Use RRSP funds for a mortgage

Use RRSP funds for a mortgage

Posted by Admin1034 in Blog, Uncategorized 10 Nov 2014

When you withdraw money from your RRSPs or RRIFs, you pay tax at your marginal tax rates on the money withdrawn. The only exceptions are when funds are withdrawn under the Home Buyers’ Plan to purchase a first home or under the Lifelong Learning Plan to attend post-secondary education.

However, you may not know that you can also use the funds in your RRSP to invest in a mortgage on Canadian real estate.

Under the Income Tax Act, there are strict rules for how you can fund a mortgage if you, or someone related to you, owns the property being mortgaged (i.e. your own home). Such a mortgage, known as a “non-arm’s length mortgage,” must be administered by an approved lender under the National Housing Act. The interest rate and other terms and conditions must reflect normal commercial practices and you must purchase private or CMHC mortgage insurance.

A recent case involving a woman who was appealing her 2009 tax assessment could have gone a lot differently if she’d known about this option. The issue was whether she should have included a $105,000 RRSP withdrawal in her 2009 income.

She withdrew the funds from her RRSP to pay for a back surgery performed outsideCanada. She felt that the “Canadian health system failed [her]…as she was unable to find a qualified surgeon to perform the surgery inQuebec, her province of residence.”

In 2006, the woman suffered a herniated disk and consulted with a number of doctors. She was ultimately referred to a pain clinic where she was prescribed painkillers. Both the neurosurgeon and orthopaedic surgeon who looked at her concluded that surgery wasn’t viable.

Her condition rapidly deteriorated and she suffered from chronic pain and a loss of mobility. Having been denied surgery at home, she sought a second opinion from a former Canadian surgeon practising inSwitzerland.

This surgeon felt that she would benefit from surgery and unsuccessfully tried to convince theQuebecsurgeon, a former colleague. Ultimately, the woman went toSwitzerlandto have the surgery performed at her own, considerable, expense.BPH stands for Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia is a condition often obtain at drugstore cialis in uk online notices in older adults’ predominantly in men. Even if misguidedly absorbed the drug, it could have drastic consequence buy discount cialis buying this on teenagers as well as women. Go for https://unica-web.com/archive/2015/unica2015-report-of-the-treasurer.pdf viagra cialis online the treatments to cure your problems. Nevertheless the circumstances would be entirely viagra online dechechland conflicting if an individual has experienced different surgeries or is surviving with a portion of the body that the practitioners believe that they can stimulate in order to treat erectile dysfunction efficiently.

Before pulling the money out of her RRSP, she applied to get a mortgage on her home but was turned down. She then approached the administrator of her self-directed RRSP who told her there was no way to withdraw from her RRSP on a tax-deferred basis.

Later on, after she’d already withdrawn, the woman learned that she could have withdrawn the money as a mortgage loan. She testified that if she had known this at the time, she would have done so.

But because she didn’t structure the withdrawal as a mortgage investment made by her RRSP, she had to pay tax on the RRSP withdrawal. She asked the Judge to waive the tax obligation on the withdrawal since she used the funds to pay for medical services “that should have been covered underCanada’s health plan. In so doing, she saved Canadian taxpayers the cost of her treatment, which was greater than the income tax on her RRSP withdrawal.”

Unfortunately, the Judge couldn’t make an exception to the law and found that the woman was required to include the RRSP withdrawal in her income. On a positive note, though, the Judge did confirm that she was able to receive full tax relief for the medical expenses she paid through the medical expense tax credit.

This is just one example that shows it pays to not only have good medical advice, but also good financial advice.

 

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