Preparing for retirement means ensuring you have ample income long after you have stopped working. So where will the money come from? With careful planning a Registered Retirement Savings Plan could be the answer. Here's how.
March 8, 2016
Preparing for retirement means ensuring you have ample income long after you have stopped working. So where will the money come from? With careful planning a Registered Retirement Savings Plan could be the answer. Here's how.
A Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) allows you to put money away for retirement in an account where the investment gains are tax free and the contributions you make towards it are tax deductible.
You can keep contributing to an RRSP until December 31st of the year you turn 71, but will then have to wind it up and open a Registered Retirement Income Fund, or RRIF.
You can place most investments into an RRSP, including money, stocks, bonds, guaranteed investment certificates (GICs) and mutual funds.
There’s an annual deadline for contributing to your RRSP, either at the end of February or beginning of March.
There are tax penalties for taking money out of an RRSP early, with one exception.
Registered Retirement Savings Plans give Canadians the opportunity to put money away for retirement while benefitting from a tax shelter, because contributions are tax deductible.
Although RRSPs are useful tools for many, if you’re a low-income earner in a lower tax bracket, you won’t see the same benefit as someone in a higher bracket.
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