🍁 Canadian FIRE Guide

Everything you need to know about retiring early in Canada

Answers to the 10 questions every Canadian asks — CPP, OAS, RRSP meltdown, withdrawal order, safe withdrawal rate, health insurance, and more. No fluff, no generic advice.

Question 01

How much do I actually need to retire in Canada?

The classic answer is 25× your annual spending — but for Canadians with CPP and OAS, the real number is often meaningfully lower. Your FI target depends on when you retire and how much government income you'll receive.

The 4% rule says: accumulate 25× your annual spending, then withdraw 4% per year indefinitely. If you spend $60,000/year, you need $1.5M invested. This rule was derived from US market data and makes no assumptions about government pensions.

Canadians have CPP and OAS — which changes the math considerably. Instead of funding 100% of your spending from your portfolio forever, you only need to fund the gap between your spending and your government benefits.

The Canadian Adjustment
If you spend $60,000/year and expect $20,000/year combined from CPP and OAS at age 65, your portfolio only needs to cover $40,000/year. At 4%, that's a $1.0M target — not $1.5M. That's a $500,000 difference.

But early retirees need to plan carefully. If you retire at 45, you face 15–20 years before CPP or OAS begins. During that bridge period, your portfolio funds 100% of spending. The CPP/OAS discount only applies once benefits actually start.

Rules of thumb by retirement age:

  • Retiring at 65: Apply 4% to (spending minus CPP/OAS). Your target portfolio is significantly below 25× gross spending.
  • Retiring at 55–60: Use 4% on full spending for the bridge years, then remodel once benefits begin. FI number is roughly 20–25× depending on bridge length.
  • Retiring at 40–50: Stay closer to 3.5% withdrawal rate. Longer horizons carry more sequence-of-returns risk and CPP will be smaller from fewer contribution years.
Retire at 65 · $60K spend
~$1.0M
After $20K/yr CPP+OAS offset
Retire at 50 · $60K spend
~$1.5M
Full spend for 15-yr bridge
Retire at 40 · $60K spend
~$1.7M
Lower WR, longer horizon
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Model this in FireCA
Your FI Number and Phase 1/Phase 2 breakdown are calculated automatically in the Overview tab.
Question 02

Is the 4% rule right for Canada — or is it too high? Too low?

For most Canadians retiring near 65 with CPP and OAS, 4% is actually conservative. For early retirees with 30–40 year horizons, 3.5% is safer. The real answer is: use a range, not a fixed number.

The original 4% rule (Trinity Study, 1998) analyzed 30-year US retirement periods with a stock/bond portfolio. It found that a 4% initial withdrawal, adjusted for inflation annually, survived nearly all historical 30-year periods. But it didn't account for CPP, OAS, or DB pensions.

For Canadians at or near traditional retirement age: CPP and OAS effectively boost your safe withdrawal rate. Research suggests Canadian government benefits add roughly 0.3–0.5% to your effective sustainable withdrawal rate. For someone with average CPP and OAS, 4% applied to the full portfolio is very conservative — the actual safe rate on just the gap spending is higher.

For early retirees (40–55): The math shifts. Reasons to use 3.5%:

  • A 40-year retirement horizon hasn't been historically tested as thoroughly as 30 years
  • Sequence-of-returns risk is more damaging over longer periods
  • CPP contributions may be incomplete, resulting in lower benefits
  • OAS doesn't start until 65 regardless
  • More time for unexpected spending shocks (health, family, inflation surprises)
The Practical Approach
Don't pick one number and anchor to it. Plan with 3.5% as your floor. Target 4%. Build in spending flexibility — being able to cut 10–20% of discretionary spending in a bad market sequence dramatically improves long-term survival odds. A flexible spender at 4% often survives as well as a rigid spender at 3%.

The "die with zero" consideration: A 30-year portfolio survival simulation was never designed to leave a legacy. If you're comfortable spending down to zero at life expectancy, you can withdraw more. If you want to leave an estate, plan conservatively.

