Inside an RRSP, this is not taxable until withdrawal
RRSP contribution room
Available room shown by institution
Verify against your CRA Notice of Assessment
YTD contributions
Amount contributed so far this calendar year
Track to avoid over-contributing
Holdings detail
Each investment position listed individually
Review each fund/ETF/stock held
Income received
Dividends, interest, distributions credited to account
These reinvest inside your RRSP tax-free
Transactions
All buys, sells, contributions, withdrawals
Verify every transaction is correct
Management fees or account fees
Any flat fees charged (some institutions charge $50–$100/year)
Flat fees are worth watching on smaller accounts
Understanding Market Value vs Book Value
Concept
Definition
Example
Book value (cost basis)
Total you paid: contributions + reinvested distributions
Contributed $40,000 total over 10 years
Market value
What it is worth today
Worth $68,000 today
Unrealized gain
Market value minus book value
$68,000 − $40,000 = $28,000 unrealized gain
Unrealized loss
Book value exceeds market value
$40,000 paid, only worth $32,000 = $8,000 unrealized loss
Tax on RRSP gains
Zero while inside the account
You only pay tax when you withdraw from the RRSP
Note: Unrealized gains inside an RRSP are not taxed until you withdraw. When you withdraw — at retirement via RRIF conversion or lump-sum — the full withdrawal amount is taxed as ordinary income, regardless of whether it came from contributions or growth.
Reading Your Holdings Section
Column
What It Means
How to Use It
Investment name / symbol
Fund, ETF, GIC, or stock name
Identify what you hold
Units / shares
Number of units or shares held
Multiplied by price = market value
Price per unit
Current NAV or share price
Compare to price when you bought
Market value
Units × price
Your position value today
Book value
Total cost of this position
Compare to market value
Unrealized gain/loss
Market − book for this position
Gain/loss since purchase
% of portfolio
This position as a percentage of total account
Check for unintended concentration
MER (if shown)
Annual management fee as % of assets
Lower is better for passive index funds
Understanding MER on Your RRSP Statement
MER Range
Investment Type
Annual Cost on $100,000
0.06%–0.25%
Index ETFs (XEQT, VGRO, ZAG)
$60–$250
0.40%–0.65%
Robo-advisor portfolios
$400–$650
1.00%–1.50%
Balanced mutual funds
$1,000–$1,500
1.75%–2.50%
Actively managed mutual funds
$1,750–$2,500
2.50%–3.00%+
High-cost legacy mutual funds
$2,500–$3,000+
MER is not deducted as a visible line item — it is already accounted for in the daily unit price. You will not see it leave your account; your fund simply grows at a net-of-fee rate.
RRSP Contribution Room on Your Statement
Item
Source
Reliability
Room shown on RRSP statement
Financial institution estimate (from last CRA data exchange)
May be outdated or incomplete
Room on Notice of Assessment
CRA-calculated after processing your prior year return
Authoritative for prior year
Room in My CRA Account
CRA real-time (updated after return processing)
Most current official source
YTD contributions this year
Not yet reflected on your NOA
Track manually across all institutions
Contribution over-limit penalty: If you exceed your RRSP room by more than $2,000, CRA charges 1% per month on the excess until it is withdrawn. Never rely solely on your statement’s room figure.
Common RRSP Statement Transactions Explained
Transaction Type
What It Means
Contribution
Cash deposited to your RRSP; increases your book value
Buy
Purchase of a security using RRSP cash
Sell
Sale of a security; proceeds stay inside RRSP as cash
Distribution / Dividend
Income paid by a fund; reinvested automatically inside RRSP
Management fee
Annual flat account fee (not MER) charged by the institution
Transfer in
Assets moved from another RRSP account (not a contribution)
Transfer out
Assets moved to another registered account; should be direct transfer to avoid withholding
Withdrawal
Cash or in-kind removal from RRSP; 100% taxed as income; withholding applies
RRSP maturity / conversion
Account converted to RRIF at age 71; not a taxable event
RRSP Withdrawal Withholding Tax Rates
Withdrawal Amount
Withholding Rate (Federal + Provincial approx.)
Note
Up to $5,000
20–21%
Additional tax may be owed at filing
$5,001–$15,000
26–30%
—
Over $15,000
30–31%
—
Any amount (Quebec)
Federal 5% + Quebec 14%
Province applies separately
Withholding is a prepayment of tax, not the final amount. Your actual tax depends on your total income that year.
What to Do Each Time You Receive Your RRSP Statement
Action
Why
Verify all contributions are recorded
Institution errors do occur; catch them early
Compare market value trend year-over-year
Long-term growth check; avoid panic on short-term dips
Check your asset allocation (% stocks vs bonds)
Rebalance annually if target percentages have drifted
Review MERs on all holdings
Switch to lower-cost index ETFs if mutual fund MERs are above 1.5%
Confirm no unexpected withdrawals
Protects against fraud or administrative errors
Cross-reference contribution room against your NOA