Unless taxpayers make a request, there are no withholding taxes on the minimum RRIF withdrawal. This can result in the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) requesting quarterly tax installments in the future: after filing a tax return where net taxes owing (taxes owing less the taxes deducted at source) exceed $3,000.
If this looks to be an annual event, it’s wise to pay the tax installments, as the CRA will charge installment interest on the amounts outstanding or paid late, Ardrey says. “That rate of interest is currently at 10%.”
(Of course, if you overpay installments, the CRA will not pay you any interest.)
Withholding taxes is another consideration. These are not the same as your final tax bill (after you die), Birenbaum says, but instead are “a default percentage the government takes upfront to ensure they get (at least some) tax on RRSP or RRIF withdrawals.” If you’re in your 60s and have ever taken money from your RRSP, you know you pay 10% withholding tax for withdrawals of $5,000 or less, 20% between $5,001 and $15,000, and 30% over $15,000. Amounts are higher in Quebec.
But the rules are different for RRIFs; there are no withholding taxes required on minimum withdrawals. Outside Quebec, withholding taxes are the same for RRSPs, says Birenbaum. For systematic withdrawals, withholding taxes are based not on each individual payment but on the total sum requested in the year that exceeds the minimum mandated withdrawal.
You don’t necessarily want to pay the least in withholding taxes, as many may know from making RRSP withdrawals in their 60s. You can always request paying a higher upfront withholding tax on RRIF withdrawals, if you expect to owe more at tax-filing time due to other pension and investment income. You can also set aside some RRIF proceeds in a savings account dedicated to future tax liabilities.
Do RRIFs trigger OAS clawbacks?
Another complication of extra RRIF income is that it can trigger clawbacks of Old Age Security (OAS) benefits. If your total income exceeds $90,997, OAS payments will be clawed back by $0.15 for every dollar over this amount until they reach zero.
Income splitting with a RRIF
Fortunately, there are ways to minimize these tax consequences. If you are one half of a couple, you can benefit from a form of pension income splitting: RRIF income can be split with a spouse on a tax return when appropriate, providing the taxpayer is over 65. An income split of $2,000 can provide a pension tax credit for the spouse, which could be the difference between being impacted by the OAS clawback or not.