What happens to CPP, OAS, and your taxes if you work after starting retirement benefits. Understanding the Post-Retirement Benefit and OAS clawback risk.
Yes — absolutely. There is no restriction on working while receiving CPP and/or OAS in Canada. Unlike some US Social Security rules, Canadian government pensions do not reduce based on employment income. You can receive full CPP, full OAS, and earn a million dollars from employment — no clawback on CPP based on earnings.
However, there are important implications for:
The Post-Retirement Benefit (PRB) is additional CPP income you earn when you continue working and contributing to CPP after you've already started receiving your CPP retirement pension.
The PRB per year of contributions is relatively small — based on the year's contributions relative to the maximum CPP benefit. For a full year of maximum contributions, a PRB is roughly $400–$500/year. But over multiple years, PRBs accumulate and can add up to $1,000–$2,000/year in additional lifetime CPP income.
Canadians aged 65–70 who are receiving CPP and continuing to work can opt out of making further CPP contributions by completing Form CPT30. To opt out:
The opt-out can be reversed — you can cancel it (Form CPT30 Part D) in a subsequent year if you change your mind. If you opt out, neither you nor your employer contributes CPP on your earnings, and no PRB is earned for those years.
The most significant concern for working retirees aged 65+ is the OAS recovery tax. Your employment income counts toward net income, potentially triggering the OAS clawback of 15 cents per dollar above $90,997.
Jean, 67, receives $728/month OAS ($8,736/year), $900/month CPP ($10,800/year), and earns $50,000 from part-time work.
If Jean also received $30,000 in RRIF income:
For complete strategies, see our OAS Clawback Guide.
Employment income in retirement is taxed exactly the same as during your working years — added to all other income (CPP, OAS, RRIF, pension) and taxed at marginal rates.
| Income Source | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Employment income | Fully taxable as ordinary income |
| CPP retirement pension | Fully taxable |
| OAS pension | Fully taxable (before clawback) |
| RRIF withdrawals | Fully taxable |
| TFSA withdrawals | Tax-free (not income) |
Your employer will withhold income tax based on your employment income alone — they don't know about your CPP, OAS, and RRIF income. This often means you're under-withheld and will owe a balance on your April 30 tax return. Consider requesting additional tax withholding from your employer (using the "additional tax" box on your TD1 form) or making quarterly tax instalments.
| Age | CPP Status | CPP Contributions Required? |
|---|---|---|
| 60–64 | Not yet receiving CPP | Yes — mandatory contributions |
| 60–64 | Receiving CPP | Yes — mandatory (PRB accrues) |
| 65–70 | Receiving CPP | Yes by default; can opt out |
| 70+ | Any status | No — no more CPP contributions |
Self-employed individuals ages 60–70 who are receiving CPP must pay both the employee and employer portions of CPP (total ~7.74% of net self-employment income up to YMPE). Opting out using Form CPT30 is available at 65+.
Many Canadian retirees supplement their income through consulting, freelancing, gig work, or small businesses. Tax considerations:
If you're receiving OAS, consider structuring part-time work to keep your total net income below $90,997. For example, if CPP + OAS = $20,000/year, you could earn up to $70,000 in employment income before touching the clawback zone.
If you're working and earning income (with RRSP contribution room remaining under age 71), contribute to your RRSP to reduce taxable income — especially valuable if you're in the 33–43% bracket.
If you're working until 68 with high income, deferring OAS until 70 avoids the clawback during working years AND gets you 36% more OAS for the rest of your life.
If earning significant self-employment income, consider incorporation. A Canadian Controlled Private Corporation (CCPC) allows income deferral, salary/dividend splitting with a spouse, and flexible timing of personal income. Professional advice required.
When you eventually stop working and income drops, draw from RRIF to fill low tax brackets. Use TFSA for top-up spending to avoid clawbacks. Build TFSA during working years using excess earnings.
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