A lot of Canadian Muslims avoid RRSPs because they assume the account itself is incompatible with halal investing. That assumption is wrong — and it's costing them significant tax savings. An RRSP is just a registered account with a tax deferral benefit. What you put inside it determines whether the investing is halal. The wrapper is neutral.
A conventional RRSP typically holds interest-bearing GICs, bank-managed mutual funds with conventional stock exposure (including banks, insurance companies, and other non-halal businesses), and fixed income products that earn interest. A halal RRSP holds Shariah-screened investments within the same registered wrapper: halal equity funds, sukuk where available, and Shariah-compliant managed portfolios. Same tax structure, completely different contents.
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How a conventional RRSP works
When you contribute to an RRSP, you deduct that contribution from your taxable income for the year. The money grows tax-deferred inside the account. When you withdraw in retirement — typically when your income (and tax rate) is lower — you pay income tax on the withdrawal. For someone in the 40% tax bracket during their working years who drops to 25% in retirement, the RRSP tax arbitrage is meaningful.
The contribution room is 18% of your previous year's earned income, up to a CRA-set annual maximum. Unused contribution room carries forward indefinitely. You can contribute to an RRSP until the year you turn 71, at which point it must convert to a RRIF (Registered Retirement Income Fund) and begin paying out.
In a conventional RRSP, most Canadians hold some combination of GICs (guaranteed investment certificates that pay a fixed interest rate), mutual funds from major banks, index funds, and bonds. All of these are interest-bearing or contain non-halal holdings. For a Muslim investor, the problem isn't the RRSP — it's the default investments that come with opening an RRSP at a conventional bank.
What makes an RRSP halal
The RRSP becomes halal when the investments inside it are Shariah-compliant. That means: no interest-bearing GICs or bonds, no mutual funds with significant exposure to conventional financial services (banks, insurance), alcohol producers, tobacco, defense, gambling, or pork. It also means applying a debt-ratio screen — companies with high interest-bearing debt may fail the screen even if their core business is permissible.
In Canada, Manzil offers a halal RRSP product for investors in Ontario, Alberta, and British Columbia. Their RRSP invests in Shariah-screened equities and follows AAOIFI-aligned investment standards. For Canadian Muslims in provinces Manzil serves, this is the most straightforward halal RRSP option available.
Outside of Manzil's service area, the alternative is a self-directed RRSP at a brokerage that allows you to purchase individual halal ETFs. Several halal-screened ETFs are available on Canadian exchanges — including products that track global Islamic equity indices. Holding these within a self-directed RRSP gives you the tax deferral benefit with Shariah-compliant holdings. The HalalWallet Canada investing guide covers which halal ETFs are available to Canadian investors.
The practical differences side by side
Conventional RRSP options at major Canadian banks are easy to open, widely available across all provinces, and come with a large selection of fund options — most of which are not halal-screened. Default risk in conventional RRSPs is often managed with GICs and bonds, which are interest-bearing. Canadian banks actively encourage GIC laddering inside RRSPs as a "safe" retirement strategy.
A halal RRSP narrows the investment universe to screened equities and Shariah-compliant instruments. This means less diversification into fixed income and more equity exposure than a conventional "balanced" RRSP portfolio. Over a long time horizon, equities have historically outperformed fixed income — but with higher short-term volatility. Muslim investors need to be comfortable with an equity-heavy portfolio, particularly in the early accumulation phase.
Fee structures also differ. Manzil's managed RRSP carries a management fee for the Shariah-screened portfolio management. A self-directed RRSP with halal ETFs typically has lower ongoing costs but requires the investor to manage rebalancing and asset allocation themselves. A conventional bank RRSP mutual fund often carries a management expense ratio (MER) of 1.5-2.5% annually — which is high regardless of whether the holdings are halal.
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RRSP or TFSA first?
This is the question most Canadian Muslim investors face before the halal vs. conventional discussion even starts. The general guidance: if you're in a high tax bracket now and expect to be in a lower bracket in retirement, prioritize RRSP contributions for the larger tax deferral. If your income is lower or variable, or if you want flexibility (TFSA withdrawals aren't taxed and don't reduce government benefits), start with the TFSA.
Many financial planners recommend maximizing TFSA first for younger investors and shifting toward RRSP as income grows. The HalalWallet guide comparing halal TFSA vs. RRSP options for Canadian Muslims covers this decision in more detail. Both accounts can hold halal investments — the question is which tax structure benefits your situation more.
What to do if your employer offers an RRSP matching program
Employer RRSP matching is one of the most valuable benefits in the Canadian compensation landscape — and it's usually attached to a group RRSP with a limited fund menu that may not include halal options. The practical guidance most scholars and financial planners give: contribute up to the matching threshold to capture the free money, then direct any additional retirement savings into a halal RRSP or TFSA where you have full investment control.
For the matched portion in a conventional group RRSP, some Muslims choose the funds that are closest to halal compliance (equity funds without financial sector exposure, for example) rather than defaulting to the balanced fund. This isn't perfect halal compliance, but it's a more thoughtful approach than ignoring the matching program entirely and leaving employer contributions on the table.
The bottom line
The RRSP is one of Canada's most powerful tax tools. Canadian Muslims who avoid it entirely because they assume it's incompatible with Islamic finance are giving up a significant advantage. The account itself is neutral — the holdings inside it are what matter. Manzil's halal RRSP is the turnkey solution for investors in Ontario, Alberta, and BC. A self-directed RRSP holding halal ETFs works for everyone else. Both options let you invest for retirement in a tax-advantaged, Shariah-compliant way. The HalalWallet investing hub has more on the full range of options available to Canadian Muslim investors.
Frequently asked questions
Is an RRSP itself haram? No. The RRSP is a registered account structure — it's neutral. What you invest inside it determines whether the investing is halal. An RRSP holding halal-screened equities is fully Shariah-compliant.
Is a GIC (guaranteed investment certificate) halal? No. A GIC pays a guaranteed fixed interest rate, which is riba. GICs should not be held in a halal RRSP.
Can I transfer an existing RRSP into a halal-screened portfolio? Yes. If you have an existing RRSP at a conventional bank, you can transfer it to a self-directed account or to Manzil's halal RRSP and reinvest in Shariah-compliant holdings. This is called a direct transfer and doesn't trigger a taxable withdrawal.
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What happens to my RRSP when I turn 71? You must convert it to a RRIF (Registered Retirement Income Fund) by December 31 of the year you turn 71. You can continue holding halal investments within the RRIF — the conversion doesn't force you to change your investment holdings.
What is the 2026 RRSP contribution limit? The 2026 RRSP deduction limit is 18% of your 2025 earned income, up to a maximum set by CRA. Check your CRA My Account for your personal contribution room, which includes any unused room from prior years.






