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LIF — Life Income Fund Canada 2025

Everything you need to know about Life Income Funds: what they are, minimum and maximum withdrawal rules, differences from a RRIF, and strategies for managing locked-in pension money.

Table of Contents

What Is a Life Income Fund?

A Life Income Fund (LIF) is a registered account that holds locked-in pension money — typically the commuted value from a defined benefit pension plan that was transferred to a Locked-In Retirement Account (LIRA). Like a RRIF, a LIF provides retirement income by allowing withdrawals from the accumulated funds, but with an important difference: there is both a minimum AND a maximum withdrawal limit.

The "lock-in" requirement is because the original source was pension money, which governments mandate be used for retirement income — you can't just cash it out all at once.

The LIF Journey

DB Pension Commuted Value → LIRA (accumulation) → LIF (income) → Annuity (optional)

LIRA to LIF Conversion

You must convert your LIRA to a LIF by December 31 of the year you turn 71 (in most provinces), though you can convert earlier. Conversion is typically done by completing your financial institution's LIF application form and transferring the LIRA balance in-kind.

In some provinces, you can convert only a portion of your LIRA to a LIF and keep the rest in the LIRA — providing flexibility on the timing and amount of locked-in income.

LIF Minimum and Maximum Withdrawals

The key feature of the LIF is the dual-limit system:

Minimum Withdrawal

The same as a RRIF — a percentage of the account balance based on your age (or spouse's age if elected). You must withdraw at least this amount each year. See the RRIF minimum table in our RRIF Calculator.

Maximum Withdrawal

Unlike a RRIF, a LIF caps how much you can withdraw in any given year. The maximum is set by federal or provincial regulation and is designed to ensure the funds last for life. The maximum percentage is based on a government-prescribed formula using interest rates and your age.

AgeApproximate Max LIF Withdrawal % (Federal/Most Provinces)
55~6.10%
60~6.51%
65~7.04%
70~7.71%
75~8.65%
80~10.00%
85~12.00%
90+~14%+

Maximum LIF percentages are set annually by the government and vary by province and interest rates. These are approximate 2025 figures.

Maximum Withdrawal Issue: In some years, particularly when LIF balances are large and you need significant income, the maximum withdrawal cap can be frustrating — you simply cannot take more than the allowed amount. If you need more flexibility, the unlocking rules (see below) may help.

LIF vs RRIF — Key Differences

FeatureLIFRRIF
Source of fundsLocked-in pension money (LIRA/commuted value)RRSP or other registered savings
Minimum withdrawalYes (same as RRIF)Yes
Maximum withdrawalYes — can't exceed the capNo — can withdraw everything
Spousal survivor optionSurvivor can continue LIF or receive annuitySpouse becomes new owner (successor annuitant)
Conversion to annuityCan buy annuity at any timeCan buy annuity at any time
Tax treatmentSame — fully taxableSame — fully taxable
Pension income amount (65+)Yes — qualifiesYes — qualifies

Unlocking Your LIF — Accessing Locked-In Funds

Locked-in funds are frustrating for some retirees who need more flexibility. Fortunately, there are several "unlocking" mechanisms:

One-Time 50% Unlock (Some Provinces)

In Ontario, BC, Manitoba, and other provinces, you may transfer up to 50% of your LIRA or LIF to a regular RRSP/RRIF when you first set up a LIF (typically between ages 55 and 71). This gives you more flexibility with half the funds.

Small Account Unlocking

If the total of all your locked-in accounts falls below a certain threshold (approximately $27,280 federally in 2025, varying by province), you may be able to unlock and withdraw the entire balance.

Shortened Life Expectancy

If a doctor certifies your life expectancy is two years or less, you can typically unlock and withdraw all locked-in funds.

Non-Residency

If you have been a non-resident of Canada for at least two years, you may unlock locked-in funds (federal jurisdiction plans).

Financial Hardship

Most provinces allow partial unlocking for specific financial hardship situations (unpaid rent, medical expenses, etc.). The rules vary significantly by province — check your provincial pension legislation.

Provincial Differences for LIFs

Because pension legislation is largely provincial in Canada, LIF rules vary by jurisdiction:

JurisdictionKey Features
Federal (pension)LIRA → LIF; 50% one-time unlock option; standard max withdrawals
Ontario50% one-time transfer to RRSP/RRIF at age 55+; specific hardship unlocking
British Columbia50% transfer option; age 65 full unlocking; hardship provisions
AlbertaOlder locked-in accounts may convert to PRIF; flexible unlocking at 50+
Manitoba/SaskatchewanPRIF available — no maximum withdrawal cap (unlike LIF)
QuebecLIF with specific Quebec rules; can convert to life annuity at 65+
Jurisdiction Matters: Your LIF rules are determined by the pension legislation governing your original pension plan, NOT your current province of residence. A federal government employee's LIRA is governed by federal rules even if they move to Ontario.

Converting LIF to a Life Annuity

At any time, you can use your LIF balance to purchase a life annuity from an insurance company. An annuity eliminates the LIF complexity (minimum/maximum tracking) and provides guaranteed income for life.

Converting to an annuity is particularly attractive when:

Compare annuity options using our guide: Annuity vs RRIF Canada.

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