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Model this in FireCA
The Monte Carlo tab runs 1,000 simulations at your chosen withdrawal rate. The Drawdown tab shows your personalized safe withdrawal rate.
Question 03

What order should I withdraw from my accounts?

The general guidance: Non-Reg first, RRSP meltdown before CPP/OAS begins, TFSA last. Getting this order right can save tens of thousands in taxes over a retirement.

Account withdrawal order is one of the highest-impact decisions in Canadian retirement planning. The same portfolio, drawn in a different sequence, can result in dramatically different after-tax outcomes.

01
50% capital gains inclusion — lower tax than RRSP
02
Fill lower tax brackets before CPP/OAS stacks
03
Forced minimums start at conversion age
04
Tax-free, doesn't count toward OAS clawback

Why RRSP meltdown matters so much: Your early retirement years — before CPP and OAS begin — are a golden window of low taxable income. If you're spending $60,000/year from TFSA and non-reg, your taxable income might be $20,000 or less. That creates enormous room in the lower tax brackets to draw from your RRSP at a 20–25% marginal rate — instead of 40%+ later, when CPP + OAS + RRIF minimums all stack on top of each other.

Delaying CPP while doing RRSP meltdown is one of the most powerful combinations in Canadian retirement planning. You shrink your future forced RRIF withdrawals AND buy a larger guaranteed, inflation-indexed CPP income simultaneously.

Couples: Pension Income Splitting
RRIF withdrawals after age 65 qualify for pension income splitting — you can allocate up to 50% to a lower-income spouse. This can save thousands annually and is one of the strongest tax tools available to Canadian couples in retirement.

TFSA last because withdrawals are completely tax-free, don't count toward OAS clawback income testing, and don't appear as income for any government benefit calculations. The longer your TFSA compounds tax-free, the more powerful it becomes. Save it for high-income years when every other source is pushing you into higher brackets.

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Model this in FireCA
The Draw Order tab lets you drag and rearrange withdrawal sequence and see the estimated tax drag of each ordering. Switch to FIRE'd mode to activate it.
Question 04

When should I take CPP — at 60, 65, or 70?

For most people who can afford to wait, delaying CPP to 65 or 70 is the better long-term decision. The break-even math favors delay if you live past your late 70s — and CPP is guaranteed and inflation-protected for life.

Start Age vs Age 65 Break-even vs waiting to 65 Example (base $1,000/mo at 65)
60 −36% ~Age 74 $640/mo for life
65 Baseline $1,000/mo for life
70 +42% ~Age 83 $1,420/mo for life

CPP timing is adjusted at 0.6% per month before age 65 (maximum 36% reduction at 60) and 0.7% per month after 65 (maximum 42% increase at 70). These adjustments are permanent and apply for life.

Take CPP early (60) if:

  • You have a serious health condition or shortened life expectancy
  • You have no other income and genuinely need the money now
  • Your portfolio is too small to bridge to 65 without undue risk

Delay CPP to 65 or 70 if:

  • You're healthy and expect to live into your 80s or beyond
  • You have sufficient RRSP, TFSA, or non-reg to bridge the gap
  • You want to do RRSP meltdown in your early retirement years (delay CPP = more room in lower brackets)
  • You want to reduce longevity risk with larger guaranteed income later in life
The FIRE Community Consensus
For early retirees who FIRE in their 40s or 50s with sufficient assets, the most common strategy is to delay CPP to 65 or 70, use that window for RRSP meltdown, and let CPP provide a larger inflation-protected income base later. CPP is guaranteed income you can't outlive — unlike a portfolio.

2025 maximum CPP at 65: approximately $1,364.60/month ($16,375/year). Most Canadians receive 60–80% of the maximum depending on their contribution history.

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Model this in FireCA
The CPP Strategy tab shows lifetime income at ages 60, 65, and 70 with exact break-even ages. Switch to FIRE'd mode to activate it.
Question 05

When should I take OAS — and what's the clawback?

