Defined Contribution Pension Guide Canada 2025

Updated: March 2025 · 10 min read

Defined contribution (DC) pensions have become the dominant workplace pension model in Canada's private sector. Unlike a defined benefit plan, a DC plan does not promise a specific monthly income at retirement. Instead, you and your employer contribute a defined amount, the money is invested in your individual account, and you bear the investment risk. At retirement, you convert the accumulated balance into income. Understanding DC pensions — and how to maximize them — is critical for millions of Canadians.

Key DC Difference: In a DB plan, your employer bears investment and longevity risk. In a DC plan, you bear both. Planning for decumulation (converting your DC balance to income) is as important as the accumulation phase.

How DC Pensions Work

Both you and your employer contribute a fixed percentage of your salary to your individual DC account. Common structures include:

DC pension contributions are made with pre-tax dollars (employer contributions also flow in tax-deferred). Investment growth is tax-deferred until withdrawal, similar to an RRSP.

DC Pension vs RRSP: Key Similarities and Differences

FeatureDC PensionRRSP
Employer contributionsYes (typically)No
Tax-deferred growthYesYes
Contribution limit sharedYes (reduces RRSP room via PA)N/A
Investment controlLimited to plan menuFull (self-directed)
Locked-in at departure?Typically yes (LIRA)No
Conversion at retirementRRIF, LIF, or annuityRRIF or annuity

Investment Choices Within a DC Plan

DC plan members are responsible for their own investment allocation — a significant responsibility that many members don't take seriously enough. Most plans offer:

Common mistake: leaving contributions in the default money market or guaranteed fund, which provides near-zero real returns over decades. Young members especially should hold a growth-oriented allocation.

What Happens to Your DC Pension When You Leave a Job?

When you leave an employer (voluntarily or involuntarily), your vested DC pension balance is typically transferred to a Locked-In Retirement Account (LIRA) at a financial institution of your choice. It remains locked-in by pension legislation until retirement age, when it must be converted to a Life Income Fund (LIF) or annuity. Some provinces allow unlocking provisions (see our LIF guide for details).

Converting Your DC Pension at Retirement

At retirement, your DC balance (or LIRA balance) can be converted to:

DC Pension and the Pension Income Credit

LIF and RRIF income from a DC plan conversion qualifies for the pension income tax credit from age 65 — the same as RRIF income generally. Income from a converted DC plan can also be split with a lower-income spouse.

Maximizing Your DC Pension

  1. Always contribute at least enough to get the full employer match — This is an instant 100% return on the matched portion. Not maximizing the match is leaving compensation on the table.
  2. Review your investment allocation annually — Especially in your 50s as you approach retirement. A common glide path is: high equity (80%+) in your 20s–40s; gradually shift to 60/40 or 50/50 as you near retirement.
  3. Understand your Pension Adjustment (PA) — DC employer contributions reduce your RRSP room. Coordinate DC contributions with RRSP contributions to stay within limits.
  4. Plan the conversion strategy early — Decide before retirement whether to convert to a RRIF, LIF, or annuity, and understand the implications for income, tax, and estate.

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DC Pension in Retirement Planning Context

DC pensions offer meaningful retirement savings with the benefit of employer contributions, but they shift all investment and longevity risk to the member. The most successful DC plan retirees are those who: maintained a growth-oriented portfolio during accumulation, captured the full employer match, converted the balance thoughtfully at retirement, and integrated the income with CPP, OAS, RRSP/RRIF, and TFSA in a tax-efficient way.