Translation unavailable - this article is shown in English. View English version
Summary
Financial Independence, Retire Early (FIRE) in Canada means accumulating enough invested assets that a safe withdrawal rate (typically 4%) covers your annual expenses indefinitely. Canadian FIRE planners benefit from unique tax-sheltered accounts (TFSA, RRSP, FHSA), but must also account for CPP/OAS government benefits and a household savings rate that averages around 5-7%.
How it works
The FIRE number
FIRE Number = Annual Expenses / Safe Withdrawal Rate
At the standard 4% SWR, this equals 25x your annual expenses. A Canadian spending C$50,000/year needs C$1,250,000 invested.
Canadian FIRE strategy: the account hierarchy
Canadian FIRE seekers typically prioritize accounts in this order:
- TFSA (C$7,000/year): Tax-free growth AND tax-free withdrawals. Ideal for early retirement since withdrawals are not taxable income and do not affect government benefits.
- RRSP (18% of income, max C$32,490/year): Tax-deductible contributions reduce current tax. Withdrawals are taxed as income, so plan to draw these in low-income years.
- FHSA (C$8,000/year): If you have not yet purchased a home, this provides both RRSP-style deductions and TFSA-style tax-free withdrawals.
- Non-registered accounts: After maxing registered accounts. Capital gains are 50% taxable; Canadian dividends receive a tax credit.
CPP and OAS as FIRE supplements
Unlike UK or US systems, Canadian retirees receive two separate government benefits:
- CPP (Canada Pension Plan): Available from age 60 (reduced) or 65 (full). Maximum at 65 is approximately C$16,375/year (2025).
- OAS (Old Age Security): Available from age 65. Approximately C$8,560/year (2025). Clawed back above C$93,454 net income.
These reduce the portfolio needed for post-65 expenses. A Canadian needing C$50,000/year post-65 might only need to withdraw C$25,000 from their portfolio, effectively halving the required FIRE number for that phase.
Savings rate drives timeline
| Savings rate | Approx. years to FIRE (6% real return) |
|---|---|
| 10% | 51 years |
| 25% | 32 years |
| 50% | 17 years |
| 75% | 7 years |
Worked example
C$90,000 after-tax income, C$50,000 annual expenses, C$100,000 already saved, 6% real return:
- FIRE Number: C$50,000 / 0.04 = C$1,250,000
- Annual savings: C$90,000 - C$50,000 = C$40,000/year
- Savings rate: C$40,000 / C$90,000 = 44%
- Year-by-year simulation: Start C$100,000, add C$40,000/year at 6%
- Year 15 balance: approximately C$1,271,000 (exceeds FIRE number)
- Financially independent in 15 years
- Post-65 FIRE number (with CPP + OAS of ~C$25,000): C$25,000 / 0.04 = C$625,000 (portfolio can partially deplete)
Key differences from other markets
- TFSA withdrawals are invisible to the tax system. Unlike UK ISA withdrawals (also tax-free) or US Roth IRA (which has age restrictions), TFSA withdrawals do not count as income for any purpose, including OAS clawback calculations. This makes TFSAs the single best early-retirement vehicle in Canada.
- CPP + OAS provide a meaningful safety net that reduces the late-stage FIRE number. The combined maximum of ~C$25,000/year is higher than the UK State Pension (~C$17,000 equivalent) and comparable to US Social Security for median earners.
Sources
Related calculators
FIRE
Plan financial independence in Canada. Factor in 2.3% inflation (Feb 2026) and local costs to find your FIRE number.
Compound Interest
Calculate compound interest with current Canadian savings rates. Average rate: 1.50% (Feb 2026). See your growth.
FIRE
Calculate your FIRE number and how long until financial independence. Lean, regular, fat, barista, and custom FIRE modes.
Investment Fees
See how MERs and fund fees erode your Canadian investments over time. Compare fee impact on RRSP and TFSA returns.