Plain English Finance
The Plain English Finance podcast is hosted by Tré Bynoe CFP® CIM®, a financial planner with TCU Wealth Management and Aviso Wealth.
While Tré specializes in working with families with more complicated finances, typically involving corporations and trusts, this podcast is for anyone wanting to learn how to make high-quality decisions based on evidence, to give themselves the highest likelihood of financial success.
You should always consult with your financial, legal, and tax advisors before making changes.
This podcast is provided as a general source of information and should not be considered personal investment advice or solicitation to buy or sell any securities.
The views expressed are those of the individual and are not necessarily those of Aviso Financial Inc.
Mutual funds and other securities are offered through Aviso Wealth, a division of Aviso Financial Inc.
Plain English Finance
RRSPs Aren’t a Scam, But This Mistake Is Costly | Ep. 55
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
RRSPs are not a scam, but using one without a withdrawal plan can create an avoidable tax problem.
In this episode, we explain when RRSP contributions help, when they don't, and why retirement withdrawals need to be planned years in advance.
What I cover:
• Why an RRSP is best understood as a tool for moving income between years
• The mistake people make when they spend their RRSP tax refund
• How one client’s decision may have cost approximately $12,000
• Why taking no RRSP income in early retirement can backfire
• How RRIF withdrawals, pensions, CPP, and OAS can stack together
• Why automatically maximizing your RRSP is not always the best strategy
Chapters:
00:00 Are RRSPs a scam?
01:12 What an RRSP actually does
02:18 The problem with spending the tax refund
04:40 The RRSP decision that may have cost $12,000
06:35 Why the withdrawal strategy matters
08:28 How a large RRSP can become a retirement tax trap
13:12 Using lower-income years for withdrawals
25:02 When maximizing your RRSP may be the wrong move
RRSP planning is not a way to get a tax refund. Deciding when you want to recognize the income and pay the tax is what they're designed for.
Subscribe for more practical conversations about Canadian retirement, tax, and financial planning.
RSPs" are a scam and you shouldn't use them," is what somebody said to me. let's talk about why that's wrong. Okay. So first off. I, I understand why people would say that, we'll talk about why they would say that.
SierraI need the understanding
Trewhy. Why do you they would say that? that?
SierraBecause they they think the government is out to get them.
TreI mean, that's beside the point. Okay.
SierraIt's one of those
Trepodcasts, um,
Sierraconspiracy. No. So a
Trea lot of of people, and it's, it is not, it's not a small amount of of people.
SierraReally.
TreYeah.
Sierrawhat's going on there?
TreBecause financial literacy is very low. So what happens is people contribute to RSPs all of of their life, and then they will go to take the money out, And then suddenly the government's taking 30%. Well, that's a scam. that's a scam.
SierraThey're scamming me. They're scam me my my money in
Trehere. Exactly.
SierraYeah. I
Tresee. Why, why is it not a scam?
SierraBecause all the rules are available to you and you didn't read the rule book. I know. It
Treit's sucks.
SierraI didn't read it either, to be but
Trebasically it's a case of RSPs are a are a tool, and I've already said this many on podcast, but RSPs are a tool to move income from one year into another.
SierraMm-hmm.
TreThat is all they are are very, very good at. So, or how people should think about it anyway. anyway.
SierraSo
Trewhen you are moving income from years when you're working, you get a tax refund often. Or think it, don't even think about it as tax refund. You don't have to pay that tax on dollar you're moving that income to to future years. But do most people go do their tax refund?
SierraSpend it. Spend.
Treor spend it, right?
SierraOf course.
TreOr if you're self-employed, it is just less tax that you have to pay. And then they will go and
Sierraspend Spend it, right, not
Tredo anything with the tax that they should have have paid, but didn't pay. Right.
SierraYeah.
TreSo that means that they don't actually see full benefit an RSP because the benefit is that you, it's almost like you get to invest and save more because you were were getting getting this tax... you're not not paying this tax. Mm-hmm. But when people don't, that's when they, they don't save enough and they complain that, hey, my million dollars in my RSP that I've, you know, religiously invested in is actually only 650 $700,000.
SierraYeah,
TreAt the end of the day, because of all the tax and and stuff like that. Well, that a lot a lot of people.
SierraI bet.
