Tuesday, June 9, 2026

How Much You Need to Retire in Canada at Age 65.4

You are eligible for Old Age Security (OAS) immediately, and your Canada Pension Plan (CPP) payments are no longer penalized for early withdrawal.

Annual Expenses Remain the Same

The average Canadian retiree still spends approximately $41,000 per year on living expenses .

How Much Help Do You Get from the Government at 65.4?

Federal Programs

A) Canada Pension Plan (CPP)

  • Starting at 65.4 years: You avoid the early-retirement penalty. If you wait until age 65 (or slightly beyond), you receive the full base amount.
  • Maximum monthly amount (age 65): $1,507.65
  • Average monthly amount: Approximately 900 for most retirees.

B) Old Age Security (OAS)

  • Available immediately at age 65.4
  • Maximum monthly amount (April–June 2026): $743.05
  • Claw back threshold: OAS begins to be reduced if your individual net income exceeds approximately $90,000 per year

C) Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS)

  • Available to low-income seniors receiving OAS
  • Maximum monthly amount: Roughly $1,108.74 on top of OAS
  • Crucial note: RRSP/RRIF withdrawals count as income and reduce GIS; TFSA withdrawals do not.

Provincial Programs

Provincial support generally begins at age 65, so you now qualify immediately:

  • BC Homeowner Grant (Seniors): Up to $845 off property taxes in Metro Vancouver/Fraser Valley
  • Ontario GAINS: Additional income top-up for low-income seniors
  • Quebec Shelter Allowance: 170/month for low-income renters aged 50+

The Updated Numbers: A Clearer Picture

Assuming you have average CPP (743/month) at 65.4:

Source

Monthly Amount

Annual Amount

CPP (Average)

$850

$10,200

OAS (Max)

$743

$8,916

Subtotal (Government Only)

$1,593

$19,116

Estimated Annual Spending Need

,

$41,000

The Gap (Needed from Savings)

,

$21,884 per year


How Much Personal Savings Do You Need?

Using the 4% withdrawal rule (a commonly accepted guideline for sustainable retirement income):

Annual Gap

Savings Needed

$20,000

$500,000

$21,884 (your gap)

$547,000

$25,000

$625,000

$30,000

$750,000

Conclusion: At age 65.4, with average government benefits, you likely need a personal nest egg of approximately 550,000 to generate the additional income required for a comfortable retirement.

If you want a more comfortable lifestyle (60,000 annually), target 1,000,000 in personal savings.

Waiting pays off. Delaying retirement to the average age of 65.4 reduces your personal savings requirement by roughly 250,000.

OAS is a gamechanger. Those extra 8,916 per year) significantly close the gap between government support and living expenses.

Know your numbers. If you have a workplace pension or a spouse with additional income, your required savings may be lower.

TFSA is your friend. Unlike RRSP withdrawals, TFSA money does not count as income, so it will not claw back OAS or GIS benefits.

The average Canadian now retires at 65.4 not because they want to, but because the math works better. If you can afford to work those extra years, or even partially retire with part-time income, you will likely enter retirement with more security, less stress, and a much smaller burden on your personal savings.

As always, speak with a financial advisor to tailor these numbers to your specific situation, CPP contributions, and retirement goals.

Monday, June 8, 2026

The Average Retirement Age in Canada

 I retired at officially at age 60. I worked or unretired for another 8 years and finally retired at age 68,

So,  I was curious as to hat the retirement age was in 2025. The numbers surprised me. As of 2025, the average retirement age in Canada hit a record high of 65.4 years . The most recent data from Statistics Canada places the average at 65.1 years as of 2023, up from a low of 60.9 in 1998 .

Here is how the numbers break down:

Group

Average Retirement Age

Overall Average

65.1 - 65.4 years

Men

65.9 years

Women

64.2 years

Public Sector Employees

63.1 years

Private Sector Employees

65.4 years

Self-Employed

68.0 years

 Over the past two decades, the average retirement age has risen by over four years. In 2003, the average Canadian retired at 61.7; today, they work until well past 65 .

Three main factors are driving this shift:

1. Canadians Are Living and Working Longer
The labour force participation rate for seniors aged 65 and older reached 15.2% in 2025, the highest since tracking began in 1976. That's nearly 1.2 million seniors still in the workforce . More older adults are choosing to work for pay, up from just 6.6% in 1994 .

