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Annuity vs RRIF in Canada: Which Is Better for Retirement Income?

Updated

The Core Trade-Off

Feature Annuity RRIF
Income guarantee For life (lifetime annuity) No guarantee — depends on market
Control of capital None — surrendered at purchase Full — you own the assets
Flexibility None once purchased High — change investments, withdrawal amounts
Longevity risk Insurer bears it You bear it
Inflation Usually not indexed (unless purchased) Investments may grow with inflation
Estate value Typically $0 at death (life annuity) Remaining balance goes to beneficiaries
Surrender Cannot undo Can convert, close, or change at any time
Best for People who fear outliving money People who want flexibility and a potential estate

Annuity Types Available in Canada

Annuity type How it works
Life (single) annuity Paid until you die — payments stop at death
Joint-and-survivor Paid until both you and spouse die — lower monthly payment
Term-certain annuity Paid for a guaranteed number of years (e.g., 10, 20) regardless of death
Indexed annuity Payments increase annually (e.g., 1–2%) — lower initial payment
Prescribed annuity (non-registered) Level taxable portion over life — tax-efficient for non-registered money

Most Canadians converting RRSP/LIRA money consider a life annuity with a guarantee period (e.g., guaranteed 10 or 15 years) — if you die early, payments continue to your estate for the guarantee period.

Sample Monthly Income Rates (2026 Estimates)

These are approximate figures based on current annuity market rates. Exact rates change with interest rates and are insurer-specific.

Single life annuity, $200,000 registered purchase

Age at purchase Monthly payment (single life) Monthly payment (joint, 60% survivor)
60 ~$850 ~$720
65 ~$960 ~$810
70 ~$1,120 ~$940
75 ~$1,350 ~$1,130

Higher purchase ages generate more income because the expected payout period is shorter.

RRIF: The Flexible Alternative

A RRIF keeps your RRSP savings invested. You must withdraw a minimum each year — but you can always take more.

Advantages over annuity:

  • Beneficiary: Remaining RRIF balance passes to a spouse or estate at death
  • Growth potential: Continued market exposure — assets may grow
  • Drawdown flexibility: Take more in low-tax years, less in high-income years
  • Reversibility: You can change strategy — an annuity cannot be undone

Risks vs. annuity:

  • Longevity risk: A RRIF can run out if you live to 95+, especially with poor returns
  • Market risk: A 2008-style downturn early in retirement can permanently impair a RRIF
  • Sequence of returns risk: Early losses followed by withdrawals is particularly damaging

RRIF minimum withdrawal rates

Age Rate On $300,000 On $500,000
72 5.40% $16,200 $27,000
75 5.82% $17,460 $29,100
80 6.82% $20,460 $34,100
85 8.51% $25,530 $42,550
90 11.92% $35,760 $59,600

The “Annuity as Insurance” Mental Model

The most useful way to think about a life annuity is not as an investment — it is insurance against outliving your money.

Like car insurance, you hope you never collect on it. But if you live to 95, 100, or beyond, the annuity pays out far more than you put in.

If you buy $200,000 life annuity at 65, payments of ~$960/month
Break-even (recover all capital)
If you die at 80
If you live to 90
If you live to 100

When an Annuity Makes More Sense

Situation Why annuity fits
No other guaranteed income (no DB pension, no CPP/OAS) Annuity provides the income floor you lack
Strong family history of longevity Longer payout period increases annuity’s expected value
You are a worried investor prone to panic selling Removes investment decisions entirely
Significant RRIF that will push income very high Annuity provides predictable income for planning, simpler tax forecasting
Health suggests average or above-average life expectancy Annuity math improves with longer life

When a RRIF Makes More Sense

Situation Why RRIF fits
You have a DB pension that already covers living expenses Income floor is already met — keep RRSP flexible
You want to leave an estate RRIF balance passes to beneficiaries; annuity typically does not
Poor health / below-average life expectancy Shorter payout horizon reduces annuity value; RRIF retains capital for estate
You want tax flexibility (RRSP meltdown, low-rate years) RRIF allows strategic drawdown; annuity payments are fixed
Younger retiree (60–65) with decades ahead Growth potential of RRIF over 30 years may significantly exceed fixed annuity

The Hybrid Approach: Partial Annuity

Many Canadian retirement planners recommend annuitizing a portion of registered savings:

  1. Use enough to buy an annuity that — combined with CPP and OAS — covers your essential spending
  2. Keep the rest in a RRIF for growth, flexibility, and estate purposes

This gives you an income floor (annuity) without surrendering all your capital flexibility (RRIF).

Where to Buy an Annuity in Canada

Life annuities in Canada are offered by insurance companies, including:

  • Canada Life
  • Manulife
  • Sun Life
  • Equitable Life
  • RBC Insurance

Annuity rates vary by insurer at the time of purchase. Rates are heavily influenced by long-term bond yields — buying when rates are high locks in better income. Consider using an independent insurance broker to compare quotes from multiple carriers.

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