TreYou need to plan better, right? Because when you're RSPs you have have to think about the withdrawal side of that. And this is where do I actually expect the average person to do this? No, but you have to then, well, you face the consequence. Either way, government gets their money, but you have to... Well, no, I'll challenge you. You, have to not think about RSPs as a tool to get a tax refund. If that is how you are viewing RSPs, then you are likely heading for trouble. Because that is not what RSPs do.
SierraOr some people just think of it as a type of savings account. Like, do, do they not? I feel like people would say that when I worked at,
TreThat's extremely low financial literacy. I'm not go there. But yeah, some people might.
SierraIt's like they don't understand all the... Yeah, the benefits the tool or they just don't understand tool they're using.
TreYeah, don't understand the tool they're using. They're told,
SierraThey're using using a mallet for a nail a wall it's like, you know,
Treget around, run
Sierrainto
Treissues.
SierraIs that a good analogy?
Tregood
Sierragood
Treenough. I don't know
SierraI do
Trehow do use the the screwdriver on a nail or something
Sierrathat, but
Treamount
Sierraworks. I was thinking because it still kind of gets the job done, like you're saving money. You're investing
TreYeah, but Yeah, but
Sierrayou're using it inappropriately, so it's like. You're You're gonna end up with hole in the wall, potentially if you're, 'cause you've got a big mallet and, Yeah. See how deep
Treis? Yeah. You've talked about that. I
Sierraput a lot of thought. Absolutely. Very Very quickly.
TreYeah. Okay. Well maybe that's a good, that's the example we're gonna use now on.
SierraThat's a great illustration.
Trefrom The rest this episode, the example we're using
SierraMallet on the nail.
TreYeah. But I ran into recently with a client that they were heading, they had one year left of retirement,
Sierraof
Treworking until they they retired Of of retirement.
SierraYikes.
TreThis is when they died. Yikes. Yikes. had one year, year year of working, and it was a high income year. Okay. So they were were earning, it was about over $200,000, almost $200,000 in this year. And the, when we built the plan, the plan was take a bunch of money, put it it into the the RSP, like $40,000 or something like that. We gotta put it into the the the RSP and then take it out the proceeding the year afterwards, because again, you're moving income from one year into another year. Mm-hmm. My plan was to
Sierraput it
Treit in there December 31st, practically speaking, and take out January 1st. So you're just moving income used to be in that year, now it's in this this year. Yeah. And I got a ton of pushback it. So much so they actually didn't do it. They kinda like stopped replying. I was like, we do this before before the deadline. Didn't do it. I find later, that's why. Because they spoke to a friend or whatever and it it was their friend said that they they shouldn't do it they 'cause 'cause are a scam.
SierraOh no
TreIt was like, unfortunately for that that individual, it cost them. Probably it was that it was like
Sierra$12,000 or something
Trelike that is what it is. What that, that cost them. Right. Because they didn't understand how it worked. And people out there that say crazy things that they don't actually know what they're talking about.
SierraBut But again, it's the whole like trusting your friend over any 'cause it's it's like, yeah, they may have good intentions, but they're not right all the time.
TreThat's what kind of led me to, to think about it a bit more. I know I'd, I'd heard it before but it's but it's been a very, very long time since someone, someone said
Sierrasomebody said
Tresomeone, someone said that, somebody really said that to me or, or impacted me any way. Because normally the people that would be saying that, not really the people that I'd be working with, for the most part. It is a very low level of of financial literacy. So I wanted to talk what it does, what RSPs do, and The withdrawal process of them. Mm-hmm. Because you have you have understand the withdrawal side of it in order to understand how you should be using a tool.
SierraMm-hmm.
TreSo the withdrawal side of it is, is very simple. It's a tax planning game.
SierraWhen it comes to
Treto RSPs, as I said, you're moving income from year into another, so
Sierracontribute to
TreRSPs. Take income off that year, and you simply take that income in a year and while it's in that account, you get to defer the taxes on any growth that you, that that money earns. Yeah, it's pretty simple. Just because you don't
Sierraspend the money, doesn't mean you don't earn
Treearn the income. That's like me saying, Hey, because hey boss, pay me less. because I don't actually want spend the money this year.
SierraJust
Trekeep it,
Sierrabut you owe me later.
