As the end of the year approaches you are probably thinking about how
to reduce your tax bill for the year. One of the best tax planning tools
available in Canada is the Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) and
if you have "contribution room", you should consider maximizing
your contribution which will save you taxes.
The contribution limit has increased to $14,500 for the year 2003. This
is the ceiling which can be reduced for persons with a company pension
or if the "earned income" for 2002 was less than $80,555.
The deadline for making contributions is normally 60 days after the end
of the year. Even though the year 2004 is a leap year the deadline will
still be March 1, 2004 as February 29th falls on a Sunday . If however,
you will turn 69 this year, your contributions should be made no later
than December 31, 2003. Alternatively, if your spouse is younger than
you are, a spousal RSP plan can be set up and contributions made to that
plan until your spouse turns 69.
RRSP contributions can be cash contributions or contributions "in-kind".
Instead of contributing cash, you can transfer "qualified investments"
from an investment account into the RRSP account and receive a tax receipt
for the contribution. This way you will still get a tax receipt even if
you don't have the cash to make a contribution. A word of caution in considering
which investments to transfer - the investment must be a "qualified
investment" for RRSP purposes and you may trigger a capital gain
on the transfer. "Qualified investments" include mutual funds,
stocks & bonds of public companies, most government bonds, GICs and
units in income trusts. When a transfer is made, the "fair market
value" of the investment is used to value the contribution and the
tax receipt you will receive. If the "fair market value" is
higher than your cost, you will have to pay tax on one-half of the gain,
unless you have capital losses from this or prior years that can be used
to offset the gain. On the other hand if the "fair market value"
is lower than your cost, the resulting capital loss, triggered by your
contribution "in kind", cannot be used on your tax return. If
you wish to generate a tax loss from an investment you plan on transferring
"in kind" into your RRSP, do this first by selling or switching
the investment before you transfer it.
Since the economy and the stock market seem to have "turned the corner",
this is the right time to evaluate your investment and RRSP portfolios
to see if any changes or re-allocation should be made. Income tax should
not drive your investment decisions but a little planning will save you
taxes. You can transfer those assets that have a capital gain into your
RRSP portfolio and offset this gain by selling other investments that
have a capital loss. Consult your investment advisor and accountant to
maximize your tax planning opportunity for RRSP contributions.
For more information, contact Anne Chun via her advisor
profile, or her website.