Average Net Worth by Age in Canada 2025

See where you stand using the latest Statistics Canada data — and what to do if you're behind.

Understanding where your net worth stands relative to your peers can be a powerful motivator — or a wake-up call. Statistics Canada's Survey of Financial Security provides the most comprehensive picture of Canadian household wealth. Here's what the data shows, what drives the numbers, and how to improve your position at any age.

Canadian Net Worth by Age: The Numbers

Age GroupMedian Net WorthMean Net Worth
Under 35$48,800$121,000
35–44$348,000$563,000
45–54$626,000$1,030,000
55–64$884,000$1,420,000
65+$878,000$1,386,000
Why median matters more than mean: Mean (average) net worth is pulled upward by the ultra-wealthy. Median — the middle value where half of Canadians are above and half below — is a more realistic benchmark for most households.

What's Driving These Numbers

Real Estate is the Primary Wealth Driver

For most Canadians aged 45+, home equity accounts for 50-70% of total net worth. The dramatic jump from under-35 ($48,800 median) to 35-44 ($348,000 median) largely reflects home ownership accumulation and appreciation. Canadians who bought homes in major cities in the 2000s and 2010s saw enormous appreciation that inflated these figures.

The Compounding Effect in the 45-64 Age Range

Net worth nearly doubles from 35-44 ($348K) to 45-54 ($626K), then grows another 41% to 55-64 ($884K). This reflects both continued saving and investment compounding. By the time Canadians reach their 50s, their investment accounts have had 20+ years to grow, and mortgages are substantially paid down.

Why 65+ Slightly Trails 55-64

The slight decline from $884K (55-64) to $878K (65+) is normal: retirees begin drawing down their wealth. This decumulation phase is expected and, for most Canadians, managed well through CPP, OAS, and RRIF withdrawals.

Net Worth by Province: Significant Variation

National medians obscure major regional differences:

What's Included in Net Worth

Net worth = total assets minus total liabilities. Assets typically include:

Liabilities include: mortgage balance, home equity line of credit (HELOC), car loans, student loans, credit card balances.

Are You Behind? Here's What to Do

Under 35 and Below $48,800

Focus on eliminating high-interest debt first (credit cards, personal loans above 8%). Then build your emergency fund (3 months expenses). Then open and contribute to a TFSA. If homeownership is a goal, open an FHSA — you get an $8,000 tax deduction plus tax-free growth.

35-44 and Below $348,000

This gap often signals under-investment in real estate or investments. If homeownership is practical in your area, explore it. If not, maximize TFSA and RRSP with index ETFs. Aggressively paying down debt above 5% is also equivalent to a guaranteed 5% return.

45-54 and Below $626,000

In your peak earning years, this is the time to maximize RRSP contributions (highest tax deduction value), pay off mortgage, and catch up on TFSA room. Consider a certified financial planner (CFP) to create a retirement projection and identify gaps.

55-64 and Below $884,000

Focus on CPP optimization (delaying CPP to 70 increases the benefit by 42% vs taking at 65), RRSP-to-RRIF timing, and minimizing taxes in early retirement. At this stage, preserving and efficiently distributing wealth matters as much as growing it.

The Wealth Gap Within Age Groups

The mean being so much higher than the median reveals extreme wealth concentration. In the 45-54 group, mean is $1.03 million vs. median $626,000 — meaning a small number of very wealthy Canadians pull the average far above the middle. Don't compare yourself to the mean; it's not a realistic benchmark.

How to Calculate Your Net Worth

Take 10 minutes right now: list all assets at current market value, list all debts at current balances, subtract debts from assets. That's your net worth. Track it quarterly — watching it grow (or correcting course when it stalls) is one of the most motivating financial habits you can build.

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