Key Takeaways
- RRSP contribution room is 18% of prior-year earned income, to a maximum of $31,560 for 2026 (up from $30,780 in 2025).
- Spousal RRSP contributions allow income splitting in retirement one of the most underutilized RRSP strategies in Canada.
- Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) participants who withdrew in 2024 must begin repaying 1/15 of their withdrawal per year in 2026, or include the amount in income.
- Contributing to an RRSP rather than spending generates an immediate tax refund effectively a forced government co-investment in your retirement savings.
While the March 1, 2026 RRSP contribution deadline for the 2025 tax year has passed, strategic RRSP management is a year-round activity and there are several advanced strategies that most Canadians either don’t know about or implement incorrectly. Understanding these strategies can meaningfully improve retirement outcomes and reduce lifetime tax bills.
How Contribution Room Works
RRSP contribution room is calculated as 18% of your prior year’s “earned income” (employment income, self-employment income, net rental income, and certain other sources), to a maximum annual dollar limit. For 2026 contributions, the limit is the lesser of 18% of your 2025 earned income or $31,560. Unused room carries forward indefinitely if you have not maximized past contributions, you can catch up in any future year.
One of the most common RRSP planning errors is failing to track pension adjustments. If you participate in a workplace defined benefit pension plan, your RRSP room is reduced by your “pension adjustment” the value your employer reports to CRA reflecting the benefit you earned in the pension that year. This can be zero for employees with no workplace pension, or tens of thousands of dollars for public sector workers with generous defined benefit plans. Your available room is printed on your Notice of Assessment from CRA each year the most reliable source to check before contributing.
Spousal RRSP: The Retirement Income Splitting Strategy
A spousal RRSP allows the higher-income spouse to contribute to an RRSP in the lower-income spouse’s name, using the contributor’s own RRSP room. The contributing spouse gets the immediate tax deduction (at their higher marginal rate), but when the funds are eventually withdrawn, the income is attributed to the lower-income spouse (at their lower marginal rate in retirement).
The after-tax savings from spousal RRSP income splitting can be substantial. If one spouse retires with $100,000 of annual RRSP/RRIF withdrawals and the other has minimal income, splitting to equalize at $50,000 each could reduce total family tax by $8,000-$15,000 annually depending on province and other income sources. The 3-year attribution rule requires that the contributing spouse not make new contributions within 3 years of the withdrawal for the splitting to work as intended.
The HBP Repayment Trap
The Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) allows first-time homebuyers to withdraw up to $35,000 from their RRSP (per person; $70,000 per couple) to purchase a first home, without paying immediate withholding tax. The catch is the repayment obligation: the withdrawn amount must be repaid to the RRSP over 15 years, starting the second calendar year after the withdrawal. If the minimum annual repayment (1/15 of the original withdrawal) is not made, that amount is added to taxable income for the year.
Many HBP participants particularly those who used the program during the 2020-2022 home buying rush are now entering their repayment window and may not fully understand the obligation. A couple that withdrew $35,000 each in 2024 must make their first annual repayment of $2,333 each (1/15 of $35,000) in the 2026 tax year. Missing this repayment adds $2,333 to each person’s taxable income a particularly expensive miss for those in high tax brackets.
| Account | Annual Limit | Tax on Contribution | Tax on Growth | Tax on Withdrawal | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RRSP | 18% of income / $31,560 | Deductible | Deferred | Taxed as income | Peak earners |
| TFSA | $7,000 | No deduction | Tax-free | Tax-free | All Canadians |
| FHSA | $8,000 / $40K lifetime | Deductible | Tax-free | Tax-free (if home purchase) | First-time buyers |
| Non-registered | Unlimited | No deduction | Taxed annually | Capital gains tax | Overflow savings |
The Bottom Line
RRSP strategy in 2026 requires thinking beyond the February contribution rush. Spousal RRSP contributions are among the most powerful and underutilized retirement planning tools available to Canadians with income inequality between spouses. HBP repayment obligations should be tracked carefully to avoid unexpected income inclusion. And for those with both RRSP and FHSA room available, the FHSA’s superior combination of upfront deductibility and tax-free withdrawal makes it the priority for first-time homebuyers before drawing on the RRSP HBP.