TreYeah. Just like, who's going do Nobody's realistically gonna do that. They gonna say, gimme the money, I'll take the money and I'll do something else with it. I'll save it, I'll invest it. do something else with it. It doesn't mean it has to be spent. So when you're looking at retirement planning, you to understand that there is two things that you are solving for. You're solving for, the first thing, which is the most important, of course, is that do I have have money to live the life that I want and food table? If markets drop, not have to worry and panic and what's plan gonna be when markets do drop? And all of that stuff. Mm-hmm. you're the the feasibility of their retirement. The second thing is you're looking at is the efficiency of their retirement. By efficiency, mean tax efficiency of their retirement. Which means that very seldom, very, very seldom is the right decision not to take income or have very, very low income in your early retirement years.
SierraThat's not the right decision?
TreThat's very, almost never is that the right decision.
SierraSo you're taking more income in the early years? You
Treshould be taking income in those So what sometimes would happen is that somebody, teachers are a prime example this, where they will retire and then will, they'll not work, so they'll get their their pension they built up all all these RSPs. And let's say they retire 55 years old and they've been pretty diligent. They have 350, $400,000 sitting in RSPs, and they choose to not take any of it, right? Maybe some of they don't have anything TFSAs. They don't a a non-registered account. They don't have don't have anything like that, but they don't need the money right now, so they'll delay it.
SierraWell, eventually
Tretime pass and
Sierra$400,000 will grow. And
Trenow at 65 years old, that $400,000 is now $800,000.
SierraRight.
TreAnd now Their bridge benefit for their pension will drop off. And then they'll start taking Old Age Security and and CPP. Well, here's the thing about taking old age security. It's an income tested benefit, which means that your income, in order to receive it, needs to receive the full amount, needs be below around 95 ish thousand dollars. But at 71 years old, this RSP Is turned into a RIF where you are now forced take money out it. Yeah. Well, now you're in a position where your RSP is now grown. If it was 865, it's it's now at 1.2. Something like that at 70 years old. And you're being forced to withdraw. $60,000 from it every year, and that percentage is going up every single year while on a $1.2 million portfolio, $60,000 isn't even even the interest. So your portfolio is continuing to go up.
SierraIt's what? This is such a funny problem to have. I'm not gonna lie. Oh no, I'm getting too much money,
TreRight?
SierraHow do I spend all this money
TreAnd all this time, they still don't have maxed out TFSAs. They still haven't done all of things that you should do. Then their partner passes away. And suddenly they now have double the the pension,
SierraAye yi yi.
Treand all their partner's money is now also not being paid tax yet.
SierraBy the way, if you're out there and you're like, Uh, what what am I doing with all this money? I'm just saying. There's people out there who might want some, and you can find my contact info.
TreIf only it was that simple, right?
SierraThey're like, I can't give because,
Trebecause it's stuck in an an RSP.
SierraYeah.
TreOr RIF or whatever. Oh, that hard. And like it creates this problem because they're, seeing they're seeing it as I might need it later. Instead of, okay, this is money I haven't tax on yet. I need to pay on it as efficiently as possible.
SierraYeah.
TreSo. That's why at 55 years old, if I'm, you're planning this and you and you see this problem happening, you would start to take large amounts this money out. You would start to max out your your TFSAs. You would even start a non-registered account that is very tax efficient. You would do things because you do not want to be stuck in this position where you are Basically forced to forego all these government benefits. Just so you can have low income between 55 and 71. Which is like, is that, guess it's, that's also your spending spending years, right?
SierraYeah. In retirement, you're gonna be traveling, doing stuff with your family. Yeah.
TreTake spend, like not, and it might not be spend it, right, depending on how much you have, but you should be taking it out to pay tax on it. Especially starting before you have access other government benefits that are, that are are income tested the. Uh. Like the medical plans and the, and those type of things, and the drug coverages and stuff like that. All of that, most of that stuff is is income tested. if I'm gonna, oh
SierraOh yeah, that's true
TreYeah. I'm gonna have low income, I would like it to be when I'm older and probably on a bunch of drugs. You know, like that's, the reality of it. It's not gonna be when
SierraLike, you have so much money and you're super sick, so you're gonna pay extra. this is the worst. Right. Or it happens where like, older ones will end up in like care homes. That is again, income
Treprobably income tested.
SierraYeah.
TreAnd now they're paying significantly more. For what? Right. Just because you didn't want to pay tax? And is not a a case of this is un like how you have have foreseen this? Some of this stuff is really obvious that it's gonna happen. Mm-hmm. Right? To a planner, like put it into any terrible planning software you just come to same conclusion. You could do an Excel, honestly. Do in Excel
SierraYou do love Excel.
