RRIF Minimum Withdrawals Explained: Rules, Rates, and Planning Strategies#
This article explains concepts, options, and rules in Canada for general information only. It is not financial, tax, legal, or investment advice.
Once an RRSP converts to a RRIF (Registered Retirement Income Fund), the tax-deferral phase effectively ends. From age 72 onward, you must withdraw a legislated minimum percentage of your RRIF balance each year — whether you need the money or not.
For many Canadians, these mandatory minimum withdrawals are the largest taxable income event in their retirement. Understanding how they work, when they kick in, and how to manage them strategically can save thousands of dollars in taxes and potentially preserve tens of thousands in government benefits.
What Is a RRIF?#
A RRIF is the primary investment account Canadians use to draw down their RRSP savings in retirement. You can also contribute employer pension funds, group RRSPs, or other registered funds to a RRIF.
Key characteristics:
- Holds the same investments as an RRSP (equities, bonds, GICs, ETFs, mutual funds)
- Tax-sheltered growth continues inside the RRIF
- Withdrawals are 100% taxable as ordinary income in the year taken
- No new contributions can be made to a RRIF (unlike an RRSP)
- Must be converted from RRSP by December 31 of the year you turn 71
When Do Minimum Withdrawals Begin?#
- Conversion deadline: December 31 of the year you turn 71
- First year of mandatory minimums: The year after conversion — so if you convert at 71, minimums begin the year you turn 72
- Exception: In the year of conversion, there is no mandatory minimum withdrawal
Many people delay conversion to 71 and are surprised that mandatory withdrawals begin the very next calendar year.
RRIF Minimum Withdrawal Rates (Full Table)#
The mandatory minimum is a percentage of the RRIF's January 1 balance each year. Here are the federal rates:
| Age | Minimum Rate | Age | Minimum Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 71 (conversion year) | No minimum | 84 | 7.71% |
| 72 | 5.40% | 85 | 8.51% |
| 73 | 5.53% | 86 | 8.99% |
| 74 | 5.67% | 87 | 9.27% |
| 75 | 5.82% | 88 | 9.93% |
| 76 | 5.98% | 89 | 10.21% |
| 77 | 6.17% | 90 | 11.92% |
| 78 | 6.36% | 91 | 13.06% |
| 79 | 6.58% | 92 | 14.49% |
| 80 | 6.82% | 93 | 16.34% |
| 81 | 7.08% | 94 | 18.79% |
| 82 | 7.38% | 95+ | 20.00% |
| 83 | 7.71% |
Note: At age 95 and older, the minimum rate is frozen at 20% of the January 1 balance.
Example Calculation#
Anne is 75. Her RRIF balance on January 1 is $600,000.
Mandatory minimum = $600,000 × 5.82% = $34,920
Anne must withdraw at least $34,920 this year, and it will be fully added to her taxable income.
The Problem of Forced Withdrawals#
The rising minimum rates create a compounding problem for retirees with large RRIFs:
- You may not need the money — but you must take it anyway and pay tax on it
- Mandatory income can push you above OAS clawback thresholds (~$90,997 in 2026), reducing or eliminating your OAS
- Forced income may disqualify you from GIS if income rises above the GIS reduction threshold
- Large mandatory withdrawals in your 80s and 90s:
| Age | $500,000 Balance at 72 (7% return, taking only minimums) | Annual Mandatory Withdrawal |
|---|---|---|
| 72 | ~$500,000 | ~$27,000 |
| 80 | ~$530,000 (7% growth outpacing withdrawals) | ~$36,150 |
| 85 | ~$510,000 | ~$43,400 |
| 90 | ~$390,000 | ~$46,500 |
| 95 | ~$250,000 | ~$50,000 |
At strong investment returns, a RRIF can actually grow in your early 70s even while taking minimums — which means larger mandatory withdrawals and more taxable income later in life.
Tax Treatment of RRIF Withdrawals#
Every dollar withdrawn from a RRIF is treated as employment income for tax purposes. It stacks on top of:
- CPP
- OAS
- Other pensions
- Investment income
Withholding Tax at Source#
Your financial institution withholds tax at source when you take RRIF withdrawals above the minimum:
| Amount Above Minimum | Withholding Rate |
|---|---|
| Over minimum, up to $5,000 | 10% (Quebec: 21%) |
| Over minimum, $5,001–$15,000 | 20% (Quebec: 26%) |
| Over minimum, above $15,000 | 30% (Quebec: 31%) |
Important: No withholding is applied on the mandatory minimum amount itself. The minimum is still fully taxable — you must ensure you set aside enough for taxes at filing time.
