If you have a defined benefit pension in Canada, one of the most important decisions you'll make at retirement is selecting a survivor benefit option. These choices are often irreversible and have major financial implications for your spouse. This guide explains how survivor benefits work, what options typically exist, and how to think about the decision.
Pension survivor benefits ensure that if you die before or after retirement, your spouse or eligible survivor continues to receive income from your pension plan. Without a survivor benefit, many DB pensions would simply stop paying at the member's death — leaving a spouse with no pension income.
If you die before you start receiving your pension:
The specific rules depend on provincial pension legislation and your plan terms. Ensure your beneficiary designations are up to date with the plan administrator.
At retirement, most DB plan members must choose a survivor benefit form. Common options include:
You receive the maximum monthly pension for your lifetime. Payments stop when you die. Your spouse receives nothing from the pension. Most provinces require spousal consent to waive survivor benefits if you're legally married or in a qualifying common-law relationship.
The most common choice. You receive a somewhat reduced pension while alive. If you die first, your spouse receives 60% of your pension for the rest of their life. The reduction in your own pension is actuarially calculated based on both your ages.
If you die first, your spouse receives your full pension amount. Your starting pension is reduced more than under the 60% option — sometimes significantly, depending on age differences.
Many plans offer a "guarantee period" (5 or 10 years). If you die within the guarantee period, payments continue to your estate or beneficiary for the remainder of the period. Guarantee periods are especially useful if you have no eligible survivor or your survivor has a short life expectancy.
Choosing survivor coverage reduces your pension. The amount of reduction depends on:
Example: Member age 62, spouse age 60, pension of $40,000/year:
Some members consider waiving survivor benefits to receive the higher single-life pension, and then use the difference to purchase life insurance for the spouse. This is known as the "pension maximization" strategy. It can make sense in specific situations:
However, this strategy requires careful analysis. Life insurance premiums can become unaffordable, policies can lapse, and the strategy fails if you die before your spouse without insurance in force. Most financial advisors recommend keeping the survivor pension unless there's a specific compelling reason not to.
Canadian pension legislation in most provinces recognizes common-law partners as eligible survivors, typically after 1–3 years of cohabitation (varies by province and plan). Ensure you've registered your relationship with the pension plan — eligibility isn't always automatic.
If you've elected a single life pension and later marry, your new spouse generally has no claim on your pension in the event of your death. The survivor election made at retirement typically cannot be changed after the first payment is issued.
Divorce complicates survivor benefits. If a pension is divided on divorce and each party receives their own share, the survivor benefit provisions apply separately to each divided portion. Federal pension legislation and most provincial legislation allow for division of pension entitlements on marriage breakdown.
A beneficiary designation (for a refund of contributions on pre-retirement death) is different from a survivor election at retirement. Both should be kept current. Your beneficiary receives any death benefit; your survivor receives ongoing pension payments.
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