TreI do love Excel. Do it it in Excel and you're, even then you'd very quickly okay, this is gonna become a problem. So you need to start, you start thinking about it. But the point is that an RSP is that tool. It is a tool used to move income from one year into another. So how do you how do you withdraw from it? You withdraw from it in low income years. Those low income years might even be maternity leaves and things like that. You still have still have the ability to withdraw during those periods of time. In fact, if I was sitting there with no income, I would withdraw money. can take it out within a couple, basically 20 ish percent taxes, that's really low.
SierraI've never heard that before. I'm kind of like. Sorry, my brain's still way back there on the maternity leave thing. I'm like, what?
TreYou have low income.
SierraYeah. I would never have thought about that
Treand like if In Canada we get the benefits, so So
SierraI guess people might not think about that. But what if you're taking an extended maternity leave? 'cause I know some people
TreYeah, but then it depends on if you're like, 'cause there's, there's more to it. So if you are are you are taking an extended one, it means you're going back to work. So you have the income
Sierrabut
Trewhat
Sierrawhat if you're taking an extended one and you're not going back work you don't know when you're going back?
Trewell, maybe now are you you talking about yourself now
Sierrawould do that? There is a, there
Treis a small, I just saying
Sierrain there is a small misconception
Trethat even with with spouses, you can still take out the minimum.
SierraLike you can still take out
Treyour exemption, but with a, in Canada, when you are, you have a spouse, your first like $15,000. If you're not working, it does, get to do it with spouse and everything, so it's not as great as just taking money out free. But you can certainly take it out for cheap.
SierraYeah,
Treand certainly it out for cheap. I
SierraI feel like, again, this is, it is one of those things where it's like a planning thing and I feel like a lot of people struggle with that, which makes sense because. Everybody uses money. Nobody reads all the rules. I don't. I mean, in general. Yeah. Like obviously you're a specialist, not
TreNo, but I but don't how big tax code is? It's
Sierrahuge. You reference, some of it least. Yeah,
TreYeah
Sierraread the stuff that is important to me. I
TreI went to a tax conference, um, run by a a law firm, like a tax law firm in town, and they were about some of the changes and stuff like that. It's just like Those people, they read all the the rules. I don't read all the rules. first How was the
Sierrathe conference?
TreIt was really interesting. interesting.
SierraI I was gonna.
Treis
Sierraawesome. That That That is not what I expected. I was like, what? Those people read all the rules and I'm just expecting like a room full of monotone people.
TreYeah, they were, They were, they were, they were. they were, they were, um. They were were cracking jokes. It was obviously rehearsed. Yeah. They were rehearsed them significantly, but they were
SierraThe jokes? They
Tremust have. Yeah. There's no way you can be a tax lawyer and interesting and funny.
SierraIt was just, but
Treno way. But, um,
Sierraat the the end waiting for the crowd to
TreYeah, basically.
SierraThat's like me. I love, I love making people laugh though. I hope people laugh at me on the podcast. They're
TreYeah, or sigh or groan.
SierraYeah. I'm my jokes aren't rehearsed everyone
TreThey're like we can tell. um. Yeah. What was I saying now,
SierraSorry? You went to a tax conference and it was interesting.
TreOh, yeah, they read all rules I don't. I read the stuff that's relevant to me. A lot of the tax code is about about is about compliance, right? compliance to certain, certain things. Like on the tax planning side, you're mainly looking ahead and optimizing for efficiency.
SierraMm-hmm.
TreRight? And income efficiency is a little bit different on the corporate side, Which are changes likely coming to the... Oh, maybe we'll we'll discuss them. The eligible dividend.
SierraOoh, the eligible dividend, everyone. I'm sure everyone's excited, knows a lot.
TreYou don't remember the nerd accounts?
SierraOf course. I remember the NERD Yeah.
TreYeah.
SierraAnd the R-D-T-O-H. Yeah. Go.
TreYeah.
SierraAnother, another high five for the podcast. My financial literacy has definitely increased.
TreYeah.
SierraSince having to spend, we should count how many hours I've had to spend talking to you about financial things. See maybe I love it. Maybe I could be a financial planner at that this
TreYeah, you can you can write the CFP should be, You never know. Should
SierraShould I just try it? Should I just be like, I'm gonna throw my name in there and try to
Trethrow it blind? I don't think let you, but
SierraI'd be
Trebe interested if you,know how well you did.