OAS starts at 65 and can be deferred to 70 for a 36% increase. Most people should take it at 65 unless their portfolio is very healthy and they want to reduce clawback risk. If you haven't lived in Canada for 40 years, your OAS is prorated.

OAS basics (2025/2026):

  • Maximum monthly OAS at 65: $727.67/month ($8,732/year)
  • At age 75, OAS permanently increases by 10% ($800.44/month)
  • Deferring past 65 adds 0.6%/month (up to 36% more at 70)
  • OAS is indexed to the Consumer Price Index quarterly
  • You cannot take OAS before age 65, regardless of circumstances

The OAS clawback (recovery tax): If your net annual income exceeds $93,454 (2026 threshold), you repay 15 cents for every dollar above that threshold. At approximately $152,000 of net income, OAS is fully clawed back.

Clawback Strategy
Keep taxable income below $93,454 if possible. TFSA withdrawals don't count toward clawback income — this is one of TFSA's most powerful retirement advantages. A retiree drawing from TFSA can effectively receive full OAS at any income level they choose.

Partial OAS — Years in Canada: OAS requires 40 years of Canadian residency after age 18 for the full amount. Each year counts as 1/40th. If you immigrated to Canada at 38, you'd have 27 years by age 65 — meaning 27/40 = 67.5% of full OAS.

This matters a lot for Canadians who spent years working abroad or immigrated later in life. FireCA includes a "Years in Canada" slider in the Benefits tab to automatically calculate your prorated OAS amount.

Should you defer OAS to 70? The break-even for deferring OAS from 65 to 70 is approximately age 81–82. If you're in good health and have income from other sources, deferral can pay off. But unlike CPP, OAS has no survivor benefit, so there's less incentive for couples to defer.

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Model this in FireCA
The Benefits tab includes OAS start age, Years in Canada slider, and automatic OAS clawback estimation in the retirement runway.
Question 06

What about health insurance? I'm retiring before 65.

This is one of the most commonly overlooked FIRE planning issues in Canada. Provincial health care covers doctors and hospitals — but not dental, vision, prescriptions, or paramedical. Budget explicitly for this gap.

Canadian provincial health care continues after you retire and covers medically necessary services: doctors, hospital stays, emergency care, and surgery. But it does not cover:

  • Prescription drugs (for most people under 65)
  • Dental care
  • Vision care
  • Physiotherapy, massage, chiropractic, counselling
  • Hearing aids
  • Private or semi-private hospital rooms
  • Long-term care beyond basic subsidized rates

Your options as an early retiree:

Option 1: Convert your employer group plan. When you leave employment, ask HR about converting your group benefits to an individual policy. Many insurers allow this within 60–90 days of leaving without medical underwriting — pre-existing conditions won't disqualify you. This window closes permanently. Act immediately when you retire.

Option 2: Private individual health insurance. Plans typically cost $100–$300/month per person depending on age and coverage level. Sun Life, Blue Cross, Manulife, GMS, and others offer individual plans. Requires medical underwriting unless converting from a group plan — existing conditions may be excluded.

Option 3: Self-fund. Pay dental, vision, and paramedical out of pocket. Most qualify as medical expenses on your tax return. At lower retirement income levels, the medical expense tax credit can offset a meaningful portion of the cost.

Federal Dental Program (CDCP)
The Canadian Dental Care Plan covers Canadians without workplace dental insurance. Early retirees under 65 qualify if household income is under $90,000. Full coverage for income under $70,000, partial co-pay between $70K–$90K. This is a significant benefit for many FIRE Canadians.

Province-specific programs that kick in at 65:

  • Ontario: Ontario Drug Benefit (ODB), Ontario Seniors Dental Care Program
  • BC: Fair PharmaCare — income-based drug coverage (available before 65 for lower incomes)
  • Alberta: 30% coverage for drugs on the Alberta Drug Benefit List
Budget Reality Check
A couple in their 40s–50s retiring early should budget roughly $5,000–$10,000/year for combined health premiums and out-of-pocket costs until age 65, when provincial senior programs and CDCP provide more support. This is a real line item — don't omit it from your spending plan.
Question 07

Do I still get CPP if I retire early and stop contributing?