2. Financial Pressures Are Real
Many Canadians are delaying retirement because of inflation, higher living costs, and concerns about having enough savings . The retirement period (the time between stopping work and passing away) peaked in 2012 at 22.7 years. By 2025, that period had shrunk to 20.5 years as people retire later .

3. The Rise of "Unretirement"
Many older adults who thought they had retired have returned to the workforce, often in part-time or contract roles. They stay connected to the labour market for financial reasons, personal fulfillment, or both. This "unretirement" trend is contributing significantly to the rising average age.

What This Means for You

If you are planning to retire early, you would be retiring earlier than the current average. This means:

  • You will need more personal savings since you will not yet qualify for Old Age Security (age 65 minimum) and your Canada Pension Plan payments will be permanently reduced if taken early
  • You are part of a minority but not alone, many Canadians do retire earlier due to health reasons or personal choice

As one analysis notes, after falling to a low of 60.9 in the late 1990s, "the average age at retirement then reversed course and has since steadily increased to its current high" . The trend shows no sign of changing.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Picture this or Listen to this

You may have noticed that in many of my posts I lean on a familiar invitation: “picture this.” It slips in like an old friend, taps you on the shoulder, and says, “Come with me, I’ve got a scene to show you.” That habit didn’t come out of nowhere. It was shaped in a classroom, where I watched students lean forward when something looked clear, when ideas were laid out like a map instead of a maze.

Picture this (there I go again): a classroom buzzing just before lunch. One student is sketching a diagram so detailed it could hang in a gallery. Another is quietly rereading notes, tracing lines with a finger like they’re following a trail through the woods. These were the visual learners, at least, that’s what we called them. They seemed to grasp things best when they could see them, charts, graphs, diagrams, even well-organized paragraphs that didn’t wander off like a distracted storyteller.

So, when I started writing posts, I naturally leaned into that strength. I painted scenes. I built little word-pictures. I tried to make ideas visible. Not because I had a grand theory about it, but because it felt like handing someone a flashlight instead of asking them to walk in the dark.

But here’s where it gets interesting, and where, if I’m honest, I have to smile a bit at myself.

I could just as easily have written for the ear instead of the eye.

Instead of “picture this,” I might have said, “listen to this.”

Listen to this: the low hum of conversation in a coffee shop, cups clinking, a chair scraping softly across the floor. A voice rises just enough to tell a story, pauses for effect, then lands the point like a well-timed punchline. Some people remember that moment not because they saw it, but because they heard it. The rhythm, the tone, the little pauses that make meaning stick.

If I were writing with sound in mind, I might swap out my visual cues for something more like this:

Instead of saying, “picture a winding path through a forest,” I’d say, “hear the crunch of gravel under your feet as you walk a quiet trail, the wind moving through the trees like a soft whisper.”

Instead of “imagine a bright summer morning,” I’d go with “listen for the screen door slamming, kids laughing in the distance, and a lawn mower droning somewhere down the street.”

Same idea. Different doorway.

And here’s the twist in the tale, the part that gently pokes at all of us who spent years trying to match teaching styles to learning styles like we were pairing socks.

A lot of research has stepped in over the years and said, “You know what? This neat little system we’ve been using, visual, auditory, kinesthetic, it doesn’t quite hold up the way we thought.” In other words, teaching someone only in their preferred style doesn’t necessarily make them learn better or remember more.

That can feel a bit like discovering your favourite shortcut actually takes longer.

But before we throw out the paintbrushes and turn off the microphones, there’s something worth holding onto.

What does help people learn and remember is richness. Variety. Engagement.

It turns out the brain isn’t sitting there saying, “Sorry, I only accept information in visual format between the hours of 9 and 11.” It’s far more flexible, and far more interested in meaning, emotion, and connection.

So maybe the value in “picture this” was never just about visual learning.

Maybe it was about invitation.

It was a way of saying, “Step into this moment with me.”

And if I add a little sound, a little movement, maybe even a touch of humour, well, now we’re not just looking at an idea, we’re experiencing it.

Let me give you one more example, just for fun.

Visual version:
Picture yourself putting off a small task, say, fixing a squeaky brake. The calendar pages flip, the problem sits quietly in the corner, and then one day, bam, you’re looking at a repair bill that makes your eyebrows climb halfway up your forehead.

