Disclaimer: I’m not an accountant and I’m not a lawyer. Consult a professional if desired.
Summary: Make sure your RRSPs, RRIFs and TFSAs have named SUCCESSORS or BENEFICIARIES to save those who survive you time, effort and money.
The CRA lets RRSPs, RRIFs and TFSAs of a dead person pass to other people without tax penalties. But the account(s) have to be properly set up. Make sure they are! It only takes a moment.
The CRA does like us to pay taxes. But they are not completely heartless. They’ve set up the concepts of successor annuitant (for RRIFs), successor holder (for TFSAs) and “Beneficiary” (for RRIFs, TFSAs and RRSPs) to help lower the tax burden of someone who has died.
A “Successor Annuitant” for a RRIF basically takes over the account of the dead person. This can only be a spouse. This is similar conceptually to the named successor holder of a TFSA. The benefits?
- There’s no sale of the assets of the RRIF/TFSA unless desired; everything can pass “in kind” to the successor
- The successor does not take a tax hit1 (although the dead person does in the case of a RRIF/RRSP2)
- The funds are not considered part of the estate, which means these funds will avoid probate. That’s good because you won’t have to pay the estate administration tax (aka probate fees) and access to the funds is MUCH quicker since you don’t have to wait for probate to be granted (a months long process, typically)
A “Beneficiary” is someone who gets the money in the accounts. This can be anyone. Or even more than one (e.g. the children of the TFSA holder or children of the RRIF holder). The same benefits apply
- The named beneficiary or beneficiaries don’t take a tax hit
- The funds in the TFSA/RRSP/RRIF are not part of the estate
Both the “successor Annuitant” and the “Beneficiary” are set up at the account level by your financial service provider (e.g. your bank, your broker) usually set up at the time the account was created. (Remember those long forms you had to fill out when you first opened a TFSA, RRSP or RRIF? It was on the application form). These can of course be changed at any time. One common situation where a change is warranted is after the death of one spouse — this would be a good time for the surviving spouse to name their children as beneficiaries of their RRSP/RRIF/TFSA.
The actions you should take? Call up the people who manage your RRIF/RRSP/TFSA and make sure that:
- If you’re the holder of a RRIF/TFSA, are married, and intend to give everything you own to your spouse, make sure you name your spouse as the SUCCESSOR
- If you’re the holder of an RRSP, are married, and intend to give everything you own to your spouse, make sure you name your spouse as the BENEFICIARY
- If you’re the holder of a RRIF/TFSA/RRSP and don’t have a spouse, or want to name someone other than your spouse for the funds, then make sure they are named as a BENEFICIARY
This only takes minutes, and can save those who remain after you’re gone time, effort, and money!
- Not 100% true. The recipients have to pay tax on the gains made by the holdings between day of death and the day of liquidation. ↩︎
- For RRIFs, this is true. Put simply, under tax rules, the dead person is considered to have sold the entire RRIF on the day they died and must declare it all as income. ↩︎