Registered Disability Savings Plans (RDSPs) - Action News
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Registered Disability Savings Plans (RDSPs)

Canada is the first country in the world to offer a government-assisted savings plan to help parents and others provide for the financial security of people with disabilities.

FAQs about the newly-improved financial planning tool to help the disabled

As many as 500,000 Canadians could benefit from Registered Disability Savings Plans. ((iStock))

Canada is the first country in the world to offer a government-assisted savings plan specifically toprovide for the financial security of people with disabilities.

The federal government first announced plans for Registered Disability Savings Plans (RDSPs) in the March 2007 budget. It took another year to flesh out the specifics, and the country's big banks gradually signed onby offering their ownRDSPs.

RDSPs aren't nearly as well known as their long-established cousins the RRSP and the RESP and during their first year of widespread availability in 2009, the new Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) got a lot more ink.

Even now, the plansstill aren't well known. A recent BMO Financial Group survey foundthat even among the disabled and their families, there was only minimal knowledge of RDSPs. Many groups who work on disability issues are trying to get the word out that these plans are well worth looking into.

"The myths [about RDSPs] are pervasive," says Kristi Fairholm Mader, an executive with the Planned Lifetime Advocacy Network,a Vancouver-based non-profit group that lobbied for the creation of RDSPs. "Some think the plans are just for rich people; just for people who have money," she told CBC News.

"There must be a catch," is a familiar comment advocates often hear.So it comes as a surprise when disabled peoplelearn they can often getthousands of dollars without having to make any contribution to their own plans.

As many as 500,000 Canadians could directly benefit from RDSPs, and about 36,000 plans have already been set up, according to government figures.

Here are answers to some frequently asked questions:

What is an RDSP?

An RDSP is similar to an RESP (Registered Education Savings Plan) in that contributions to the plan are not tax-deductible, but the income inside the plan is allowed to grow on a tax-sheltered basis until funds are withdrawn. Contributions are further bolstered by federal grants and savings bonds (more on this government assistance below) that provide up to $4,500 a year to a lifetime total of $90,000 of direct assistance, depending on income.

Who is eligible to have an RDSP?

To have a Registered Disability Savings Plan, recipients must satisfy three main conditions. They must be:

  • Under the age of 60 when contributions are made.
  • ACanadian citizen with a Social Insurance Number.
  • Eligible for the Disability Tax Credit. This ensures that plans can only be set up for those with a severe and ongoing physical or mental impairment.

Parents can set up plans for disabled children. Disabled adults can set up plans for themselves. But only one RDSP can be set up per person.

How do the plans work?

Once someone sets up an RDSP for a particular beneficiary, anyone can contribute money to it as long as the plan holder gives written consent. "This restriction is important," writes Jamie Golombek in the Canadian Tax Journal, "because it permits the RDSP holder to plan contributions strategically, in order to maximize matching government grants and bonds."

Depending on family income and how much is contributed, Ottawa will provide a grant of up to $3,500 a year. For lower-income Canadians with RDSPs, the federal government adds a bond of up to $1,000 a year, even if no contribution is made that year. These grants and bonds are available until the year the beneficiary turns 49. All grant and bond money must remain in the plan for at least 10 years.

There's no annual limit on how much can be put in, but there is a lifetime contribution limit of $200,000, not counting the grants and bonds. The deadline for contributions each year is Dec. 31.

What more is there to thegrants and bonds?

The grants are called Canada Disability Savings Grants. An RDSP can receive a maximum of $3,500 in matching CDSGs in any one year and a total maximum of $70,000 over the lifetime of the RDSP's beneficiary.

The grant is on a sliding scale. For families with a net income over $83,088 in 2011, the grant is equal to the first $1,000 contributed to a maximum of $1,000 a year. But for those with family incomes below $83,088, the grant is sweetened. On the first $500 contributed, Ottawa will contribute $1,500. On the next $1,000, the feds will kick in $2,000. So the maximum grant in any one year can reach $3,500 on a contribution of just $1,500.

RDSP reforms in 2010 budget
Ottawa will now allow a 10-year carry forward of unused grant and bond entitlements, starting in January 2011. This will allow people to claim unused grant and bond money going back to 2008 (when RDSPs became available) even if the RDSP wasn't set up until 2011. The second reform, which takes effect in July 2011,allows parents or grandparents of a disabled child or grandchild to arrange for a tax-free rollover of RRSP, RRIF or company pension plan money to an RDSP when the parent or grandparent dies.

For lower-income Canadians, Ottawa also provides Canada Disability Savings Bonds. For those with family incomes up to $24,183, the RDSP will get a $1,000 bond each year, even if nothing is contributed to the recipient's RDSP that year. For incomes between $24,183 and $41,544, the grant will be reduced proportionately until it disappears entirely at incomes above $41,544. The lifetime limit for bond payments is $20,000.

A word about family income. For those RDSP beneficiaries under age 18, it's the net income of the child's parents or guardians that is the key figure. For those 18 or over, it's their own family income that is key, even if they still live with their parents.

The bottom line? All disabled adults, even if they have no income, should apply for the disability tax credit, file tax returns, set up an RDSP and apply for grants and bonds.

The money can really add it up.Here's one example provided by the Planned Lifetime Advocacy Network (PLAN):

A low-income familycontributes $1,500 a year for 20 years to an RDSP for a total contribution of $30,000. Assuming that the maximum $90,000 of federal grants and bonds are received in those 20 yearsand the plan is in placefor another 10 years(to avoid any repayment issue), an RDSP could grow to be worth between $400,000 and $500,000, assuming a modest return of 4.5 to 5.0 per cent per year over the 30 years.

Advocates say the plans offer a hugeincentive for families to contribute.

How are funds withdrawn from an RDSP?

Several types of withdrawals can be made from an RDSP. Lifetime Disability Assistance Payments (LDAP) are paid at least once a year until the RDSP is terminated or the beneficiary has died. This payment arrangement, if selected, must begin no later than the end of the year when the plan's beneficiary turns 60. A complicated formula limits the maximum annual LDAP payout.

Disability Assistance Payments (DAP) can be made from an RDSP at any time, but grants and bonds may need to be repaid if they have not been in the plan for at least 10 years.

Payments in the early years of a plan are limited by the assistance holdback rule. Since all grants and bonds received in the previous 10 years must be repaid once a disability assistance payment is received, the plan must hold back an amount equal to that amount in case a benefit repayment must be made. In some cases, that can prevent any disability payment at all. Advocacy groups have asked for this rule to be changed.

How do withdrawals affect other benefit payments?

Payments from an RDSP are partially taxable and partially non-taxable the portion of the withdrawalderived from grants, bonds and growth is taxable, but the part derived from contributions is not taxable. The really good news is that payments do not reduce the beneficiary's entitlement to any federal income-tested benefit, like the child tax benefit or the federal sales tax credit and the Guaranteed Income Supplement. Furthermore, most provinces and territories have announcedafull exemption of RDSP income and assets from provincial income-tested support programs.Quebec and P.E.I. havepartial exemptions in place.

How do I set up an RDSP?

Bank of Montreal was the first big bank to establish an RDSP in December 2008. Now,all of the big bankshave their own RDSP programs in place. More institutions, including credit unions, are expected to join later. Each financial institution offers its own investment choices. RDSPs can only be set up at institutions that offer the plans.

More information on RDSPs is available fromthe financial institutions, from the federal government, and various advocacy groups, includingthe Planned Lifetime Advocacy Network.