Using
Your RRSP- "Home Buyers Plan"
The
Federal Home Buyers Plan allows first time home buyers
to withdraw up to $20,000 from their RRSP for the purpose
of buying or building a qualifying home. The primary benefits
are that the RRSP issuer will not withhold tax on the
amount nor will you have to claim the amount as income.
The amount must be repaid to the RRSP within 15 years
with a minimum annual payment of 1/15th of the amount
withdrawn. If a repayment is not made for a given year
the minimum repayment is included as taxable income for
that year.
Participation
To participate you have to withdraw the amount from your
RRSP using form T1036 Applying To Withdraw An Amount Under
The Home Buyers Plan. Give the completed form to the RRSP
issuer along with the certification that you meet or intend
to meet certain conditions as follows:
Conditions
-
You
have to make your withdrawal request in the same year
you wish to participate in the Home Buyers Plan
-
You
cannot have previously participated in the plan in
previous years.
-
You
have to be a resident of Canada
-
You
have to enter into a written agreement to buy or build
a qualifying home
-
You
can withdraw a total of $20,000. Multiple withdrawals
are allowed. Each of you and your Spouse can participate
in the Plan and withdraw $20,000 from your own RRSPs.
-
You
have to be considered a First Time Home Buyer
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A qualifying home is a housing unit located in Canada.
Existing homes and homes under construction are both qualifying
homes and can be either:
-
Single Detached Family Homes
-
Semi
Detached
-
Town
Home
-
Mobile
Home
-
Condominium
Unit
-
Apartment
in a Duplex, Triplex, Four-plex or apartment building.
-
A
Share in a Cooperative Housing Corporation, provided
the share entitles you to posses, and gives an equity
stake in, a housing unit.
First Time Home Buyer
You are considered a first time home buyer if you have
not owned a home while you occupied it as your principal
place of residence for five years. At any time in the
fifth calendar year since you last owned a home you can
qualify.
Recent
Improvements
The
1998 budget now allows Canadians to use the homebuyers
plan again. The applicant must have no outstanding balance
on any previous Home Buyer Plan loans and must re-qualify
for the program again. This means the home owner must
re-qualify as a first time home buyer by not owning for
the prescribed period. The effective date of the changes
is 1999.
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Should You Take Money Out of Your RRSP For A Home Purchase?
Withdrawing
$20,000 from your RRSP under the "Home Buyers Plan"
can be viewed as a loan from your RRSP to yourself. Some
call this a zero interest loan but of course the actual
cost of the loan is exactly what the funds would have
earned if they had remained in your RRSP. You will forego
these earning if you take the funds out and use them for
a down payment. On the other hand if you don't withdraw
these funds you will be forced to borrow the required
down payment.
Lets
assume you have $20,000 in your RRSP at an average annual
rate of return over the next 15 years of, say 8%. In 15
years your $20,000 will have grown to $63,443, an increase
of $43,443. As such if you withdraw these funds under
The Home Buyers Plan, while you won't suffer taxes, you
will forego these earnings.
Most
financial advisors will counsel you to borrow to invest
in your RRSP because the "overall" rate of return
from your RRSP is greater than the cost of borrowing the
money. The cost of borrowing $20,000 in a catch up loan
over 15 years is usually in the neighborhood of Prime,
plus or minus a percentage point, depending on the risk
of the RRSP investment. Assume a cost of 7.5% over the
15 year amortization of the loan. The interest paid to
borrow $20,000 would be $13,372. If we also assume a 35%
tax rate, you would have to earn $20,572 of gross income
in order to net out these interest costs.
We
can now compare the before tax cost of borrowing - around
$20,572 - with the before tax return this $20,000 would
earn in your RRSP - around $43,443. Clearly it makes sense
to borrow to invest in your RRSP. Conversely, it should
also make sense to leave the money in your RRSP and borrow
your down payment, one being the same as the other.
In
reality, no mortgage lender will finance 100% of your
purchase price. In addition, your lender will qualify
you for a larger mortgage, based on gross income, if your
debts are lower and don't include a large personal loan
for the down payment. A personal loan or second mortgage
is a debt that squeezes the maximum mortgage amount you
will qualify for if it puts you above the lenders target
debt service ratios.
In
addition withdrawal under the Home Buyers Plan may be
more cost effective than borrowing if this borrowing cost
also includes a CMHC fee. This fee can dramatically push
up your effective interest rate. If you're just shy of
a conventional down payment of 25% it may be wise to withdraw
the remainder from your RRSP to avoid paying mortgage
insurance fees.
The
best approach is to withdraw from your RRSP under the
Home Buyers Plan, get all the financing you qualify for,
and then once the mortgage is funded borrow to replenish
the RRSP if you can afford the payments. Remember you'll
also have to pay back your RRSP 1/15th each year.
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Tips
Pay back the minimum 1/15th required each year if you
borrow through the home buyers plan. Repayments do not
trigger another tax savings. All savings above the minimum
1/15th repayment should be designated 'contributions ',
rather than repayments, and invested into your RRSP. You'll
receive the tax savings on these amounts each year.
Always
invest as much as you can in your RRSP, even if you have
to borrow, but be sure you can afford to carry the loan.
Withdraw
the money from your RRSP only if you have no other source
of non RRSP savings.
Saving
Your Down Payment Using your RRSP
To
accumulate $20,000 in a non RRSP savings plan, assuming
an 8% return and a marginal tax rate of 35%, you would
have to invest $3,605 each year for the next five years.
This would mean earning $5,546 in gross income each year
in order to net out this $3,600 in after tax savings.
Rather
than spending this $5,546 in gross income each year on
a non RRSP investment, you could invest this same amount
into your RRSP. With yearly RRSP contributions of $5,546,
you will accumulate about $32,536 in five years. You will
also receive tax savings each year in the amount of $1,941.
Another way to look at it is that you could accumulate
the required $20,000 down payment in about 3 1/3 years
by choosing the RRSP savings approach. IT ALWAYS MAKES
SENSE to save through an RRSP, whether the savings will
be for a house or retirement.
Other
Plans
Tax-Free
RRSP Withdrawals for Lifelong Learning
Canadians
will be eligible to make tax-free withdrawals from their
RRSPs to support lifelong learning. Individuals will be
able to withdraw tax free up to $10,000 per year from
their RRSPs, with a maximum of $20,000 over a four-year
period. To preserve retirement incomes, these withdrawals
will be repayable over 10 years.
More
tips:
What
if I want to sell my home before I have paid off the RRSP
loan?
You do not have to repay the remaining balance if you
sell your home before your scheduled payments are complete.
And you are not required to continue to own the home until
the amount borrowed is repaid.
In
some situations, outstanding repayment installments have
to be reported as income by the borrower:
When
you leave the country. If a taxpayer ceases to be
a resident of Canada, "the balance of withdrawals
made under the plan and not yet repaid must be repaid
within 60 days of ceasing residency, or must be included
in the individual's income for that year."
If
you die. When an individual dies with an outstanding
Home Buyer's Plan repayment balance, "the outstanding
amount must be included in the deceased's income for the
year. There is an election that may be made in certain
circumstances to allow a spouse of the deceased to effectively
take over the deceased's obligations with respect to repayment
installments."
When
your RRSP matures. If you have an outstanding Home
Buyer's Plan repayment balance at the end of the year
in which you turn 69 - the deadline for collapsing an
RRSP - this outstanding amount must be repaid before year
end or be reported as income on your tax return.
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