2025 Pension Income Credit: 15% federal credit on the first $2,000 of eligible pension income = up to $300 federal tax reduction. Most provinces add a matching provincial credit, bringing combined savings to roughly $440–$600.
The Pension Income Tax Credit (also called the Pension Income Amount) is a non-refundable federal tax credit for Canadians who receive eligible pension income. It is claimed on line 31400 of your federal tax return and reduces the amount of federal income tax you owe.
The credit is calculated as 15% of the lesser of your eligible pension income or $2,000. The maximum federal credit is therefore $300 (15% × $2,000). It cannot generate a refund — it only reduces tax owed to zero.
Not all retirement income qualifies for the pension income credit. The CRA distinguishes between "eligible pension income" (which qualifies) and other income sources (which do not).
| Income Type | Qualifies? | Age Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Employer registered pension plan (RPP) | Yes | Any age |
| RRIF withdrawals | Yes | 65+ only |
| Annuity from RRSP/DPSP | Yes | 65+ only |
| Foreign pension income | Yes | 65+ only |
| OAS payments | No | N/A |
| CPP/QPP payments | No | N/A |
| GIS payments | No | N/A |
| RRSP withdrawals (lump sum) | No | N/A |
If you don't have an employer pension plan, the most common way to generate exactly $2,000 in eligible pension income (to maximize the credit) is to convert a small portion of your RRSP to a RRIF at age 65 and withdraw $2,000 per year from it.
Even a RRIF with a relatively small balance can produce $2,000 annually. This is sometimes called the "pension credit conversion" strategy and is widely used by Canadian financial planners for clients who lack employer pensions.
If your pension income credit exceeds your federal tax owing, the unused portion can be transferred to your spouse or common-law partner using Schedule 2. This is separate from — and in addition to — pension income splitting.
Every province and territory offers its own pension income credit that mirrors the federal credit. The provincial credit amount and eligible income threshold vary by province. In most provinces, the combined federal and provincial credit on $2,000 of eligible pension income saves seniors $440–$600 in total taxes.
Quebec has its own pension income credit rules under the provincial tax system.
Pension income splitting (allocating up to 50% of eligible pension income to your spouse) and the pension income credit work together. Splitting pension income to a spouse who has no eligible pension income of their own allows that spouse to claim the $300 pension income credit — effectively doubling the household pension income credit benefit.
To claim pension income splitting, both spouses must file returns and complete Form T1032. The allocation does not require money to physically move between accounts.
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAThe Pension Income Tax Credit is a modest but guaranteed tax benefit for Canadian seniors with eligible pension income. At just $300 federally (plus provincial matching), it won't transform your tax situation on its own — but combined with income splitting and the Age Amount, these credits stack up to meaningful savings over a long retirement. If you have RRSP savings and no employer pension, the RRIF conversion strategy to generate exactly $2,000 in eligible pension income is one of the simplest optimizations available.