← Bremo.io — Canadian Personal Finance

Retire at 55 Canada — FIRE Number & Complete Guide

Retiring at 55 means a 10-year bridge before CPP and OAS — and is an achievable goal for a wide range of Canadian earners. Here's everything you need: FIRE number, savings milestones, and decumulation strategy.

Retire at 55 Canada Calculator

Why Retire at 55 Is Broadly Achievable in Canada

Retiring at 55 is one of the most realistic early retirement targets for middle-income Canadians. With a 30-year working career (age 25-55), even modest savings rates of 25-35% can accumulate $700,000-$1.2M depending on income. The 10-year bridge to CPP/OAS is short enough to model with high confidence, and most 55-year-olds have meaningful RRSP and TFSA balances built up over decades.

The key difference between retiring at 55 vs 65 is often just 10-15 years of additional employment. Many Canadians find this calculation surprising — working 10 extra years in a job they dislike to fund a retirement that could have started a decade earlier. The math often favours retiring earlier, especially given the health and quality-of-life premium of retiring while still fully active.

The 55-65 Bridge: Just 10 Years to CPP/OAS

The 10-year bridge from 55 to 65 is highly manageable with proper planning. Unlike retiring at 40 or 45, the 55-65 window is short enough that market volatility is less threatening, and the RRSP meltdown timeline is compressed into a decisive 10-year period.

Optimal bridge strategy: draw $15,000-$20,000/year from RRSP to fill the 20.5% federal bracket, supplement with TFSA withdrawals to cover remaining expenses. By 65, RRSP should be substantially reduced, CPP and OAS kick in, and portfolio pressure dramatically decreases.

Should You Consider Taking CPP at 60?

For Canadians retiring at 55, taking CPP at 60 (rather than 65) is worth analyzing. CPP at 60 pays 36% less than at 65 — but it starts 5 years earlier, bridging years 60-65 with income. For someone with health concerns or a strong preference for income security in their early 60s, CPP at 60 can make sense.

However, for most healthy Canadians, waiting to 65 is financially superior. The break-even age is ~74, and with normal life expectancy, waiting to 65 generates significantly more lifetime CPP income. More importantly, taking CPP at 60 while doing an RRSP meltdown can push income into higher tax brackets. See our detailed CPP timing guide.

ScenarioAnnual Expenses $60KCPP/OAS at 65FIRE NumberSavings Rate Needed
Retire at 55, avg CPP$60,000$17,400/yr~$1,065,000~30-40%
Retire at 55, max CPP$60,000$25,100/yr~$872,500~25-35%
Retire at 65, avg CPP$60,000$17,400/yr~$1,065,000~15-20%
DB Pension + FIRE at 55: Many Canadians with defined benefit pensions (teachers, federal/provincial workers, some private sector) can retire at 55 with a pension that partially or fully covers expenses. If your DB pension covers $40,000/year, your portfolio only needs to generate $20,000/year — a FIRE number of just $500,000. DB pension holders are frequently in a strong position to retire at 55.

🔥 Every Dollar Counts on the Path to FIRE

FIRE chasers don't pay bank fees. KOHO is 100% free — no monthly fees, cash back on purchases, automatic savings roundups. Reclaim $200+/year in banking fees and invest it instead.

Get KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYA