One of the most consequential decisions in Canadian retirement planning is when to start your Canada Pension Plan (CPP) retirement benefit. You can begin as early as age 60 with a permanent reduction, at the standard age of 65, or delay up to age 70 for a permanently higher benefit. There is no universally correct answer — it depends on your health, finances, tax situation, and personal priorities.
The CPP benefit is adjusted based on when you start relative to age 65:
Taking CPP at 60 = 36% reduction from the age-65 amount (0.6% x 60 months).
Taking CPP at 70 = 42% increase from the age-65 amount (0.7% x 60 months).
The maximum CPP at age 65 in 2025 is $1,306.57/month. Here are the amounts at different starting ages:
Most Canadians receive less than the maximum, so multiply these percentages by your actual expected benefit. Check your My Service Canada Account for your personal estimated amounts.
Starting at 60: You collect for 5 extra years, but at a 36% lower rate. Starting at 65 with the full benefit, you earn more per year. The breakeven point is roughly age 74. If you live past 74, starting at 65 gives you more total lifetime CPP income. If you die before 74, starting at 60 was mathematically better.
Starting at 70: You collect a benefit 42% higher than at 65, but miss 5 years of payments. The breakeven point is approximately age 82-83. If you live past 83, the delay to 70 produces more lifetime income. Average Canadian life expectancy at 65 is around 85-87, which suggests delaying to 70 is mathematically favorable for many people. But the risk is you may not live that long.
If your health is poor or your family history suggests a shorter lifespan, taking CPP early maximizes the income you receive before potential health decline. A smaller benefit for more years may be better than waiting for a larger benefit that you may not collect for long.
If you have retired early and need income before 65, starting CPP early fills the gap. It may be preferable to drawing down your RRSP or investment portfolio, which would continue compounding tax-sheltered.
Some argue you can invest the early CPP payments and earn a return that compensates for the lower amount. At current safe withdrawal rate assumptions (~4%), there is some mathematical merit to this — but it requires discipline and assumes reasonable investment returns.
If you are married and your spouse has a large CPP, the combined survivor pension rules may cap what they receive anyway. In that case, you might as well take your CPP early to maximize household income during the years you are both alive.
CPP is inflation-indexed guaranteed income for life. A higher CPP benefit protects against the risk of outliving your savings. This "longevity insurance" argument is the strongest case for delaying. The longer you live, the more valuable the higher benefit becomes.
A higher CPP benefit produces a higher survivor pension for your spouse. If you have a younger spouse with limited CPP of their own, maximizing your CPP benefit creates valuable income protection for them after you are gone.
Between ages 60 and 70, if you have other income sources (RRSP/RRIF withdrawals, investment income), adding CPP could push you into a higher bracket. Delaying CPP and drawing from RRSP first (while in a lower bracket) then receiving CPP later can be more tax-efficient.
If you have a large RRIF, DB pension, and CPP all starting at the same time, the combined income may trigger OAS clawback. Staggering income sources — CPP later, RRSP meltdown earlier — can help keep you below the clawback threshold.
A popular strategy for people who retire between 60 and 65 is to use personal savings as a "bridge" — drawing from RRSP or non-registered accounts to replace CPP income while delaying CPP for a higher eventual benefit. This works best when:
For healthy Canadians with adequate savings who expect to live into their mid-80s or beyond, delaying CPP to 70 is often the mathematically superior decision for maximizing lifetime income. However, no financial formula can account for personal circumstances, health uncertainty, or the very real value of having income available when you most enjoy spending it. Work through the numbers with your personal estimated CPP benefit and your specific income picture before deciding.
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