Taking CPP at 65 in Canada 2025: The Standard Age

CPP at 65 (2025): The maximum monthly CPP at age 65 is approximately $1,433/month. The average recipient receives around $830/month. Age 65 is the baseline — no reductions, no bonuses.

Age 65 is the standard CPP start age — the benchmark against which all early and late starts are measured. Taking CPP at exactly 65 means you receive your full calculated benefit with no adjustment up or down. For most Canadians, it's the default choice, and for good reason.

What Is the Maximum CPP at Age 65?

In 2025, the maximum monthly CPP retirement pension for someone starting at age 65 is approximately $1,433/month ($17,196/year). To receive the maximum, you must have contributed the maximum amount for at least 39 of the 47 years in your contributory period.

Most Canadians don't receive the maximum. The average CPP payment across all recipients is around $830/month in 2025, reflecting varied contribution histories, time out of the workforce, and lower-earning years.

How the Age-65 Baseline Works

Service Canada calculates your "base" CPP as if you started at exactly 65. This base amount is then adjusted:

CPP at 65 vs. Other Ages

Start AgeAdjustment vs. 65Est. Max MonthlyEst. Annual
60-36%~$917~$11,004
62-21.6%~$1,124~$13,488
650% (baseline)~$1,433~$17,196
67+16.8%~$1,674~$20,088
70+42%~$2,035~$24,420

Why 65 Is the Most Common Choice

Most Canadians start CPP at or near 65 for several practical reasons:

CPP at 65 + OAS: Your Combined Government Income

At 65, most Canadians become eligible for both CPP and OAS simultaneously. In 2025:

If you contributed close to the maximum, CPP + OAS could be $1,433 + $727 = $2,160/month ($25,920/year). This provides a solid base, though most Canadians need additional savings (RRSP/RRIF, TFSA, workplace pension) to maintain their pre-retirement lifestyle.

Taxes on CPP at 65

CPP is fully taxable as regular income. At $830/month ($9,960/year), you'd typically owe minimal federal tax after the basic personal amount ($15,705 in 2025) is applied. But add OAS and RRIF income and you may owe more. Consider:

Pension income splitting: CPP retirement pension can be split with your spouse starting at age 60. If your spouse has lower income, splitting up to 50% of your CPP can reduce your household tax bill significantly.

Should You Start CPP at 65 or Wait?

The decision between 65 and 70 comes down to health and income needs:

Your SituationRecommendation
Average health, uncertain longevityStart at 65 (safe default)
Excellent health, family lives to 90+Consider deferring to 70
Need income to bridge to other savingsStart at 65
Have other income sources, don't need CPP nowConsider deferring to 67-70
Spouse has low incomeStart at 65, split the pension

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How to Apply for CPP at 65

  1. Apply 6–12 months before your 65th birthday through My Service Canada Account
  2. Have your SIN, banking information, and birth certificate ready
  3. Choose your start month — it doesn't have to be exactly the month you turn 65
  4. Payments begin the month after your chosen start date
Don't miss out: CPP is not automatic. You must apply. Many Canadians delay applying unnecessarily and lose months of payments. Apply 6 months early to avoid any processing gaps.