SierraI would love to like do a mock to, I obviously I'm not interested in getting like actually certified by any means, but I would love to see how much I know now 'cause I've been mentored for a long time.
TreYou'd know more than some people that take it. Anyways
SierraY yikes um Yeah,
TreThat was basically really wanted to cover was just the fact that a, it's Oh, contributing it. Sorry. Contributing to it. How you do it is you determine what your long-term tax bracket is going to be.
SierraWell, that's what I, oh, sorry. That's what we were talking about. I was saying the long-term planning is very difficult for people I find. Even,
Tresome of it is even difficult for me to do, and I would say,
SierraYeah. It's
Treoh,
Sierrajust simply figure out what your long-term
Tretax gonna Well, that, that part's not the hard part. The hard The hard part is... well, that might be the hard hard part, as well, but You can get a pretty good idea depending on what career you're in. Right? Like, know that a a nurse is gonna make roughly this amount. There's certain, know, there's certain careers that are gonna be, so for nurse is a great example where nurses flirt with the 115 thousand dollars ish tax bracket.
SierraIt's not what I
Trearound that. Around that point.
SierraYeah.
TreYeah. and then when like their taxable so they'll learn more and and then they'll contribute to pensions like that, and they'll bring it down to that ish. So you'd make RSPs around that tax bracket. You'd want your taxable income to always be below that threshold so you'd know, hey, that's the minimum I'm gonna do RSP contribution. I'd do. You'd take money from your non-registered account, TFSA accounts, all of those to make those contributions and get it below that tax bracket threshold. That is how you should approach RSP contributions. Here's the thing. With Canada, there is a lot of benefits are are income tested. So it does complicate it a little bit. So even in the middle of tax bracket, sometimes it can make sense to do on the lower end. So between like $50,000 and $100,000, sometimes it can still make sense do RSP contributions to get things like the, child tax credit. Right. And things like that. There's other plenty of other things that are based on your taxable income. So sometimes you'll do it just to get those, but there's not actually a good tax planning software out there that includes all of the the benefit stuff.
SierraYeah. Well, probably, probably because they maybe change and stuff to add new benefits.
TreThere's that, but the question is why would you need it? So tax planning stuff tends to be focused on the upper end of the tax spectrum.
SierraYeah,
Tretax filing software is about compliance to the tax codes. You're just filing taxes so that doesn't need it. So it's really, you would need like low income, lower income, financial planning software to do it. That's updated those things there. Yeah.
Sierrakind of does suck that the people who, yeah, that people who really need, Like if people were genuinely like in a lower income bracket. And, and could benefit from something like that. And were willing to, you know, like, I'm not saying like they they wanted to work towards knowledge and that kind of stuff, they were motivated to do that.
TreYeah.
SierraBut there's nothing that exists for it. So it's like kind of, that's kind of, sucks for them. Like,
TreYeah. So if there's like,
SierraOr people on a, well, we were just talking about like people on disability, people on. It's like there, there are benefits and there are things for them that they could be utilizing, but there's no financial planner that they can go to for these things.
TreNo. Well, you can go, like you could and, but this is the blurs. So you can go get pro bono help and advice and things like that. Um. At some places, but realistically, you're gonna have to pay somebody for them. And people in that income range tend not want to pay for professional services, right? Mm-hmm. So they're also the most likely people to use Like HR block for their tax filings like stuff like that because you, you of want want the easiest thing possible. And truth be told especially on the lower income side of things, there's very few people that operate in it. Like I, even, for me, I don't, I work with enough people in in that, in that area to know all of the ins and the the outs for,
Sierrawell, yeah, you can't
Treneed and all the
Sierraspecialize
TreAll the benefits that are available to you. Like I I could find it, but think about the time. So if I'm gonna charge somebody for my time,
Sierrathey
Trereally.
SierraGonna pay
Treme a, like
Sierraa thousand,
Tre$2,000 to find,
Sierrato
Tretake the hours it's gonna take for me to go through government
SierraCanada website. Like there are like
Tresmall calculations and stuff that you can, you can through and there's a list of
Sierraa bunch of
Treof the,
Sierrathe
Trebenefits, but they just have new ones. So Canada Grocery and and Essentials, essentials benefit, right? So like
Sierraquarterly
Trepayments.
