Year-end planning for your RRSP, RRIF, and TFSA

November 17, 2024by Akmin
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For most Canadians, the subject of making RRSP or TFSA contributions, or making RRIF withdrawals, isn’t usually top of mind at year-end. Most Canadians know that the deadline for making contributions to one’s registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) comes 60 days after the end of the calendar year, around the end of February, but relatively few are aware that in some circumstances an RRSP contribution must be (or should be) made by December 31, in order to achieve the best tax result. As well, while a contribution or withdrawal from a TFSA can be done at any time, additional flexibility can be gained where withdrawals, in particular, are timed to take best advantage of the rules governing TFSAs. Finally, most Canadians who have opened a registered retirement fund (RRIF) are aware that they are required to make a withdrawal of a specified amount from that RRIF each year, with the percentage withdrawal amount based on the RRIF holder’s age – although few are aware of when and how that required withdrawal is calculated.

There are, in sum, significant advantages which can be obtained (and significant disadvantages avoided) by taking some time to consider and plan for RRSP and TFSA contributions and withdrawals before the end of the calendar year. What follows is an outline of steps which should be considered, before the end of the 2024 calendar year, by Canadians who have an RRSP, an RRIF, or a TFSA – or maybe all three.

Timing of RRSP contributions

When you are making a spousal RRSP contribution

Under Canadian tax rules, a taxpayer can make a contribution to a registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) in their spouse’s name and claim the deduction for the contribution on their own return. When the funds are withdrawn by the spouse, the amounts are taxed as the spouse’s income, at a (presumably) lower tax rate. However, the benefit of having withdrawals taxed in the hands of the spouse is available only where the withdrawal takes place no sooner than the end of the second calendar year following the year in which the contribution is made. Therefore, where a contribution to a spousal RRSP is made in December of 2024, the contributor can claim a deduction for that contribution on their return for 2024. The spouse can then withdraw that amount as early as January 1, 2027 and have it taxed in their own hands. If the contribution isn’t made until January or February of 2025, the contributor can still claim a deduction for it on the 2024 tax return, but the amount won’t be eligible to be taxed in the spouse’s hands on withdrawal until January 1, 2028. It’s an especially important consideration for couples who are approaching retirement and may plan on withdrawing funds in the relatively near future. Even where that’s not the situation, making the contribution before the end of the calendar year will ensure maximum flexibility should an unforeseen need to withdraw funds arise.

When you are turning 71 during 2024

Every Canadian who has an RRSP must collapse that plan by the end of the year in which they turn 71 years of age – usually by converting the RRSP into a registered retirement income fund (RRIF) or by purchasing an annuity. An individual who turns 71 during the year is still entitled to make a final RRSP contribution for that year, assuming that they have sufficient contribution room. However, in such cases, the 60-day window for contributions after December 31 is not available. Any RRSP contribution to be made by a person who turns 71 during the year must be made by December 31 of that year. Once that deadline has passed, no further RRSP contributions are possible.

RRIF withdrawals for 2024

Under Canadian law, anyone who has an RRIF is required to make a minimum withdrawal from that RRIF each year. The amount of the withdrawal is calculated as a specified percentage of the balance in the RRIF at the beginning of the calendar year, with that percentage based on the age of the RRIF holder at that time.

Taxpayers who have no immediate need of funds held within an RRIF are often reluctant to make a withdrawal and pay the tax on those amounts, especially where the value of investments held in an RRIF has declined. While there is no way of avoiding the requirement to withdraw that minimum amount from one’s RRIF, and to pay tax on the amount withdrawn, such taxpayers can consider contributing those amounts to a tax-free savings account (TFSA). Where that is done, the funds can be invested and continue to grow. As well, neither the original contribution nor the investment gains will be taxable when the funds are withdrawn from the TFSA, and amounts withdrawn will not be included in income when determining the taxpayer’s eligibility for means-tested federal benefits and credits, like Old Age Security, the GST/HST credit, or the age credit.

Planning for TFSA withdrawals and contributions

Each Canadian aged 18 and over can make an annual contribution to a tax-free savings account (TFSA) – the current-year contribution limit for 2024 is $7,000. As well, where an amount previously contributed to a TFSA is withdrawn from the plan, that withdrawn amount is added to the taxpayer’s total TFSA contribution limit, but not until the year following the year of withdrawal.

Consequently, it makes sense, where a TFSA withdrawal is planned (or the need to make such a withdrawal might arise) within the next few months, to make that withdrawal before the end of the calendar year. A taxpayer who withdraws funds from their TFSA on or before December 31, 2024 will have the amount which is withdrawn added to their TFSA contribution limit for 2025, which means it can be re-contributed, where finances allow, as early as January 1, 2025. If the same taxpayer waits until January of 2025 to make the withdrawal, the amount withdrawn won’t be added to the taxpayer’s TFSA contribution room until 2026.

The approach of the calendar year end doesn’t usually prompt Canadians to consider the details of making contributions to an RRSP, or withdrawals from a TFSA or an RRIF. There is, however, no flexibility in the deadlines for taking such actions, and considering what steps may be needed or advisable now means one less thing to remember as the December 31 deadline nears.


The information presented is only of a general nature, may omit many details and special rules, is current only as of its published date, and accordingly cannot be regarded as legal or tax advice. Please contact our office for more information on this subject and how it pertains to your specific tax or financial situation.

Akmin