Are You Using Your RRSP Efficiently? What Investors Often Miss
For many Canadians, contributing to an RRSP is a routine part of tax season. It’s familiar, expected, and often treated as a box to check before the deadline. Funds go in, the deduction is claimed, and attention shifts elsewhere.
But once the contribution is made, a more important question tends to go unasked:
Is your RRSP actually working the way it should?
The reality is that while RRSPs are widely used, they are rarely used with full intention. The focus is often placed on how much is contributed, rather than how that capital is structured and deployed over time. And that distinction matters more than most investors realize.
An RRSP, at its core, is not an investment. It’s a structure — a tax-deferred container. What ultimately determines its effectiveness is not the account itself, but what sits inside it and how those assets behave over time.
This is where inefficiencies begin to emerge.
Many RRSPs fall into a pattern of passive allocation. Contributions are directed into familiar holdings — broad market funds, mutual funds, or portfolios that are set once and rarely revisited. Over time, these accounts may grow, but without a clearly defined role. There is often no deliberate balance between growth and income, no adjustment as personal goals evolve, and no consistent review of whether the strategy still fits.
Nothing is necessarily wrong with this approach. But it is often incomplete.
Tax deferral, one of the main advantages of an RRSP, is frequently misunderstood. Deferring taxes does not automatically improve outcomes. It simply creates the opportunity for more efficient growth — if the underlying investments are aligned with a well-considered strategy. Without that alignment, the benefit is limited.
This becomes particularly relevant when considering how different types of investments behave within an RRSP. Some assets are geared toward long-term appreciation. Others are designed to generate income. Some introduce volatility, while others aim to reduce it. Yet many investors never define what role their RRSP is meant to play within their broader financial picture.
Is it intended to maximize growth over time?
Is it meant to support future income needs?
Or is it expected to do both?
Without clarity, the account often becomes a mix of holdings that do not work cohesively together. The result is not necessarily poor performance, but a lack of direction.
As time passes, this lack of intention becomes more significant. Investment strategies that may be appropriate early on are often left unchanged, even as priorities shift. As investors move closer to retirement, the emphasis frequently turns toward stability, income, and predictability. Yet many RRSPs remain structured for growth alone, simply because they have not been revisited with purpose.
Efficiency, in this context, is not about chasing higher returns. It’s about alignment — ensuring that the structure of the account, the types of assets it holds, and the investor’s long-term goals are working together rather than independently.
This is why some investors begin to broaden how they think about their RRSP. Rather than relying solely on traditional public market investments, they consider how other asset classes may fit within the same structure. Industrial real estate, for example, is often tied to operating businesses, long-term leases, and tangible economic activity. For certain investors, it can introduce a different kind of exposure — one that behaves differently from public markets.
The objective isn’t to replace one approach with another. It’s to build a more intentional combination.
Tax season, while often viewed as an administrative deadline, is actually one of the most practical times to revisit these decisions. With financial information fresh and contributions top of mind, it creates a natural pause — an opportunity to step back and ask whether your RRSP is simply growing, or truly working.
Small adjustments made at this stage can have a meaningful impact over time. Not because they dramatically change performance overnight, but because they bring clarity and direction to how capital is positioned moving forward.
In the end, the effectiveness of an RRSP doesn’t come from the act of contributing alone. It comes from how deliberately it is used.
And that’s the part most investors miss.
About InvestPlus Real Estate Investment Trust
InvestPlus Real Estate Investment Trust (IP REIT) is a Calgary-based private real estate investment fund focused on increasing unitholder value through the acquisition, ownership, and management of commercial and residential real estate across primary and secondary markets in Western Canada.
With more than 40% of unitholders investing through their RRSPs, InvestPlus REIT regularly hosts investor presentations and property tours to educate Canadians on how to participate in private industrial real estate using registered funds or cash.
To learn more about InvestPlus REIT, upcoming opportunities, or to review the Trust’s current Offering Memorandum, schedule a discovery call with our team.


