You Will Lose 40% of Your RRSP

You Will LOSE 40% of Your RRSP

Huge RRSP Mistake to AVOID – You will LOSE 40% of Your RRSP

The most overlooked area of retirement planning in Canada are taxes owing to the Canada Revenue Agency due to your remaining Registered Retirement Income Fund (RRIF) balance. When a person passes away with an RRSP or RRIF and they have no surviving spouse, the balance of your RRSP or RRIF is deemed to have been paid in full. The result is a high income in the year of your passing. You will lose at least 40 percent of your RRSP or RRIF to tax. If you’re like most people, each year you try to keep more of your hard earned money by contributing to an RRSP. Your RRSP contribution reduces the income tax payable to CRA.

Eliminating or reducing the taxes on your estate is actually very simple. A life insurance policy where the cash value and the death benefit grows over time to meet the needs of the of paying your final needs expenses (funeral, debts, taxes, beneficiaries & charities) Participating or Whole Life insurance will provide this solution for you in addition to being an alternative to your fixed income investments.

If you have any further questions about this video’s topic or any financial planning questions in general, I encourage you to schedule your confidential meeting with me.

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RRSP STRATEGY

Watch these Awesome RRSP Strategies to Hit the RRSP Jackpot!

Are you investing in an RRSP? We’re going to explain the proper use of an RRSP including what to do if you think you’re behind schedule with your savings goal.

โœ… RRSP Contribution Limits

โœ… What to do with your Refund RRSP is an acronym for โ€œregistered retirement savings plan.โ€

This definition sounds mighty dry when you consider how RRSPs are superheroes of modern retirement planning for Canadian โ€” true tax-obliterating, retirement-enriching wonders of the modern world.

A Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) is a retirement account thatโ€™s existed since 1957. RRSPs were introduced by the government to help Canadians save for retirement. The main benefit of RRSPs is that tax on RRSP contributions is deferred until retirement.