Auditory version:
Hear that faint squeal every time you tap the brakes? You turn up the radio to drown it out. A week later, it’s louder. Two weeks later, it’s practically singing a solo. And then comes the mechanic’s voice, calm, steady, and just a little too cheerful, telling you it’s no longer a “quick fix.”

Same story. Different sensory hook. Same lesson… with maybe a slightly more expensive ending.

If there’s a takeaway here, it’s not that we’ve been doing it wrong. It’s that we’ve been doing it partially. Like telling a story with only half the instruments in the band.

So, I’ll probably still say “picture this.” Old habits, after all, are loyal companions.

But I might start inviting you to listen more often too.

Because the real goal isn’t to match a style, it’s to make the message land, linger, and maybe even make you smile along the way.

And if I can do that while gently reminding myself that I don’t have to paint every scene like a landscape artist… well, that’s a lesson worth hearing, and seeing, at the same time.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

What Happens When You Get Happy Enough

 My friend said something to me the other day that I haven't been able to shake.

He looked at me over his coffee, that knowing look people get when they've lived long enough to stop caring about looking silly, and said:

"Royce, did you know that if you get happy enough, you can actually hear colors and see music?"

I laughed. Then I stopped laughing.

Because he wasn't joking. Not entirely.

Think about it. When was the last time you were truly, deeply, unreasonably happy? Not just "fine." Not just "not stressed." But the kind of happy where the world looked different. Where problems that seemed enormous yesterday suddenly felt manageable. Where you found yourself smiling at a stranger for no reason at all.

In that state, strange things happen.

You paint without numbers. The rigid rules you usually live by, the shoulds, the musts, the "what will people think", they loosen their grip. You colour outside the lines, and it turns out beautiful.

You eat dessert and lose weight. Not literally, of course. But when you're truly happy, food becomes nourishment again, not a weapon, a comfort, or a punishment. You enjoy the cake without the guilt. And somehow, that peace matters more than the calories.

You spend money and have more. Not because of magic. But because happy people spend differently. They spend on experiences, on connection, on things that actually matter. And those investments pay dividends that no bank can match.

You love unconditionally. The grudges you've been carrying? They suddenly feel too heavy for the journey. The small slights you've been rehearsing in your head? You forget what they were about. Love flows more freely because you're not guarding yourself against hurt that hasn't happened yet.

You feel as if you can live forever. Not in a denial-of-death way. In a "this moment is so full that time itself seems to pause" way. In a way that makes eighty years feel like a beginning, not an ending.

I can hear you now. "That's lovely, Royce. But you don't know my life. You don't know the stress, the bills, the losses, the news cycle, the family drama."

You're right. I don't know your specific battles. But I know this: happiness is not the absence of problems. Happiness is the ability to breathe anyway.

The world has always been mad. There has never been a golden age without war, without worry, without heartbreak. The difference is not in the world. The difference is in where we place our attention.

Happiness does not require you to ignore real problems. It requires you to stop letting those problems steal every single moment of joy you could otherwise have.

You don't get to "hear colors" overnight. But you can start moving in that direction today.

Stop scrolling. The news will be there in an hour. The arguments will continue without you. Put the phone down. Look out a window. Notice that the sky is doing something interesting.

Do one thing you used to love. Before life got so serious. Before you became the person who always says, "I'm too busy." Do that thing. Even for ten minutes.

Find someone who needs encouragement. The fastest path to your own happiness is making someone else a little happier. Call a friend who's struggling. Write a note. Show up.

Forgive yourself. For the mistakes. For the weight you've gained. For the patience you lost. For the years you spent grinding instead of living. Let it go. You did the best you could with what you knew. Now you know more.

Expect good things. This sounds simple, but it's profound. Happy people expect that things might work out. Not naively. Not without planning. But they wake up believing that something good could happen today. And that belief changes how they see everything.

My friend was teasing me, of course. You can't literally hear colors or see music. But you can get close. You can reach a state where life feels richer, fuller, stranger, and more wonderful than you ever imagined possible.

It's not about ignoring the stress and madness. It's about refusing to let them have the final word.

So, here's my invitation to you. This week, get a little happier. Not for anyone else. For yourself. See what shifts. See what becomes possible.

You might be surprised.

And if you figure out how to eat dessert and lose weight, please call me. I have questions.

"We don't laugh because we're happy. We're happy because we laugh." ,  Probably someone who got happy enough, said this.