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Trevor recently died in Ontario. On Trevor’s RRSP contract, his spouse, Nicky, is named sole beneficiary. Because Nicky is a qualified beneficiary, she would qualify for a refund of premiums to transfer Trevor’s date-of-death income inclusion to Nicky. To eliminate tax on receipt of the proceeds, the RRSP assets are directly transferred to Nicky’s RRSP. At tax filing time, Nicky receives a T4RSP tax slip that requires her to include the date-of-death RRSP amount in her taxable income, but she offsets this amount with a 60(l) tax deduction.
The above rollover is commonly seen when a qualified beneficiary is designated as beneficiary on an RRSP application. Where this occurs, the proceeds normally bypass the deceased’s estate, reducing probate fees (where applicable) and avoiding estate creditors and complex estate settlements.Trevor recently died. On Trevor’s RRSP application, his estate was named beneficiary, but his wife, Nicky, is beneficiary of his estate. In an attempt to minimize tax payable for the year of death, Nicky and Trevor’s executor, his adult son, Phil, jointly elect to treat the RRSP payment to Trevor’s estate as a refund of premiums taxable to Nicky. CRA form T2019 is completed and included in the tax returns for both Trevor and Nicky for the year of payment to Trevor’s estate to indicate the details of the transaction. The RRSP proceeds are then paid to Nicky via Trevor’s estate, and a contribution to Nicky’s RRSP is subsequently made (before the end of 60 days following the year of payment to the estate). The end result is a tax-deferred rollover – a date-of-death income inclusion to Nicky, offset by an RRSP tax deduction.
This provision has brought much relief to executors and beneficiaries who realize after the death of an RRSP annuitant that he failed to designate a qualified beneficiary on his RRSP application. Sometimes the omission is intentional (e.g., to allow for greater control over the distribution of the asset); sometimes it is not. In Quebec, with the exception of insurance contracts, RRSP beneficiary designations cannot be made on or pursuant to plan contracts, meaning such designations are usually made by way of will. The 146(8.1) election provides flexibility in tax planning in that partial rollovers are allowable (which can allow for use of a deceased annuitant’s lower tax brackets or unused tax credits to minimize RRSP tax payable). A similar provision is available on death of a RRIF annuitant (CRA form T1090 is used for this purpose). But, annuitants and advisors should keep in mind that RRSPs and RRIFs paid to an estate are normally subject to probate tax, estate creditors and complex estate settlements where applicable. Wilmot George, CFP, TEP, CLU, CHS, is director of tax and estate planning at Mackenzie Investments. Wilmot can be contacted at [email protected]. Originally published on Advisor.caShare this article Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linkedin Share on Reddit Share on Email
My wife past away last year. I was beneficiary with her and it was spose account. The money was in Rrsp. I trasfer money to my RRSP account without realizing gain. It was tranfer straight institution to instiutions. Now that consider as asset me but then CR A thing I withraw money but it isn’t. Account needs some proof to show cra. Who would issue tax receipts either source institution or the destination. Also, wha could be done here
I know tax season ends soon but never realized. Thank you for your assistance.