The Pension Income Credit and RRIF Withdrawals#
After age 65, RRIF withdrawals qualify for the pension income credit:
- Federal credit: 15% × up to $2,000 = up to $300 tax savings
- Provincial credits vary (typically similar in range)
- Combined federal + provincial savings: up to ~$450–$700 depending on province
This is one reason some retirees voluntarily convert RRSP to RRIF before age 71 — to start claiming the pension income credit sooner.
Spousal Age Election: Lower Your Minimums#
If your spouse is younger than you, you can elect to base RRIF minimum withdrawals on your spouse's age instead of your own. This results in a lower minimum percentage, reducing forced taxable income.
Example:
- George is 75, spouse Helen is 68
- Using George's age: minimum = 5.82%
- Using Helen's age: minimum = 5.24% (the rate for age 68 is not in the standard table below 71, but RRIF rules use the formula 1/(90 − age) for ages under 71)
For Helen at age 68: minimum = 1 / (90 − 68) = 1/22 = 4.55%
On a $500,000 RRIF:
- George's age: $500,000 × 5.82% = $29,100
- Helen's age: $500,000 × 4.55% = $22,750
Annual difference: $6,350 less in mandatory taxable income. Over 10 years, that's $63,500 less in forced withdrawals — potentially saving $12,000–$20,000 in taxes depending on marginal rate.
The spousal age election must be made in the first year you set up the RRIF and cannot be changed later. It can help to select your spouse's age if they are younger when you convert.
Strategies to Reduce the RRIF Minimum Burden#
Strategy 1: Draw Down the RRSP Early#
The most effective long-term strategy: reduce your RRIF balance before mandatory minimums begin.
Every dollar you draw from your RRSP proactively — between age 60 and 71 — is a dollar that won't generate mandatory RRIF withdrawals in your 80s and 90s.
This is especially powerful if:
- Your income is low in your early 60s
- You have not yet started CPP and OAS
- The withdrawals will be taxed at a lower marginal rate now than in later years
Example comparison:
Margaret has a $700,000 RRSP at age 62. She retires with only CPP income (~$15,000):
Option A (no early draws): She takes no RRSP income until 72. At 72, her RRIF is ~$950,000 (after 10 years of growth). Mandatory minimum = $51,300. Combined with CPP and OAS ($24,000), her income is ~$75,300/year — and forced higher over time.
Option B (early RRSP draws): She takes $30,000/year from RRSP from age 62–70. Her income is ~$45,000/year (taxed at a low rate). At 72, her RRIF is only ~$400,000. Mandatory minimum = $21,600. Combined income is now ~$45,600 — well below the OAS clawback threshold.
Total lifetime tax savings can exceed $60,000–$80,000.
Strategy 2: In-Kind Withdrawals#
You do not have to sell investments to satisfy RRIF minimums. You can take in-kind withdrawals — transfer securities directly from the RRIF to a non-registered account at fair market value.
This satisfies the minimum without disrupting your investment strategy. The fair market value on the day of transfer is still taxable income, but you avoid forced selling.
Strategy 3: Use a Spousal RRSP to Create a Second RRIF#
If you contributed to a spousal RRSP during your working years (or up to age 71), your spouse will have their own RRIF in retirement. This:
- Splits RRIF income between two people (income splitting at source)
- Effectively doubles the threshold before OAS clawback is triggered
- Allows the pension income credit to be claimed by both spouses
This is most powerful when one spouse has very little retirement income of their own.
Strategy 4: Consider an Annuity for Part of the RRIF#
You can convert a portion of your RRIF into a prescribed annuity or a life annuity. An annuity provides a guaranteed fixed income stream for life. The trade-off:
- Eliminates longevity risk and market risk
- No RRIF minimum headaches on the annuitized portion
- Gives up flexibility and potential upside
- Income is still fully taxable
Annuities are most attractive when interest rates are high. A rough test: if an annuity pays more than your expected RRIF withdrawal rate, it may be worth considering for a portion.
