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Retirement Planning for Self-Employed Canadians 2026 — RRSP, TFSA, IPP Guide

Updated

Self-Employed Retirement — The Core Gap

Employed (with pension) Self-Employed Your Action
DB pension — employer funds Nothing — you fund 100% RRSP + TFSA + corp investment
Employer RRSP matching No employer match Max your own RRSP first
Group benefits at retirement Coverage ends when you stop working Budget for individual health/dental (~$200–$350/month)
CPP — employer pays half Self-employed pay both halves Both halves partially deductible
65+ OAS Same Same

RRSP Room for Self-Employed — How It Works

Year Net Self-Employment Income RRSP Room Earned (18%) Dollar Limit Actual Room
2023 $45,000 $8,100 $30,780 $8,100
2024 $75,000 $13,500 $31,560 $13,500
2025 $120,000 $21,600 $32,490 $21,600
2026 $200,000 $36,000 $32,490 $32,490 (capped)
Cumulative room if not previously contributed $75,690

Unused RRSP room carries forward forever — self-employed with volatile income can contribute large amounts in high-income years using accumulated carry-forward room.

RRSP vs TFSA — When to Use Each

Income Level Recommended Priority
Under $50,000 net income TFSA first — marginal rate low; future retirement rate may be similar
$50,000 – $80,000 Balanced; RRSP if in the 33% bracket (ON); TFSA if near bottom of bracket
$80,000 – $150,000 RRSP dominant — deduction saves 40%+; likely lower rate in retirement
$150,000+ Max both; then invest inside corporation (incorporated only)
Incorporated — any income level RRSP up to max room; TFSA $7,000; remainder in corp investment account

CPP Contributions — Self-Employed 2026

Item Amount (2026 estimates)
Maximum pensionable earnings (YMPE) ~$71,300
Basic exemption $3,500
Net self-employment income for CPP $71,300 − $3,500 = $67,800
CPP1 rate (employee + employer combined) 9.9%
CPP1 contribution $67,800 × 9.9% = $6,712
CPP2 (YAMPE above YMPE, lower rate) Applies to income $71,300–~$81,400 at 8% combined
CPP2 contribution estimate ~$600–$800
Total CPP self-employed ~$7,300–$7,500
Deductible (employer equivalent — 50%) ~$3,650–$3,750 off net income
Non-deductible half Non-refundable tax credit (~15% of employee half)

Investment Options for Retirement Savings

Account Annual Limit Tax Treatment Best For
RRSP 18% of prior-year income, max $32,490 Deductible now; taxable on withdrawal High-income years; tax rate arbitrage
TFSA $7,000/year (2026) No deduction; growth tax-free; withdrawal tax-free Any income level; flexibility; estate
FHSA $8,000/year (max $40,000 lifetime) Deductible; tax-free if used for first home Self-employed first-time buyers only
Corporate retained earnings (incorporated) No limit Corporate tax 9–12% SBD; personal tax on extraction High-income incorporated owners
Non-registered account No limit Investment income taxable annually After maxing registered accounts
IPP (incorporated only) Actuarially determined; often exceeds RRSP Tax-deductible corp contribution; deferred until retirement Incorporated owner, 45+, $175K+ salary

Retirement Income Stack — Building Your Pension Substitute

Source Annual Amount (illustrative, 2026$) Tax Status
CPP (if contributed 30+ yrs) $8,000–$12,000 Taxable
OAS (at 65) ~$8,500 Taxable
RRSP/RRIF withdrawals As needed Taxable
TFSA withdrawals As needed Tax-free
Corporate retained earnings (incorporated) Dividends or salary Various
Non-registered investment income Dividends, capital gains, interest Various

Target Savings by Retirement Age (Illustrative)

Target Retirement Age Target Portfolio (for $60K spending) Monthly Savings Needed (30, 8% return)
55 ~$1,400,000 ~$1,700/month from age 30
60 ~$1,200,000 ~$1,200/month from age 30
65 ~$1,000,000 ~$800/month from age 30

Assumes 8% nominal return, 2.5% inflation adjustment, CPP + OAS cover $20,000/year of the $60K target. Individual mileage varies significantly.