Becoming Your Own Banker | Keep Taxes Away From Your Wealth

What You Will Learn

Every step of a Canadian’s financial life, from their first paycheck to their last RRSP withdrawal, involves someone else getting paid first. This session with CPA Henry Wong maps the entire flow of money through the systems most Canadians accept without question, exposes the hidden traps inside the TFSA, RESP, and RRSP, and explains why the retirement income tax bracket promise almost never holds true.

Key Moments in This Session

  1. The full money map: how a Canadian’s earned income is taxed, deducted for CPP and EI, deposited into the banking system, and then routed into government-controlled registered accounts or bank-owned real estate, with someone else controlling the rules at every single stage before the money ever reaches the family.
  2. The TFSA is not truly tax-free: how CRA conducted audits seeking $110 million from TFSA holders, flagging accounts above $100,000 using ambiguously defined criteria including trading frequency, time spent studying securities, and holding period, none of which have a clear defined threshold, meaning success itself can trigger an audit in an account marketed as tax-free.
  3. The RESP trap: how the $50,000 lifetime limit is increasingly inadequate for four years of post-secondary education, how early or non-educational withdrawals forfeit the $7,200 Canada Education Savings Grant and trigger a 20% penalty tax on any growth earned inside the account, and how the rules on what the money can be used for are set by the government, not the family.
  4. The senior high income tax trap: how a retired Canadian earning $133,141 from RRSP, RRIF, rental income, and government benefits ends up paying $59,000 in combined taxes and clawbacks compared to $38,000 for a working Canadian at the same income, effectively a 45 to 50% effective rate that demolishes the promise of being in a lower tax bracket at retirement.
  5. The age 71 RRIF forced withdrawal problem: how at age 71 the RRSP converts to a RRIF with a mandatory minimum withdrawal starting at 5.28% and increasing annually to 20% by age 95, stripping the retiree of any ability to control their taxable income, triggering OAS clawbacks, age credit loss, and guaranteed income supplement elimination in the same year that other income events may already be pushing them over the threshold.