey now receive periodic RRIF payments
No income inclusionNot reported as income on the deceased’s return
No new RRSP/RRIF contribution room neededAccount continues as-is
Minimum withdrawalsBased on surviving spouse’s age going forward
No financial institution visit requiredPrimarily administrative — estate notifies the institution

Successor annuitant example

ItemValue
RRIF balance at death$380,000
Named designationSuccessor annuitant (spouse)
Income on deceased’s terminal return$0 (RRIF rollover)
Spouse’s RRIF balance after$380,000 + any existing RRIF balance
Tax payable at this pointNone

Option 2: Spousal Rollover (Beneficiary + Transfer)

If the spouse is named as beneficiary (not successor annuitant), the RRIF is collapsed but the proceeds can be transferred to the spouse’s RRSP or RRIF with no immediate tax.

StepDetails
1 – RRIF collapsed at deathFinancial institution pays out proceeds
2 – T4RIF issuedShows amount paid and eligible for rollover
3 – Spouse elects rolloverFiles Schedule 7 / T2220 with their return
4 – Proceeds transferred to spouse’s RRSP/RRIFDirect transfer — no contribution room required
5 – No income to deceasedDeduction on deceased’s return offsets T4RIF income
6 – Spouse pays tax on future withdrawalsNormal RRIF/RRSP withdrawal rules

The Minimum Withdrawal in the Year of Death

A RRIF requires a minimum annual withdrawal. The year of death is no exception.

SituationWhat happens
Minimum already withdrawn before deathNo additional action required
Death before minimum is withdrawnExecutor must arrange remaining minimum withdrawal
How calculatedAccount balance Jan 1 ÷ (90 − annuitant’s age)
Reported asIncome on the deceased’s terminal T1 return
Successor annuitantMinimum for year of death still applies before transfer

Non-Spouse Beneficiary: The Tax Hit

When a non-spouse (adult child, sibling, friend) is the beneficiary:

RRIF value at deathOther income ($40,000)Terminal return incomeEstimated tax (Ontario)
$150,000$40,000$190,000~$75,000
$300,000$40,000$340,000~$148,000
$500,000$40,000$540,000~$264,000

The named beneficiary receives the RRIF proceeds — but the estate must pay the income tax from its other assets first. If the estate does not have enough liquid assets, the beneficiary and executor must work out how the tax is funded.

Probate: Named Beneficiary Bypasses It

DesignationProbate required?
Successor annuitant (spouse)❌ No
Named beneficiary (any person)❌ No (most provinces)
Estate named / no designation✅ Yes
Quebec✅ Always (no beneficiary designations on registered accounts)

Ontario probate fee on a $400,000 RRIF with no named beneficiary: approximately $6,000. Naming any beneficiary (even a non-spouse adult child) avoids this cost.

RRIF at Death: What the Executor Must Do

TaskDetails
Notify financial institutionProvide death certificate
Obtain T4RIF slipShows RRIF value and withdrawals
Confirm successor annuitant or beneficiary on fileFinancial institution’s records govern
Ensure minimum withdrawal is madeFor the year of death
File terminal T1 returnReport income or claim rollover deduction
File T3 estate return if RRIF earns income during administrationIf account not transferred quickly
Apply for CRA clearance certificateBefore distributing estate assets

Bottom Line

For married RRIF holders, naming a spouse as successor annuitant is almost always the best designation — the RRIF continues in the spouse’s name with zero tax consequences and no account disruption. A beneficiary designation for a spouse is a close second — it allows a rollover, but requires the account to be collapsed and reconstructed. For non-spouse beneficiaries, the RRIF value is fully taxed on the deceased’s final return regardless — the only benefit of naming them vs the estate is bypassing probate. Review your RRIF designation to ensure it reflects your current wishes and family situation.


→ Back to: Complete RRSP Guide