SierraHow much you could receive and like, but
Treagain, it's income tested, so
Sierrathere's so many that, you know know what they should do though? should should really just like. If somebody is on certain benefits, they should really just have a way to be like, Hey, if you're on these benefits, you're probably gonna also, because you're telling me
Trethey they kind So like this one for instance, is like the GST/HST credit.
SierraOkay.
TreRight. So. So. With with one, but it got, it changes every year, right? So with maximum threshold married or individuals with or without children. So in 2024 with two children, $66,000, right? So it might make sense that close to that amount. As a household that you do RSP contributions to get you below that. And then you get this extra, this extra amount,
Sierrayeah. of your credit,
TreAnd it might make up for the the fact that. But that's that's that's fair amount of of planning somebody with a household income of $66,000 with two children to
Sierraand and for them to be like, oh, you know what I'm gonna do? I'm gonna contribute to my RSP because I wanna bump income into my another year. Like they're,
Treyou know, like, it's it's
Sierrajust very unlikely. Yeah, exactly. Which is, it's too bad, but
Treit's too bad because these are the type of people that would benefit from that planning the most. Yeah. But. Unfortunately, yeah, there's just very few people out As in, I don't don't know any, I don't know anybody out there that specializes in with individuals in this type of
SierraWell, like
TreWell,
Sierralike you said,
Trefamily income range. 'cause it's not profitable to do like you,
Sierrathat's the issue
TreVery difficult to build a business out of it. cause they're they're not the people that look for help with it, unfortunately. But,
Sierrayeah.
TreYeah. But anyway,
Sierrathat's, so RSPs can
Trecan be be used for that type of thing as well. Where you, again, just moving income
Sierrayear into another.
TreSo use that tool as you would, there's tons and tons of uses for a tool like that. But one of them, is which the biggest one, is retirement. But you gotta out what the, what drawing it it out looks well. lots lots of that hit retirement and all they they have is RSPs. And it's
Sierraokay,
Trewell you have an issue that we'll try to fix, but there, there's an issue here. Yeah. Again, but it's
Sierrait's, don't, the name of the account is registered retirement savings plan. So people just mindlessly
Treput money in there and that's for, save pretty efficiently without RSP at all. Right. Like don't need use an RSP do it. Lots of people, wouldn't. No, I would say lots of people wouldn't. There's plenty of people out there that don't much in RSPs that retire just fine.
SierraYeah,
TreBecause they have other income sources, et cetera. I still remember A teacher that, one of my first clients, in fact. But I very early stopped RSP contributions I know that that they got comments from like, because they discuss it friends and stuff like that, and I held firm to it. I was like, No, I know what they are telling you. is wrong. It's wrong. We are pick a non-registered account, investing in a a non-registered account over RSPs RSPs because I know what your income is gonna be later on, I know what your pension like. This money, it's much more valuable than just mindlessly putting into RSPs building up a big RSP balance. You don't spend enough for this to be worthwhile. Anyway. For different people, it can make a lot more more sense to, to use them in certain ways than others, right? So we still use them, but definitely nowhere near maxed or what we could potentially put in them. The money isn't necessarily for retirement, right? It was like a building wealth fund and now we're talking about lots other things. Building cabins and buying cabins and stuff that. Because they paid off their home. And guess what? We have the money to do it, right? And do it tax efficiently if we wanted to use debt. Right? There's so much potential.
SierraYeah. Yeah.
Treof the way way that we built it versus mindlessly putting into RSPs and
SierraAnd having those like mental, again, same about like how I do it. Where it's like this money is for this. Yeah. Instead of like, here's all the money and I can like. really, yeah. I've really struggled with that and I've really tried to work on it over the years, but I still notice, I'm like, I have this $100 bill and that is for this can't use another bill. It's gonna be this bill. This, this
Treanother bill.
Sierrais bill. Why?
TreIt's exactly how a lot of people think about it.
SierraWhy am I wired that way?
TreI dunno. I think
Sierrahumanity
Treis, in general, I I think it, it takes a little of bit of work get out of that habit, if anything.
SierraYeah.
TreBut
Sierrait's like you don't wanna lose track of it or something.
TreBut anyway that's, yeah. So that's,
SierraSo RSPs are not a scam.
TreNo, they are not. It is basic math math. They're not a religion that you have to
SierraLike, I don't believe
TreI don't believe in it. Like, no, it's, RSPs are what they are. It's basic math.
