Peak earning years meet peak expenses — here's how to come out ahead and set up a wealthy retirement.
Your 40s present a unique financial challenge: you're likely earning more than ever, but also spending more than ever — mortgage, children's activities, aging parents, lifestyle upgrades. The Canadians who build serious wealth in their 40s are those who resist lifestyle inflation and channel the income gap between what they earn and what they spend into long-term investments.
The median net worth of 45-54 year old Canadians is $626,000. Here's how to reach and exceed that benchmark.
By your early 40s you should ideally have:
If you don't have all of these in place, the 40s are still early enough to course-correct significantly. You have 20+ years of compounding available. Act now.
Your 40s are typically your highest-income years — and therefore the years when RRSP contributions save you the most tax. At a 46% combined marginal rate (common for $150K+ earners in Ontario or BC), a $100 RRSP contribution saves $4,600 in tax immediately. That refund, reinvested, generates compounding returns for 20+ years.
By your mid-40s, the $95,000 cumulative TFSA room (2025) should be fully invested. If it isn't, prioritize filling it — the tax-free compounding over the next 20+ years is extremely valuable. In retirement, TFSA withdrawals don't trigger OAS clawback, which is a significant advantage for high-income retirees.
With mortgage rates at 4-6% in 2025, the math on extra mortgage payments vs. investing is close. General guidance:
Making accelerated bi-weekly payments (vs. monthly) adds one extra payment per year at no additional cost — always worth doing.
If you have teenagers, you may have 3-10 years left to accumulate in the RESP. The 20% government grant on up to $2,500/year means contributing the full amount annually is a guaranteed 20% return. Catch-up contributions (up to $5,000/year grant-eligible with prior unused room) can accelerate RESP growth significantly.
Many Canadians in their 40s face financial pressure from both sides: children's expenses and aging parent support. Strategies to navigate this:
In your early-to-mid 40s, you still have 20+ years of investment horizon — equities should still dominate your portfolio. The common mistake: de-risking too early because "retirement feels closer." A 40-year-old who shifts to 50% bonds is sacrificing enormous expected returns for minimal needed security.
Canadian median net worth at 45-54 is $626,000. Mean is $1.03 million. If you're significantly below these numbers, the 40s are your correction window. Identify the gap, quantify what monthly savings increase would close it by age 55, and implement it now while your income is at its peak.
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