Group RRSP · Phase 8

Your Group RRSP Lineup Is Terrible. Now What?

When your employer's plan only offers high-MER mutual funds and you can't easily switch — how to minimize damage, when matching contribution still wins anyway, and when leaving actually makes sense.

How the Trap Works

Group RRSPs in Canada are employer-sponsored plans that pool employees into a single provider contract — typically Manulife, Sun Life, Great-West Life (Canada Life), or Desjardins. The employer negotiates the deal, not you. The fund lineup gets locked in. You inherit whatever was negotiated.

The result: a menu of 12–40 mutual funds, nearly all actively managed, with MERs ranging from 1.5% to 2.8%. Sometimes a single balanced fund or target-date series is the only "simple" option — and it charges 2.2%.

Why this matters

A 2% MER on a $200,000 portfolio costs you $4,000/year in fees — whether markets go up, down, or nowhere. Over 20 years of accumulation, that fee drag compounds into a six-figure gap versus a 0.2% ETF alternative. The plan provider and your employer's fund-choice aren't your enemies, but their incentives don't align with yours.

Finding the Least-Bad Fund in a Locked Lineup

When you can't leave or choose freely, the goal shifts: minimize the damage within the available options. Here's how to evaluate what you've got.

Step 1: Pull the MER for every available fund

Log in to your group plan portal (Manulife GroupRetirement, Sun Life MySunLife, etc.) and find the fund fact sheets — usually a PDF link beside each fund name. The MER is the number that matters. Ignore "management fee" on its own; MER includes the trailing commission paid to the plan administrator.

Step 2: Compare within the same asset class

Don't compare a Canadian bond fund to a global equity fund — they serve different roles. Compare Canadian equity funds to each other. Find the lowest-MER option in each category you'd actually hold.

What to look forWhat to avoid
Index-tracking or "passive" fund label — these often have MERs under 0.8%Funds with "Enhanced," "Plus," or "Premium" in the name — usually higher fees for no proven benefit
Target-date fund if the MER is under 1.0% — one-decision simplicity has valueTarget-date funds over 1.8% — you're paying for rebalancing that barely moves the needle
Balanced index fund if you want a single holdingSegregated (seg) fund versions — they add a guarantee wrapper that costs 0.4–0.8% extra for protections most accumulators don't need
Money market fund as a temporary holding if you're about to move the accountActively managed sector funds — niche exposure plus high fees is a double cost

Step 3: Don't over-engineer allocation to compensate

Some employees try to build a 10-fund portfolio inside a group plan to replicate a couch-potato strategy. Unless those funds are low-MER, you're adding complexity without reducing cost. One or two lower-MER funds beats six funds averaging 2.1%.

Practical shortcut

Sort all available funds by MER, ascending. Circle anything under 1.0%. If there's a Canadian equity index or balanced index under that threshold, that's your default holding unless something structural changes.

When Employer Matching Beats Fee Optimization

Employer matching is the single most powerful variable in this entire calculation. A 50% match on your contributions is an instant 50% return before any investment performance. No ETF portfolio can compete with that on day one.

You contribute: $5,000/year
Employer match (50%): $2,500/year
Total invested: $7,500/year
 
Without match, 0.2% MER ETF: $5,000 × 1.05^20 = $13,266
With match, 2.0% MER fund: $7,500 × 1.035^20 = $14,930
 
The match wins — even with 10x higher fees.

The matching contribution more than compensates for reasonable fee drag while the match is active. This changes the decision framework entirely:

Common matching structures and their break-even points

Match structureYour fee drag break-evenVerdict
100% match up to 3% of salary Fee drag would have to exceed 100% annual return to offset — impossible Always take the match
50% match up to 6% of salary MER would need to exceed ~2.5% annually to wipe out the match advantage over 10 years Take the match; watch fund selection
25% match, 4-year vesting cliff Break-even sensitive to tenure — if you leave before vesting, you may lose the match Take the match only if tenure is likely
No employer match Fee drag operates with no offset from day one Strong case for self-directing instead

What Fee Drag Actually Costs Over Time

These numbers assume $10,000/year contributions, 7% gross annual return before fees, 20-year horizon. No employer match included — this is the pure cost of the fee difference.

