LIRA Canada 2026 — Locked-In Retirement Account

Where it comes from, LIF conversion, and provincial unlocking rules explained

What Is a LIRA?

A Locked-In Retirement Account (LIRA) is a registered account that holds pension money transferred from an employer's defined benefit (DB) or defined contribution (DC) pension plan when an employee leaves a job before reaching pensionable age. The funds are "locked in" — meaning you generally cannot withdraw from a LIRA before a specified age or without meeting specific hardship or unlocking criteria.

LIRAs are provincially regulated (or federally for federally regulated employers such as banks, airlines, telecoms). Each province has its own Pension Benefits Act governing LIRA rules, so the specifics vary considerably across the country. Quebec uses a different name — Locked-In Retirement Savings Plan (LRSP).

How a LIRA Is Created

LIRAs are almost always created through a pension transfer. When you leave an employer and your pension plan allows (or requires) a commuted value transfer, the lump sum is transferred directly to a LIRA — maintaining the tax-deferred status while preserving the intent of the pension funds for retirement income. You cannot contribute to a LIRA; the only way to add funds is through a pension transfer.

LIRA vs RRSP: Key Differences

FeatureLIRARRSP
Source of fundsPension commuted value onlyAnnual contributions from earned income
Can you contribute?NoYes (within limits)
Can you withdraw freely?No — locked in until specified ageYes (with withholding tax)
Mandatory conversion ageVaries by province (typically 71)71 (to RRIF)
Converted toLIF (Life Income Fund) or annuityRRIF or annuity
Minimum withdrawalsLIF has both minimum and maximumRRIF has minimum only
Spousal rightsStrong — spouse must consent to transfers/changesNo spousal consent required

Converting LIRA to LIF

At retirement (or the province's specified age), your LIRA must be converted to a Life Income Fund (LIF) or used to purchase a life annuity. A LIF functions similarly to a RRIF in that it requires minimum withdrawals — however, unlike a RRIF, a LIF also has maximum annual withdrawal limits designed to prevent you from depleting the fund before death.

LIF maximum withdrawal percentages are set by each province and vary by age. In Ontario, the maximum LIF withdrawal at age 65 is approximately 6.7% of the account balance. This cap can be frustrating for retirees who need more income — particularly those with large LIFs who would prefer faster drawdown.

Unlocking Provisions by Province

All provinces allow some form of unlocking — accessing locked-in pension funds before normal retirement age or beyond the LIF maximums. Common unlocking provisions include:

ProvinceAge-Based UnlockSmall Balance UnlockFinancial Hardship Unlock
Ontario55+ can transfer up to 50% to RRSP/RRIF onceBalance under $33,000 (2026 threshold)Low income, medical, first/last month rent
BC55+ can unlock 50% onceBalance under 20% of YMPE (~$13,200)Shortened life expectancy, low income
Alberta50+ can unlock any amount from LIRA to RRSPBalance under 20% of YMPEFinancial hardship provisions
Quebec65+ can convert LRSP to RRSPSmall balance provisionsShortened life expectancy
Federal (FSRA)55+ can unlock 50% onceBalance under $24,690Non-resident, shortened life expectancy
Tip: The one-time 50% unlock provision (available in Ontario, BC, and federally for those 55+) is highly valuable for reducing LIF maximum withdrawal constraints. The unlocked funds move to a regular RRSP or RRIF with no maximums, giving greater income flexibility in retirement.

Non-Resident Unlocking

If you are no longer a Canadian resident, most provinces allow full unlocking of a LIRA. You will pay withholding tax on the full withdrawal amount, but you can access the entire balance rather than being subject to LIF maximums. Non-residents should confirm the process with their provincial pension regulator before withdrawing.

LIRA on Death

Upon the death of a LIRA holder, pension legislation typically requires the full value to pass to the surviving spouse or common-law partner — regardless of the will or named beneficiary. This is a strong provincial law protection. If there is no surviving spouse, the balance passes to the named beneficiary or estate. The surviving spouse can transfer the inherited LIRA to their own LIRA or RRSP tax-deferred.

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