Short Answer
A Life Income Fund holds locked-in pension money from a former employer’s pension plan. It works like a RRIF (mandatory minimums, tax-deferred growth, taxable withdrawals) but adds a maximum withdrawal cap to prevent funds from being depleted too quickly. LIF rules — especially the maximum formula — vary significantly by province.
LIF vs RRIF vs LIRA
| Feature | LIRA | LIF | RRIF |
|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Pension plan (employer) | Converted from LIRA | Converted from RRSP |
| Contributions allowed | No | No | No |
| Minimum withdrawal | No | Yes (same as RRIF) | Yes |
| Maximum withdrawal | No | Yes | No |
| Conversion required | At 71 (most provinces) | N/A (is the income phase) | At 71 |
| Can unlock | Limited | Limited | N/A |
| Pension income credit | No | Yes (age 65+) | Yes (age 65+) |
LIF Maximum Withdrawal Calculation
The LIF maximum is designed to ensure funds last to a projected age (usually 90 or life expectancy tables). The maximum is calculated using a formula based on your RRIF minimum factor and the plan balance — specifically, the greater of the investment return or a prescribed rate.
Simplified Maximum Formula (Federal and Most Provinces)
| Age | RRIF minimum % | Approximate LIF maximum % |
|---|---|---|
| 65 | 4.00% | ~6.1% |
| 70 | 5.00% | ~7.0% |
| 71 | 5.28% | ~7.2% |
| 75 | 5.82% | ~8.1% |
| 80 | 6.82% | ~9.7% |
| 85 | 8.51% | ~13.2% |
| 90 | 11.92% | ~20.0% |
The LIF maximum increases substantially with age. By age 90, the minimum and maximum converge.
Provincial LIF Rules Summary
| Province | Maximum formula | One-time 50% unlock? | Small balance unlock threshold |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Prescribed maximum table | ✅ Yes (once, by Nov 30) | 40% of YMPE (~$28,200 in 2026) |
| British Columbia | PBSA formula | ✅ Yes (once, at 55+) | 20% of YMPE (~$14,100 in 2026) |
| Alberta | Prescribed maximum | ✅ Yes (at 50+) | 20% of YMPE |
| Manitoba | Prescribed maximum | ❌ No | 40% of YMPE |
| Saskatchewan | Prescribed formula | ❌ No | 40% of YMPE |
| Quebec | QR maximum table | ❌ No | 40% of YMPE |
| Nova Scotia | Prescribed maximum | ❌ No | 40% of YMPE |
| New Brunswick | Prescribed maximum | ❌ No | 40% of YMPE |
| Federal (PBSA) | Federal maximum | ❌ No | 20% of YMPE |
Rules change — verify current provisions with your financial institution and provincial pension regulator.
LIF Unlocking Options
| Unlocking type | Criteria | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Small balance | Total LIF below threshold (varies by province) | Full balance transfers to RRSP/RRIF — unlocked |
| 50% one-time transfer (ON, BC, AB, others) | One-time election at specified age | Up to 50% moves to RRSP/RRIF — no longer restricted |
| Financial hardship | Province-specific low income or medical criteria | Partial withdrawal allowed |
| Non-residency | Resided outside Canada for 2+ years | Full balance may transfer |
| Shortened life expectancy | Medical certification of shortened life | Full unlocking allowed |
Once unlocked to a RRSP or RRIF, the funds are no longer subject to LIF maximum restrictions and can be accessed flexibly or transferred under standard RRSP/RRIF rules.
Tax on LIF Withdrawals
| Withdrawal amount | Withholding applied | Final tax treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum (same as RRIF factor) | No withholding | Fully taxable as income |
| Above minimum, up to maximum | 10–30% withholding based on amount | Fully taxable as income |
| Unlocked lump-sum transfer to RRSP | No tax (in-plan transfer) | Tax deferred into RRSP |
Death and Survivor Benefits
| Beneficiary | Treatment |
|---|---|
| Spouse (where spousal consent was given at setup) | Survivor benefit — LIF transfers to spouse’s LIF/locked-in plan, no immediate tax |
| Financially dependent child/grandchild | Rules vary by province — some allow tax-deferred rollout |
| Adult children or estate | Full balance taxed as income in deceased’s final return |
In most provinces, your legal spouse must provide written consent when you establish a LIF — this is a pension law requirement, not just a CRA rule. Failure to obtain consent may render the LIF designation invalid.
Bottom Line
A LIF is the income-phase vehicle for Canadians with locked-in pension assets. It works like a RRIF but with a hard cap on annual withdrawals — making detailed income planning more important. Explore one-time unlocking options (available in ON, BC, AB) if you want more flexibility, and check your province’s specific maximum formula at conversion time.