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)
B) Old Age Security (OAS)
C) Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS)
Provincial Programs
Provincial support generally begins at age 65, so you now qualify
immediately:
The Updated Numbers: A Clearer Picture
Assuming you have average CPP (850/month)**and**fullOAS(
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 500,000to
550,000 to generate the
additional income required for a comfortable retirement.
If you want a more comfortable Lifestyle (50,000–
60,000 annually), target 750,000to
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 200,000–
250,000.
OAS is a gamechanger. Those extra 743permonth(
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.
Originally Published on https://boomersnotsenior.blogspot.com/