SierraYou can disagree with it, I guess, but or not use it. Whatever. But
TreYou, yeah, can not use it. But for it to be scam is, low financial literacy. It's just, it has to be used appropriately. Yeah. And as you said, if you were smacking a nail with a you say that this is a scam mallet, but it's like.
SierraYeah, this, this mallet isn't,
TreThis is a garbage tool.
SierraBroke my wall.
TreYeah, it's, well, how this, well, he was using it wrong. That's broke your wall. Very good at what what it's, designed for.
SierraWhat is the mallet for? I just said that 'cause I know it's a big hammer.
TreIt's, I think it's to, they use it in like woodworking to... I just have this picture in my mind somebody building a, like a staircase and and having to a mallet on piece of wood where they want to damage the wood. Which is why it's rubber.
SierraYeah. 'cause it's to like maybe move things.
TreYeah. To
Sierrawhole
Trewhole piece of wood into this area. So think like designed to, so doesn't cause damage on like.
SierraThat makes sense. Like if you're fitting pieces together, it's like this has to be super tight.
TreYeah.
SierraSo I need like pressure to push it together, but I don't wanna
TreYou don't don't wanna like a nail hammer that's gonna
Sierradent
Trehuge dent in the wood or something like that.
SierraSee, wrong tool.
TreRight? But the mallet is great for certain things. Right, man. Just like with RSPs, they're just, it's just a tool. It's just a tool.
SierraYeah. It's
Trehow we use it. That's what matters. So if you're in a position where you're like, this is a scam. It's probably You. It's probably you
Sierrago read the rule book.
TreYeah. I mean, it still,
SierraGo read the user manual. That's what it should be. User manual for your mallet.
TreYeah. I think part of this issue is caused by not enough people that know call, not out, but like correcting them. Because even, even as an advisor sometimes it could, I could definitely see where it's easier to just go with what client client wants to do.
SierraYeah. It's uncomfortable to be like, you're wrong.
TreYeah, absolutely.
SierraPeople don't like that. Or to,
Treto say to somebody, no, we. Could avoid taxes this year. 'cause I've Done that with clients even this past tax year, whereas, so we, we could, but yeah, of course we could put money into RSPs here, but when are we gonna take it it out? Right. Let's look at your timeline. Ain't no no for take this out without you you paying more taxes on it.
SierraMm-hmm.
TreSo gonna pick taxes this year, right? Like it's,
Sierrayeah.
TreYou have the ability to, it's not gonna, like, you'll just, earned a a bunch of side gig money, right? Like it's. You gotta pay some tax on it. We'll pay only this much taxes. We'll put RSPs in to bring your taxable down to here, but you gonna taxes. When we could say, okay, well we'll just pay an extra $40,000 and not pay any taxes. like. You're gonna have to pay the tax sometime.
SierraYeah. Yeah. People, I think people hope you just will never have pay the tax.
TreThat's not way it works.
SierraMaybe the tax code will change in 20 years and then I won't pay the tax.
TreThere's only one way way that I think the tax code is gonna go that's pay more taxes.
SierraYeah, so pay while it's cheap now Pay
Trewhile its it's cheap. Absolute, absolutely. Yeah. But even when somebody away, right, Because all of that income is that one year. year So if you have, know, $500,000 sitting in your, in your RIF when when pass away and you have nobody to roll that over to, that's $500,000 of income in that year. That's a bill that you you are paying. you are paying.
Sierrayeah.
TreWell, I'm glad you uh, got to put it in there at 30% and uh, now you're 49. It's,
Sierradoesn't make make sense.
TreDoesn't make sense. Yeah, it doesn't make It's a tool. Use a a tool appropriately. But anyway, that's where we'll leave it for that one.
SierraPerfect.
TreSee you in the next one.
SierraBye.
TreBye. Thanks for listening to this episode of the Plain English Finance Podcast. Tre Bynoe, Certified Financial Planner, Chartered Investment Manager is a financial planner with TCU Wealth Management and Aviso wealth. You should always consult with your financial, legal, and tax advisors before making changes. This podcast is provided as a general source of information and should not be considered personal investment advice or solicitation to buy or sell at any securities. The views expressed are those of the individual and are not necessarily those of Aviso Financial Inc. Mutual funds and other securities offered through Aviso wealth, a division of Aviso Financial, Inc.