MERNet annual return20-year ending balanceLost to fees vs 0.2%
0.2% (ETF benchmark)6.8%$416,000
0.8% (low-cost group plan)6.2%$384,000$32,000
1.5% (mid-range group plan)5.5%$347,000$69,000
2.0% (typical active fund)5.0%$320,000$96,000
2.5% (high-end active fund)4.5%$296,000$120,000
The real number

The difference between a 0.2% ETF portfolio and a 2.0% group plan fund isn't just $96,000. When you account for the tax-deferred compounding inside the RRSP, the gap is larger on a pre-tax basis. On a $400K+ portfolio, the fee drag can represent 2–3 years of retirement income.

When Leaving and Self-Directing Actually Makes Sense

There's a clear decision matrix here. Leaving the group plan to self-direct at Questrade or Wealthsimple Trade involves real tradeoffs — administrative overhead, potential contribution room complexity, and losing access to the group plan's tax receipt simplicity. Here's when it's worth it:

Leave and self-direct

No employer match, MERs above 1.5%, and you have the discipline to manage a simple ETF portfolio. The math strongly favours leaving.

⚖️

Split: match threshold + self-direct rest

Take the full employer match inside the group plan, then direct all additional RRSP room to a self-directed account. Best of both worlds.

🏦

Stay in the group plan

Strong employer match (50%+), at least one fund under 0.8% MER, or you genuinely won't manage an RRSP yourself. Don't optimize out of a good deal.

The "I won't actually manage it" factor

Self-directing only wins if you actually execute. A Questrade account with $80,000 sitting in cash for 18 months because you haven't gotten around to buying the ETF is worse than a 2% MER balanced fund that's at least invested. Be honest about your follow-through before moving money.

TFSA first if you're near the income threshold

If your marginal tax rate is below 30%, the RRSP deduction advantage shrinks. In that scenario, maxing your TFSA at Wealthsimple or Questrade with low-MER ETFs before contributing to the high-fee group plan (beyond the match) is often a better sequence.

How to Move Money Out Without Losing the Match

Many group plans allow partial or full transfers out once you leave the employer — but the rules vary on in-service transfers (transfers while still employed).

In-service transfers

Check your plan's "transfer provisions" section (usually in the member booklet or the plan administrator's FAQ). Some plans allow annual partial transfers to a personal RRSP — typically 25–50% of your personal contributions (not employer match). If this is allowed, you can gradually move your own contributions to a lower-cost RRSP each year while staying enrolled for the match.

On departure

When you leave an employer, the group RRSP transfers directly to a personal RRSP. There's no lock-in. You request a transfer-in-kind or cash transfer to your chosen institution. Use Form T2033 (Direct Transfer under Subsection 146(16)) to avoid triggering tax on the transfer. Your new institution usually handles this paperwork.

Key point

A group RRSP is not a pension — there's no locked-in requirement. Unlike a LIRA (locked-in retirement account from a pension), group RRSP money moves freely on a registered transfer. Don't delay the move because you think it's complicated. It usually takes 2–4 weeks.

Watch the vesting schedule on the match

Employer contributions to group RRSPs may have a vesting schedule — common structures are immediate vesting, 1-year cliff, or 2-year graded. If you leave before fully vesting, you may forfeit unvested employer contributions. Time your departure (if voluntary) to fall after a vesting event.

Action Checklist

  1. Pull the fund fact sheets for every fund in your group plan lineup. Note the MER for each.
  2. Sort by MER ascending. Circle anything under 1.0% — especially index funds or passive balanced options.
  3. Find your employer match rate and vesting schedule — this is in your benefits documentation or HR portal.
  4. Confirm you're contributing at least enough to capture the full match. If not, increase your contribution immediately. This is free money.
  5. Redirect any contribution above the match-eligible limit to a personal RRSP at a lower-cost provider (Questrade, Wealthsimple, RBC Direct Investing).
  6. Check if in-service partial transfers are allowed under your plan — if yes, consider moving your personal contributions out annually.
  7. On job change or retirement: initiate a direct registered transfer (T2033) to your personal RRSP within 60 days to avoid the temptation of cashing out.
  8. Once self-directing: keep it simple — XEQT or VGRO for growth-oriented, XBAL or VBAL for moderate risk. MERs under 0.25%. No further optimization required.
Related guides

Group RRSP Guide for Canadian Employees — how the plan structure works, what your employer can and can't control, and common plan types.

Group RRSP Fee Label Decoder — IMF vs MER vs management fee, where fees hide in plan statements, and how to find the real all-in cost.

RRSP vs TFSA — contribution room, sequencing by income level, and which account to prioritize.