TangoTwoBravo
Army.ca Veteran
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Any of you financial wizards able to advise between a boat, an ATV or a snowmobile?
Tango2Bravo said:Any of you financial wizards able to advise between a boat, an ATV or a snowmobile?
Good2Golf said:Those are for amateurs....get an airplane! :nod:
GAP said:Only if you get to jump out of it, otherwise you're restricted to those little roads they put for landing them on. The long roads are being hogged by those little tiny beetles crawling along them.......oh, they're cars? Who Knew!!
and besides, everytime you want to park it, you have to come down!!
PPCLI Guy said:While we are talking RRSPs, my wife is now retired, without a pension. If I use the severance package to max out her lifetime RRSP room, how long does it have to stay in there before I can remove it, paying her nominal tax rate vice my somewhat larger one?
Good2Golf said:GAP, the thing is, you don't even have to fly it to lose money! Tango2Barvo looked like he wanted to burn money, so I provided what I thought was, short of actually burning the money, the best way to see your money disappear. ;D
Pusser said:You would have to do some serious number crunching on this one (get some professional advice). As I understand the rules (and I am no expert), you would still have to pay tax at source at YOUR rate in order to get the money. Then, when you put into your wife's RRSP, she would get a tax refund when she files, but at HER rate. I would think (assuming her rate is lower than yours) that this would result in a net loss and not be worth it. As for how long it has to stay in the RRSP is more up to how it's invested, not the fact that it's in an RRSP. In other words, once you put it into the RRSP, you should be able to take it out again right away, unless the investment you chose makes you pay a penalty for early withdrawal.
At this point I should illustrate a common mistake that people make with RRSPs. An RRSP is not an investment in itself. It is a plan or tax regulation under which investments are made. So an RRSP can include, stocks, bonds, GICs, mutual funds and even savings accounts. You can withdraw money from an RRSP at anytime without penalty, unless the specific investment itself (e.g. a mutual fund) levies a penalty for early withdrawal. However, keep in mind that you will have to pay tax on any withdrawal at that point (not a penalty in the truest sense). The exception to this would be a "locked-in" RRSP, which you are simply not allowed to withdraw from until you reach retirement age. Locked-in RRSPs are usually used in cases where an individual has left an employer and the former employer has paid out their pension.
Another thing I would like to point out is that the last time folks were getting large payouts all at once (e.g. Leave buy-back plan and FRP) it was made very clear that payouts would be taxed at source unless members had permission from Revenue Canada (now CRA) to waive that regulation. In other words, if your intent is to put money into an RRSP, be prepared to contact CRA and request permission to do this. Hopefully the CBI will clarify the requirements and there will be avenues set up to facilitate this.
The more I'm thinking about this, I'm inclined to elect the split option. I'm thinking that I will take as much severance now as I need to max out my RRSP, then wait until retirement to take the rest (when presumably it would be a retirement allowance) and apply the $2000 per year prior to 1996 rule to put the rest into my RRSP. I'll have to check to see if that will fly. If that's the case, there's a good possibility I could receive my entire severance tax free! Well, at least until I want to actually buy groceries... ;D
stellarpanther said:I heard the rumor yesterday at work that we were going to start paying 50/50 for pension but haven't seen anything. Does anyone know when this will take affect?
FSTO said:Will the severence be paid out at your current rank? Or let say you get promoted a couple of years down the road, will you be paid out at your rank at retirement?
cdnsailor said:I retire this July with 35 + years. I am hoping that this is not going to screw things up for me with regards to placing some of my Severance into a RRSP and using some to pay off debts.