Mortgage vs. RRSP
Are you better off to pay down your mortgage, or contribute to an RRSP?
Which option is better:
-
Pay $1,187 per month in mortgage payments to pay off a $100,000 mortgage in 10 years, then continue to pay $1,187 per month into your RRSP for 15 years, and also invest the tax savings in your RRSP, or;
-
Pay only the required $739 per month on your mortgage, and pay it off over 25 years, and invest the difference of $448 ($1,187 less $739) plus tax savings in an RRSP.
| Mortgage
Term (yrs) @interest rate 7.5% |
# Months Investing in RRSPs | Monthly
Amount Invested in RRSPs |
Monthly
Tax Savings Invested in RRSPs |
Total in
RRSPs at end of 25 Years at RRSP returns of: |
|||
| 5% | 7.5% | 10% | |||||
| 1. | 10 | 15 yrs x 12 = 180 | $ 1,187 | $ 356 | $ 399,549 | $ 483,608 | $ 588,299 |
| 2. | 25 | 25 yrs x 12 = 300 | $ 448 | $ 134 | $ 333,341 | $474,779 | $ 686,887 |
You are better to pay off your mortgage first if your mortgage interest rate is equal to or higher than the rate of return on your RRSP. However, if the rate of return on your RRSP is consistently higher than the mortgage interest rate (can you guarantee this?), you would have more money by paying the lower amount on your mortgage, and investing the difference in an RRSP.
If you pay down the mortgage faster, you have a guaranteed savings. If you have or plan to have children, you should try to ensure that the mortgage on your home will be paid off before your children enter university. This will free up funds for their education.
In order to get a better rate of return in your RRSP than the interest rate you are paying on your mortgage, you would have to take on riskier investments, which will not have a guaranteed rate of return. We believe you can make a return of 9% per year on your RRSPs.
Remember: Pay down all non-tax-deductible debt with over 8% interest