Strategy 5: Convert Earlier and Level-Load Income#
Rather than waiting until 71 to convert, convert at 65 (or even earlier) and take even voluntary withdrawals each year. This "level-loads" your income — avoiding the spike in your 80s — and makes income tax planning more predictable.
Example: Converting at 65 and taking $25,000/year in voluntary withdrawals allows you to:
- Use the pension income credit from age 65
- Fill low tax brackets in pre-OAS years
- Deposit into TFSA with the after-tax proceeds
- Reduce RRIF balance so future mandatory minimums are manageable
RRIF Minimums and the Retirement Calculator#
Manually projecting RRIF mandatory minimums 20–30 years into the future is complex, especially when combined with investment returns, inflation, other income sources, and tax brackets.
The Retirement Withdrawal Calculator automatically applies the correct RRIF minimum rates each year and models what happens to your accounts over time. You can see:
- Year-by-year RRIF balance and mandatory minimum for your age
- How mandatory minimums interact with OAS clawback and GIS
- The impact of early RRSP/RRIF draws vs. waiting
- Spouse RRIF modelling with pension income splitting
- Monte Carlo projections showing how market returns affect mandatory draws
Enter your RRIF balance, age, and other income into the Retirement Withdrawal Calculator to see your full mandatory minimum schedule and total projected taxes over your retirement.
Frequently Asked Questions#
Can I skip a RRIF minimum withdrawal in a bad market year?#
No. RRIF minimums are mandatory regardless of market performance. The 2020 COVID exception (a one-time 25% reduction in minimums) was a rare legislative response — do not count on it repeating.
What happens if I don't take my RRIF minimum?#
Your financial institution is required to calculate and pay out the minimum by December 31 each year. If you fail to manage it, they may make the payment automatically or you could face tax consequences.
Can I have multiple RRIFs?#
Yes. You can hold a RRIF at multiple financial institutions. The mandatory minimum is calculated separately for each RRIF, but you can withdraw the combined minimum from any one of them (provided you track the combined minimums carefully).
What happens to my RRIF when I die?#
The full fair market value of the RRIF is included in your income in the year of death (taxed on the final return) — unless:
- The RRIF passes to a spouse or common-law partner (rolled over tax-free to their RRIF)
- The RRIF passes to a financially dependent child or grandchild under 18 (annuitized)
- The RRIF passes to a dependent child with a disability (rolled to their RDSP or annuity)
Without these exceptions, the entire RRIF is a taxable estate event — often the largest single tax bill of a retiree's life. Proper estate planning is essential.
Can I contribute to a RRIF?#
No. Once an RRSP is converted to a RRIF, no new contributions can be made to that RRIF. However, if you have a younger spouse, you can still contribute to a spousal RRSP until the year your spouse turns 71.
Open a Canadian Investment Account#
Some links on this page are referral links. If you open an account through them, I may receive a small bonus at no additional cost to you.
If you are looking for a low-cost platform to open or manage your RRIF, RRSP, or TFSA, here are two widely recommended options for Canadian investors:
Questrade — Canada's largest discount broker. ETF purchases are commission-free; other trades start from $4.95. Supports RRSP, TFSA, FHSA, RRIF, and non-registered accounts — everything needed for a self-managed Canadian retirement plan.
Wealthsimple — Commission-free stock and ETF trading with a clean, modern interface. Supports RRSP, TFSA, FHSA, RRIF, and non-registered accounts. Also offers Wealthsimple Invest (robo-advisor) for hands-off index investing.
Summary#
| Key RRIF Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Conversion deadline | December 31 of the year you turn 71 |
| First mandatory minimum | Age 72 |
| Minimum rate at 72 | 5.40% |
| Minimum rate at 95+ | 20.00% |
| Tax treatment | 100% taxable as ordinary income |
| Withholding on excess | 10%, 20%, or 30% depending on amount |
| Pension income credit | Eligible after age 65 |
| Pension income splitting | Up to 50% to spouse after age 65 |
| Spousal age election | Use younger spouse's age for lower minimums |
The bottom line: RRIF mandatory minimums are unavoidable once they begin — but careful planning before they begin can dramatically reduce the tax burden. Proactive RRSP/RRIF draws at lower rates, TFSA maximisation, and spousal strategies all work together to flatten income and preserve government benefits.
Use the Retirement Withdrawal Calculator to model your specific situation and see the numbers year by year.