Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Taking CPP at 60, 65, or 70 — Which Age Is Best?

One of the biggest retirement decisions Canadians face is when to start collecting CPP. You can take it as early as 60 or as late as 70 — a 10-year window that dramatically affects how much you receive every month. There is no universally correct answer, but understanding the math can help you make the best decision for your situation.

The Basic Rules

The standard CPP start age is 65. Starting before 65 means a permanent reduction; starting after 65 means a permanent increase. These adjustments apply for the rest of your life.

Example: CPP at $1,000/Month at Age 65

If your CPP entitlement at 65 is $1,000/month, here is what each start age looks like:

That is a $780/month difference between taking CPP at 60 versus 70 — a gap that compounds significantly over a long retirement.

The Breakeven Analysis

The breakeven age is when cumulative payments from waiting equal what you would have collected by starting early. If you outlive the breakeven age, delaying pays off.

Breakeven: Age 60 vs. Age 65

Taking CPP at 60 gives you 5 extra years of payments, but at a reduced rate. The breakeven point is approximately age 74. If you live past 74, you would have collected more by waiting until 65.

Breakeven: Age 65 vs. Age 70

Delaying from 65 to 70 means 5 years of missed payments, but higher monthly amounts. The breakeven is approximately age 83 to 84. If you live past 83, delaying to 70 was the better choice.

Factors That Favour Taking CPP Early (Age 60-64)

Factors That Favour Delaying CPP (Age 66-70)

The Tax Consideration

CPP is taxable income. If you are working and receiving CPP simultaneously, your combined income could push you into a higher tax bracket. If you retire early with low income, taking CPP at a reduced rate may result in less tax overall.

CPP and GIS Interaction

If you expect to qualify for the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS), be aware that CPP income reduces GIS. For very low-income seniors, the math is complex and worth reviewing with a financial advisor.

What About Inflation?

CPP payments are indexed to inflation annually. A larger base payment from delaying grows faster in absolute dollar terms. Over 20 to 25 years, this indexing makes delayed CPP even more valuable than the raw breakeven analysis suggests.

Important: Once you start CPP, you generally cannot stop and restart it. This is a permanent, lifelong decision. Take time to consider your health, other income sources, and retirement plans before applying.

The Simple Rule of Thumb

For most Canadians in average or better health with some savings, delaying CPP to at least 65 — and ideally 70 — produces better lifetime outcomes. The 42% bonus for waiting until 70 is one of the best guaranteed returns available in Canada.

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