Yes, but your CPP will be lower than if you'd worked until 65. The amount depends on how many years you contributed and how much you earned. Early retirees with 20–25 years of contributions typically receive 50–70% of the maximum.

CPP is calculated based on two things: your contributory period (from age 18 to when you start collecting) and your average earnings during that period. Years with no earnings count as zeros — but the calculation drops your lowest years automatically.

The dropout provisions help early retirees:

  • Standard dropout: The 8 lowest-earning years in your contributory period are dropped
  • Child-rearing dropout: Years caring for children under age 7 can be excluded from the calculation
  • Disability dropout: Periods of CPP disability can be excluded

An example: If you retire at 45 and plan to take CPP at 65, your contributory period is 47 years (18 to 65). You only contributed for 27 of those years. After the 8-year dropout, 12 years of zeros remain in the calculation. This significantly reduces your CPP below the maximum.

Check Your Actual Estimate
Log into My Service Canada Account (canada.ca) to see your projected CPP at ages 60, 65, and 70 based on your actual contribution history. This is the most accurate number to use in your planning — not a rule of thumb.

Post-retirement CPP contributions: If you retire early but take on part-time or consulting work while under 70, you can still make post-retirement contributions that incrementally increase your CPP benefit. This is worth considering for people doing semi-retirement or "barista FIRE" style arrangements.

QPP (Quebec): If you worked in Quebec, you contribute to the Quebec Pension Plan instead of CPP. QPP rules are similar but not identical — check Retraite Québec for your specific estimate.

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Model this in FireCA
Enter your actual Service Canada CPP estimate in the Benefits tab. FireCA applies the correct delay or early-start factor automatically.
Question 08

Should I pay off my mortgage before retiring?

There's no universal answer, but most Canadians retiring before 65 are better off with a paid-off home. It lowers the minimum spending floor, reduces sequence risk, and simplifies the early retirement income picture.

This debate comes down to expected investment returns versus mortgage interest costs — but the right answer also depends on your risk tolerance, psychology, and how close to minimum spending you're comfortable running.

The case for paying off the mortgage:

  • Reduces your minimum fixed monthly obligations — your spending floor drops, making it easier to cut expenses in a bad market
  • Eliminates sequence-of-returns risk on your largest fixed obligation
  • Provides certainty — investment returns aren't guaranteed, but a paid-off home is
  • Simplifies cash flow planning in early retirement
  • At today's mortgage rates (5–6%), the guaranteed "return" from paying off debt is competitive with expected bond returns

The case for keeping the mortgage:

  • If your expected portfolio return exceeds your mortgage rate, investing the difference generates more wealth over time
  • With a low fixed-rate mortgage (e.g., 2–3% from 2020–2022), the math may favor investing
  • RRSP contributions can generate immediate tax refunds that partially offset mortgage interest
The FIRE Community View
Include your current mortgage payment in your monthly expense estimate — FireCA's Real Estate section does this automatically. The auto-drop feature then removes the mortgage from projected spending once it's paid off, and either redirects that amount into savings (accumulation mode) or reduces your retirement spending floor (FIRE'd mode).

What about the mortgage in retirement planning math? If your mortgage will be paid off before you retire, you should model your retirement spending at the lower post-mortgage amount. If you'll carry a mortgage into retirement, include the full payment in your spending target. Don't accidentally inflate your FI number by forgetting the mortgage drops off.

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Model this in FireCA
The Real Estate section calculates payoff date, total interest, and shows the spending offset once the mortgage clears — in both accumulation and FIRE'd modes.
Question 09

What is Coast FIRE — and is it realistic in Canada?

