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Am I Behind on Retirement Savings in Canada?

Updated

Many Canadians feel behind on retirement savings because they compare themselves to extreme online examples instead of realistic benchmarks. The better question is not whether your balance looks impressive. It is whether your current savings path can realistically fund the retirement you want.

Quick signs you may be behind

You may be behind if several of these are true:

Warning Sign Why It Matters
Saving less than 10% of gross income Hard to build enough over time
No employer pension More burden on personal savings
High-interest debt Crowds out long-term investing
Little or no TFSA / RRSP use Missed tax advantages
No retirement projection You cannot measure the gap

Common benchmark by age

Age Rough Target
30 1x salary
40 3x salary
50 5x to 6x salary
60 8x salary
65 10x salary

If you are materially below these figures and do not have a strong defined-benefit pension, it is reasonable to say you are behind.

Behind compared to what?

There are three useful comparison points:

Comparison Usefulness
Your peers Emotionally interesting, but incomplete
Rules of thumb Good for a quick check
Your actual target retirement budget Most accurate

The third one matters most. A household planning a modest retirement in a paid-off home may be less behind than a higher-income household aiming for expensive travel and a second property.

Why Canadians fall behind

The most common reasons are:

  • starting late because of student debt or high housing costs
  • focusing only on mortgage payments and ignoring investing
  • using TFSA room mainly for short-term spending goals
  • relying too heavily on future raises
  • underestimating how much CPP and OAS will and will not cover

A better way to judge your position

Ask these questions:

  1. What do I spend now, and what would I spend in retirement?
  2. How much of that will CPP, OAS, and pension income cover?
  3. How much do I need my portfolio to generate?
  4. Am I saving enough each month to get there?

If you cannot answer these, the uncertainty itself is often the bigger problem than the exact balance.

What behind looks like at different ages

Age Example of Being Behind
30 No emergency fund, no investing, credit card debt
40 Little retirement savings, still saving under 5%
50 Under 2x salary saved, major debt, no pension
60 Still dependent on full-time work with no drawdown plan

The good news is that catching up is still possible at every stage, though the tools change.

How to catch up

Action Why It Helps
Raise savings rate to 15% to 20%+ Biggest direct impact
Pay off high-interest debt Improves cash flow immediately
Max employer match Instant return
Use RRSP strategically Larger tax deduction for higher earners
Use TFSA for long-term investing Tax-free growth and retirement flexibility
Delay retirement More savings and fewer withdrawal years

Even delaying retirement from 62 to 65 can materially improve the plan.

Should you prioritize RRSP or TFSA when behind?

Situation Often Better First Step
Higher tax bracket today RRSP
Moderate income, flexible access matters TFSA
Employer match available Pension/RRSP match first
First-home buyer with flexibility FHSA can also help

Compare RRSP vs TFSA if you are unsure.

Bottom line

You are probably behind on retirement savings if you are saving too little, hold too much expensive debt, and have no realistic plan to replace your future income. But behind is not hopeless. The sooner you turn vague anxiety into a monthly savings plan, the more recoverable the gap becomes.

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