What Is a Refund of Premiums on an RRSP? | CRA Term Explained
Updated
What Is a Refund of Premiums on an RRSP?
When a Canadian dies with an RRSP, the CRA uses the term “refund of premiums” to describe the amount that can be rolled over tax-free to a surviving spouse or dependent child. The terminology comes from the original language of the Income Tax Act, where RRSP contributions were called “premiums.” Understanding this term helps surviving family members navigate the T4RSP slip and claim the rollover correctly.
Refund of Premiums at a Glance
Feature
Details
Income Tax Act reference
s.146(8) — “refund of premiums”
Who can receive it
Qualifying survivor only
T4RSP box
Box 18 — “Refund of premiums”
Tax on receipt
Included in qualifying survivor’s income UNLESS rolled over
RRSP contribution room needed
❌ No — special designation overrides room rules
Deadline to roll over
December 31 of year following year of receipt
Who Is a Qualifying Survivor?
Person
Qualifies?
Conditions
Spouse or common-law partner
✅ Yes
Must have been spouse/CLP at date of death
Separated spouse (not divorced)
Depends
Provincial family law affects this — consult a lawyer
Financially dependent child (any age, disabled)
✅ Yes
Net income ≤ disability threshold in prior year
Financially dependent child under 18 (not disabled)
✅ Yes
Net income ≤ basic personal amount (~$16,129)
Adult child with normal income
❌ No
Not financially dependent — does not qualify
Grandchildren
✅ Potentially
Must meet financial dependency test
Parents, siblings, friends
❌ No
Never qualify as qualifying survivors
What the T4RSP Shows at Death
T4RSP box
What it represents
Tax treatment
Box 18 — Refund of premiums
Amount to qualifying survivor
Deferred if rolled to RRSP/RRIF
Box 28 — Other income
Amount to estate (non-qualifying)
Included in deceased’s terminal T1 income
If the beneficiary is a qualifying survivor and the full RRSP is designated, only Box 18 is used. If the beneficiary is not a qualifying survivor (e.g., an adult child with income), the amount appears on Box 28 and becomes income on the deceased’s terminal return — taxed fully.
Rollover Options by Qualifying Survivor Type
Qualifying survivor
Rollover options
Spouse or common-law partner
Contribute to own RRSP or RRIF — no contribution room required
Dependent child under 18, not disabled
Must purchase a term-certain annuity to age 18
Dependent child who is disabled
Contribute to own RRSP, RRIF, or RDSP — most flexible
Dependent grandchild
Same options as dependent child based on circumstances
Surviving Spouse: How the Rollover Works
Step
Action
1
Financial institution issues T4RSP with Box 18 filled
2
Surviving spouse includes Box 18 amount on their T1 return
3
Surviving spouse contributes the amount to own RRSP or RRIF
4
Files Schedule 7 to claim deduction — offsets Box 18 income
5
Net tax: $0
6
Ongoing: surviving spouse pays tax on future RRSP/RRIF withdrawals
Financially Dependent Child (Under 18, Not Disabled)
Step
Action
1
Financial institution issues T4RSP with Box 18 to dependent child
2
Child (or guardian) purchases a term-certain annuity to age 18
3
Annuity pays periodic amounts to child each year
4
Child pays income tax on annuity payments each year (likely low rate)
5
No lump-sum income inclusion — tax spread over remaining years to 18
Refund of premiums can go directly to the child’s RDSP
Lifetime RDSP contribution limit bypassed
✅ Rollover does not count toward the $200,000 lifetime RDSP limit
Tax deferral
Funds in RDSP grow tax-sheltered
Required form
CRA Form RC4625
Very valuable
A disabled adult dependent can shelter a large RRSP entirely
Why the Term Matters
Context
Why “refund of premiums” matters
T4RSP slip
Box 18 label is exactly “Refund of premiums” — not “spousal rollover” or “transfer”
CRA guides
CRA technical documentation uses this phrase — helpful when Googling for authoritative information
Financial institution paperwork
Forms may ask for designation of “refund of premiums” rather than using plain language
Tax professional communication
Using the right term avoids confusion when working with an accountant or tax preparer
Deadline and Consequences
Event
Deadline / consequence
Rollover contribution to RRSP/RRIF
By December 31 of year following receipt
Late contribution (missed deadline)
Full amount included in qualifying survivor’s income — no deduction
No RRSP/RRIF available (e.g., over 71)
Surviving spouse over 71 must use RRIF as receiving vehicle
Bottom Line
Refund of premiums is the technical CRA term for the amount a qualifying survivor receives from a deceased’s RRSP — and it unlocks a powerful tax deferral that requires no RRSP contribution room. Spouses can roll the full amount into their own RRSP or RRIF. Dependent disabled children can use the RDSP rollover, which is one of the most underused estate planning tools available to families with disabled members. Recognizing the term on the T4RSP Box 18 and meeting the rollover deadline are the two critical actions qualifying survivors must take.