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What to Do When You Receive an Inheritance in Canada

Updated

Receiving an inheritance is often emotionally complicated — grief and financial decisions arrive together. There is no need to rush. Most financial experts recommend a “pause period” of 3–6 months before making major decisions with inherited money, unless you have pressing debt or immediate needs.

This guide covers the tax implications, the probate process, and the smartest ways to put an inheritance to work once you are ready.

What happens immediately: the estate process

The executor named in the will handles the legal and tax steps. As a beneficiary, your role is mostly to wait — but understanding the process helps you set realistic expectations.

StepWho Does ItTypical Timeline
Locate and file the willExecutorWeek 1–2
Apply for probate (if required)Executor1–8 months depending on province
File the deceased’s final tax returnExecutor (or accountant)April 30 of the following year, or 6 months after death (whichever is later)
Pay estate debts and taxesEstateBefore distribution
Distribute assets to beneficiariesExecutorAfter probate and taxes are settled

Registered accounts (RRSP, RRIF, TFSA) with named beneficiaries

Accounts with a named beneficiary pass directly to the beneficiary without going through the estate — no probate, no waiting for the will to clear.

AccountTax Treatment for Beneficiary
TFSAInherited tax-free if you are the successor holder or designated beneficiary. Any growth after the date of death is taxable
RRSP/RRIF → surviving spouse or common-law partnerCan be rolled over tax-free into the survivor’s RRSP/RRIF
RRSP/RRIF → adult child or other beneficiaryFull value included in deceased’s income for year of death — beneficiary receives the net-of-tax proceeds
Life insurance proceedsAlways tax-free to beneficiary

→ See: What Happens to a TFSA When You Die | Estate Planning Guide Canada

Tax on inherited money and assets in Canada

Canada does not have an inheritance tax — you do not pay tax on assets you receive. The tax is paid by the estate on the deceased’s final return.

What the estate pays tax on

AssetTax Rule
Capital property (stocks, real estate, cottage)Deemed disposed at fair market value on death — capital gains taxed in estate
RRSP/RRIF (no surviving spouse)Full value included in deceased’s income
Principal residenceCapital gains are usually sheltered by the principal residence exemption
Business or farm (qualifying)Lifetime capital gains exemption may shelter up to $1.25M (2026)

What you (the beneficiary) may owe going forward

Once you receive assets, any future growth is taxable to you:

Asset ReceivedYour Future Tax Exposure
CashNone — cash is not a taxable receipt
Stocks or fundsCapital gains on any appreciation after you receive them (your adjusted cost base is the fair market value at date of death)
Rental propertyOngoing rental income and eventual capital gains
RRSP proceedsNo future tax if it was already included in deceased’s income

→ See: Capital Gains Tax in Canada | Inheritance Tax Canada

Probate fees by province

Probate fees are paid by the estate, not the beneficiary — but they reduce what you receive.

ProvinceProbate Fee CalculationOn a $500,000 Estate
Ontario0.5% on first $50K + 1.5% above~$6,750
BC0.6% on $25K–$50K + 1.4% above~$6,900
AlbertaFlat fee caps at $525$525
QuebecNo probate (notarial will)$0
Saskatchewan0.7% above $10K~$3,430
Manitoba0.6% of estate value~$3,000

→ See: Probate Fees by Province Canada

What to do with the money: decision framework

Before you invest or spend anything, take this structured approach.

Step 1: Wait and park it safely

Put inherited cash in a high-interest savings account (HISA) or short-term GIC while you decide. Current HISA rates of 3.5–5.0% mean your money earns something without taking any risk.

Step 2: Pay off high-interest debt

DebtAction
Credit card debt (19–22%)Pay off completely
Personal loans above 8%Pay off
Car loans above 6%Pay off
Mortgage (4–6%)Consider partial lump-sum prepayment (up to your prepayment limit)
Student loan (3–6%)Low priority — invest instead if rate is below 5%

Step 3: Fill registered accounts

In order of priority:

Account2026 LimitKey Benefit
FHSA$8,000/year (if first-time home buyer eligible)RRSP deduction + tax-free growth + tax-free home purchase withdrawal
RRSP18% of prior year earned income (max $32,490)Tax deduction now; tax-deferred growth
TFSA$7,000 new roomTax-free growth and withdrawals forever
RESP$2,500 to maximize CESG20% government grant on first $2,500

Step 4: Invest remaining amounts in non-registered accounts

Once registered accounts are maxed:

  • Broad-market ETFs (all-in-one funds like XBAL, VGRO, or XEQT) for simplicity
  • Dividend stocks or REITs for income
  • GIC ladder for capital preservation

→ See: Best All-in-One ETFs Canada | Asset Location Strategy

When to get professional advice

Inheritance SizeRecommendation
Under $25,000Self-direct: fill TFSA/RRSP, pay debt, done
$25,000–$100,000One-time session with a fee-only financial advisor ($300–$600)
$100,000–$500,000Comprehensive financial plan from a fee-only CFP; consider tax specialist
$500,000+Estate lawyer, tax accountant, and investment advisor — the cost of getting this wrong is high

A fee-only advisor charges by the hour and has no incentive to sell you products.

→ See: Fee-Only Financial Advisor Canada

Common mistakes to avoid

MistakeWhy It Hurts
Investing immediately without a planLump-sum investing in a volatile market can feel wrong — dollar-cost average over 6–12 months if that helps you commit
Letting guilt drive decisionsRelatives who suggest you “should” spend or give away inherited money are projecting; the decision is yours
Buying a car or taking a vacation firstOne-time consumption consumes what compounding could have built over decades
Ignoring the tax implications of sold assetsSelling inherited stocks at a gain triggers capital gains tax — track your adjusted cost base
Co-mingling with a spouse’s funds without considering attribution rulesTransferring inherited money to a spouse can create attribution rules on investment income