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Taxes in Retirement Canada: Complete Guide 2025

How different retirement income sources are taxed in Canada, and the credits and strategies that can dramatically reduce your annual tax bill.

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How Each Income Source Is Taxed in Retirement

Income SourceTax Treatment
CPP100% taxable as ordinary income
OAS100% taxable; subject to recovery tax (clawback)
GISNot taxable (non-taxable benefit)
RRSP withdrawal100% taxable as ordinary income
RRIF withdrawal100% taxable as ordinary income
TFSA withdrawalTax-free; not reported as income
DB pension100% taxable as ordinary income
Capital gains (non-reg)50% inclusion rate — half is taxable income
Canadian dividendsGrossed-up; eligible for dividend tax credit
Interest income100% taxable as ordinary income

Federal Tax Brackets in Retirement (2025)

Taxable IncomeFederal Rate
First $57,37515%
$57,376–$114,75020.5%
$114,751–$158,51926%
$158,520–$220,00029%
Over $220,00033%

Provincial taxes are additional — combined federal + provincial rates range from roughly 20% at low incomes to 53%+ at the highest income levels depending on province.

Key Tax Credits for Retirees

Minimizing Taxes: Practical Strategies

Quarterly Tax Installments

If you owe more than $3,000 in federal taxes (or $1,800 in Quebec) that was not withheld at source, CRA requires you to pay quarterly installments. This commonly applies to retirees receiving CPP, OAS, pension, and investment income without sufficient withholding. Request voluntary withholding on CPP and OAS to avoid installment obligations.

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