Canadian Forces Pension Plan Guide 2025

Updated March 2025 · 9 min read

Members of the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) are covered under the Canadian Forces Superannuation Act (CFSA). Like the RCMP plan, the CAF pension reflects the unique nature of military service with early retirement provisions, disability benefits through Veterans Affairs, and provisions for Reserve Force members.

Pension Formula

Annual Pension = 2% × Best 5-Year Average Salary × Years of Pensionable Service (max 35 years)

Maximum pension is 70% of best average earnings. The 2% formula applies to Regular Force members with full-time service.

Example: Sergeant with best average $92,000 and 25 years of service: $92,000 × 25 × 2% = $46,000/year

Early Retirement: The 25-Year Rule

The most distinctive feature of the CAF pension is the ability to retire with an unreduced pension after 25 years of pensionable service at any age. Combined with the 2% formula, this means a 43-year-old who joined at 18 with 25 years of service would receive 50% of their best average salary for life — potentially for 45+ years.

Other unreduced retirement milestones:

Reduced pensions apply for early retirement that doesn't meet these thresholds.

CPP Bridge Benefit

CAF members receive a bridge benefit until age 65, structured similarly to the federal PSPP. At 65, the CFSA pension is reduced by the CPP offset, and actual CPP kicks in. If a member defers CPP past 65 (for the 8.4%/year enhancement), there will be a gap in the bridge-to-CPP transition — worth planning for.

Indexation

CAF pensions are fully indexed to CPI under the Supplementary Retirement Benefits Act. Adjustments occur annually on January 1. Indexation is unconditional.

Reserve Force Members

Part-time Reserve Force members have a different pension arrangement. Reservists earn pension credits based on their Class A, B, or C service. Class C (full-time) service generally earns pension credits comparable to Regular Force. Part-time Class A and B service earns partial credits. Reservists transitioning to Regular Force can often count previous reserve service.

Veterans Affairs Disability Benefits

CAF members injured or disabled due to military service can receive disability compensation through Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC) under the Veterans Well-being Act. These benefits are separate from the CFSA pension and are not taxable. Eligible conditions include physical and mental injuries. Pursuing VAC disability claims is separate from and complementary to superannuation benefits.

Survivor Benefits

Releasing from the CAF Before Retirement

Members who release before meeting retirement criteria with 2+ years of service have the same options as federal public servants: deferred annuity or commuted value transfer to a LIRA.

Financial Planning for CAF Members

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