Coast FIRE is when your invested assets are large enough that compound growth alone — with no further contributions — will reach your FI number by retirement age. It's a realistic and popular milestone for Canadians who want to de-stress while still working.

Once you hit Coast FI, you no longer need to save aggressively. You only need to earn enough to cover your current living expenses. This makes semi-retirement, part-time work, career changes, or passion projects financially viable without sacrificing your long-term security.

The formula:

Coast FI Calculation
Coast FI Amount = FI Number ÷ (1 + annual real return)^years to retirement

Example: FI Number $1.5M, retiring at 60, currently 40 (20 years), 5% real return
Coast FI = $1,500,000 ÷ (1.05)^20 = $565,000

Once you have $565,000 invested today, you can stop contributing and still reach $1.5M by 60 — assuming 5% real growth.

Why it's especially appealing in Canada: CPP contributions continue as long as you work — even part-time. Semi-retirement at a lower-stress job still builds CPP credits. Coast FIRE + meaningful part-time work is one of the most common Canadian FIRE strategies, particularly for people with families or who enjoy their work but want more control over their schedule.

Important caveats:

  • Coast FI assumes a specific real return — lower actual returns extend the timeline
  • It doesn't protect against sequence-of-returns risk in the final years before retirement
  • Inflation can erode your target if you haven't adjusted the FI number over time
  • It's a milestone, not a guarantee — recalculate every few years
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Model this in FireCA
Your Coast FI number is displayed in real time in the Overview stat row, calculated against your current return and target retirement age.
Question 10

TFSA vs RRSP — which should I prioritize?

Prioritize RRSP when your current marginal tax rate is high and you expect a lower rate in retirement. Prioritize TFSA when your rate is lower now, or when you want to protect OAS and maximize flexibility in retirement.

This is the most foundational question in Canadian personal finance — and the right answer genuinely depends on your individual tax situation, not a universal rule.

Account Tax on contribution Tax on growth Tax on withdrawal Counts toward OAS clawback?
RRSP / RRIF Deductible (reduces tax now) Tax-deferred Fully taxable as income Yes
TFSA No deduction Tax-free Completely tax-free No
Non-Registered No deduction Taxable annually Capital gains at 50% inclusion Yes (investment income)

Choose RRSP first when:

  • Your current marginal tax rate is high (35%+) — the deduction is worth more now
  • You expect a significantly lower tax rate in retirement
  • You plan to do RRSP meltdown in early retirement to drain it at lower brackets
  • You have a spouse in a lower bracket (spousal RRSP contributions allow future income splitting)

Choose TFSA first when:

  • Your current marginal rate is low or moderate
  • You expect a similar or higher tax rate in retirement
  • You want to protect OAS — TFSA withdrawals don't count toward the clawback threshold
  • You've already maxed RRSP room or expect large income in retirement from CPP, OAS, and RRIF
The FIRE Community's General Approach
1. Max TFSA every year — always, without exception.
2. Maximize RRSP during high-income working years for the deduction.
3. In early retirement (low income, before CPP/OAS): execute RRSP meltdown to fill lower tax brackets.
4. Late retirement: use TFSA as the primary withdrawal source to avoid bracket creep as CPP + OAS + RRIF minimums stack.

2026 TFSA contribution room: $7,000/year. If you were 18 or older in 2009 and have never contributed, your cumulative room is $102,000 as of 2026.

RRSP contribution room: 18% of your previous year's earned income, up to the annual maximum ($32,490 for 2025). Unused room carries forward indefinitely. Check your Notice of Assessment or My CRA Account for your exact room.

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Model this in FireCA
The Accounts tab shows the after-tax value of each account type. The RRSP Meltdown tab models bracket-filling drawdown. The Draw Order tab shows the tax cost of different sequences.
Disclaimer
This guide is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute professional financial, tax, or legal advice. Tax rules, government benefit thresholds, and contribution limits change annually. Always verify current figures at canada.ca and consult a qualified financial advisor or advice-only planner before making significant retirement decisions.