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Calculating your Annual RSP Contribution Limit Your annual RSP contribution limit is based on a three-step formula.
First, take 18% of your previous year’s "earned income," subject to the limits cited on the previous page. Earned income consists of more than your pay from work; check the list.
Second, subtract the Pension Adjustment factor (PA) that appears in box
52 of your T4 slip for the prior year. The PA reflects the value of benefits you
accumulated in your employer’s registered pension plan or deferred profitsharing
plan. Your PA will be zero if your employer has no such plans. You might
also have a Past Service Pension Adjustment (PSPA) covering retroactive pension
plan improvements. That reduces your RSP contribution room. Or, you might
have a Pension Adjustment Reversal (PAR) if you’ve left a defined benefit
pension plan before retirement age. A PAR allows you to contribute more to
your RSP by restoring part of the RSP room you previously lost through the
PA calculation.
Third, add any unused contribution room from as far back as 1991. That amount is on the Notice of Assessment for your most recent federal tax return. Or, call the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency’s computerized telephone service. The number is in your telephone directory’s blue pages.
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Yearly Contribution Room
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18% of previous year’s earned income, subject to
the contribution limits
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PLUS
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Unused contribution room carried forward from previous years
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PLUS
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Pension Adjustment Reversal (PAR), if any
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MINUS
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Your previous year’s Pension Adjustment factor (PA)
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MINUS
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Past Service Pension Adjustment (PSPA), if any
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