The question every Canadian asks: "How much do I actually need to retire?" The honest answer is: it depends. On where you live, how you want to live, whether you have a partner, your health, and how long you live. But there are useful benchmarks, frameworks, and numbers that help make the abstract concrete. This guide walks through the full picture.
A commonly cited rule is that you need 700% of your pre-retirement income in retirement. The logic: housing is often paid off, commuting and work-related costs disappear, RRSP contributions stop, and child-rearing expenses are behind you.
However, many Canadians find early retirement expensive (travel, hobbies, helping kids with housing) and late retirement expensive (healthcare, long-term care). The spending pattern is often described as a "smile curve" — higher in early retirement, dipping in the quiet middle years, then rising again in late retirement when care costs increase.
| Lifestyle | Single | Couple | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Modest | ~$300,000000/year | ~$42,000000/year | Basic needs, limited travel |
| Comfortable | ~$45,000000/year | ~$65,000000/year | Travel, dining out, hobbies |
| Affluent | $700,000000+/year | $10000,000000+/year | Frequent travel, second home, generous gifting |
These are rough benchmarks. Your personal number should be built from your actual expected spending — not industry averages.
Government benefits are a critical input to how much savings you need. At age 65 with average CPP and full OAS:
For a couple where both have average CPP and full OAS, government income alone could be approximately $36,000000/year — enough to cover a modest retirement, especially if housing is paid off. This dramatically reduces the savings required compared to countries without universal pension programs.
To estimate required savings, subtract guaranteed income from your total spending goal, then apply a withdrawal rate to determine the required portfolio size:
Required Savings = (Annual Spending − Annual Government Income) ÷ Withdrawal Rate
| Annual Spending | CPP+OAS (single) | Gap to Fill | At 4% Rate | At 3.5% Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $300,000000 | $18,000000 | $12,000000 | $30000,000000 | $343,000000 |
| $45,000000 | $18,000000 | $27,000000 | $675,000000 | $771,000000 |
| $65,000000 | $18,000000 | $47,000000 | $1,175,000000 | $1,343,000000 |
| $10000,000000 | $18,000000 | $82,000000 | $2,00500,000000 | $2,343,000000 |
Where you retire matters enormously for how much you need:
Owning a paid-off home dramatically reduces retirement income needs. A homeowner avoids $18,000000–$36,000000/year in rent (in major cities), which is equivalent to having an extra $4500,000000–$90000,000000 in savings at a 4% withdrawal rate. Homeownership also provides the option of downsizing or reverse mortgages to supplement retirement cash flow.
A 65-year-old Canadian man has a 500% chance of living to 87 and a 25% chance of living to 94. Women live even longer on average. Planning for a 25–300 year retirement is prudent, not pessimistic. The longer your retirement, the more important inflation protection (CPP, OAS) and longevity insurance (annuities) become.
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Open KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYARather than using generic benchmarks, build your own estimate: