Financial Snapshot: Where You Should Be at 50
| Metric | Under-Prepared | On Track | Well-Positioned |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retirement savings | Under $300,000 | $500,000-$800,000 | $800,000+ |
| Mortgage | 15+ years remaining | 5-10 years remaining | Paid off |
| Emergency fund | Under $10,000 | $20,000-$40,000 | $40,000+ |
| Debt (non-mortgage) | Carrying balances | Minimal | None |
| Estate plan | No will | Basic will | Will, POA, insurance reviewed |
| TFSA | Under $30,000 | $50,000-$80,000 | $80,000+ (near max) |
Priority Actions in Your 50s
| Priority | Action | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Maximize RRSP contributions (unused room) | Massive tax deductions + tax-deferred growth |
| 2 | Pay off mortgage before retirement | Reduces retirement income needs by $15,000-$30,000/year |
| 3 | Check CPP statement (My Service Canada) | Plan optimal CPP start date |
| 4 | Review employer pension (if applicable) | Understand commuted value vs pension |
| 5 | Update estate plan (will, POA, beneficiaries) | Protect family |
| 6 | Review insurance needs | Life, disability, critical illness |
| 7 | Plan healthcare needs | Extended health, dental for retirement |
RRSP Catch-Up Strategy
| Year | Unused RRSP Room (example) | Contribution | Tax Refund (~30% rate) | Reinvest Refund |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $80,000 | $20,000 | $6,000 | Into TFSA |
| Year 2 | $60,000 | $20,000 | $6,000 | Into TFSA |
| Year 3 | $40,000 | $20,000 | $6,000 | Into TFSA |
| Year 4 | $20,000 | $20,000 | $6,000 | Into TFSA |
| Total | $80,000 | $24,000 | $24,000 in TFSA |
Your RRSP deduction limit is shown on your CRA My Account. Many Canadians in their 50s have $50,000-$150,000 in unused room.
Investment Allocation in Your 50s
| Age | Equity (Stocks/ETFs) | Fixed Income (Bonds/GICs) | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50-55 | 60-70% | 30-40% | Still growing, moderate risk |
| 55-60 | 50-60% | 40-50% | Reducing risk as retirement nears |
| 60-65 | 40-50% | 50-60% | Capital preservation focus |
Suggested ETF Portfolios
| Risk Level | Portfolio | MER |
|---|---|---|
| Moderate-aggressive | VGRO (80/20) | 0.24% |
| Moderate | VBAL (60/40) | 0.24% |
| Conservative | VCNS (40/60) | 0.24% |
| Custom | VEQT + ZAG (adjust ratio) | 0.20-0.25% |
CPP Planning
| Start Age | Monthly Amount (2025 max) | Adjustment | Total by Age 85 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60 | ~$850 | -36% | ~$255,000 |
| 65 | ~$1,364 | 0% | ~$327,000 |
| 70 | ~$1,937 | +42% | ~$348,000 |
Break-even: taking CPP at 70 vs 65 breaks even around age 82. If you expect to live past 82, delaying to 70 pays more.
Mortgage Payoff Strategy
| Strategy | How It Works | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Increase payment frequency | Switch from monthly to bi-weekly | Save 2-3 years on amortization |
| Lump sum payments | Use bonus/tax refund (up to 15-20% annually) | Directly reduces principal |
| Increase regular payments | Add $200-$500/month | Can cut 5-7 years off mortgage |
| Downsize | Sell large home, buy smaller | Eliminate mortgage + free up equity |
| Target | Mortgage-free by 60-65 | $15,000-$30,000/year less needed in retirement |
Insurance Review at 50
| Insurance | Need in 50s | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Life insurance | Decreasing need (if assets growing) | May reduce or convert term to permanent |
| Disability insurance | Still critical until retirement | Protects peak earnings |
| Critical illness | Consider if no employer coverage | Cancer, heart attack, stroke payout |
| Long-term care | Start researching | Coverage gets expensive past 60 |
| Extended health/dental | Essential for retirement planning | Bridge from employer to private coverage |
Estate Planning Checklist for Your 50s
| Item | Status Needed | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Will | Updated (within last 5 years) | Dictates asset distribution |
| Power of Attorney (financial) | In place | Someone can manage finances if incapacitated |
| Power of Attorney (health) | In place | Medical decisions if you can’t decide |
| Beneficiary designations | Reviewed on all accounts | RRSP, TFSA, insurance, pension |
| Joint ownership review | Reviewed | Avoid probate on major assets |
| Executor chosen | Named and informed | Ensure they understand your wishes |
Retirement Income Projection (Couple, Both 55)
| Income Source | Monthly (at 65) | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| CPP (both) | $2,400 | $28,800 |
| OAS (both) | $1,600 | $19,200 |
| Employer pension | $2,000 | $24,000 |
| RRSP/RRIF withdrawals | $2,500 | $30,000 |
| TFSA withdrawals | $1,000 | $12,000 |
| Total | $9,500 | $114,000 |
This example assumes $800,000 combined retirement savings. Actual amounts will vary based on your situation.
Key Deadlines and Milestones
| Age | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 55 | Earliest age for some employer pensions |
| 59.5 | US retirement account withdrawal (if applicable) |
| 60 | Earliest CPP start |
| 65 | OAS starts; GIS eligibility; CPP standard age |
| 67 | OAS may increase to this age for some cohorts |
| 70 | Maximum CPP/OAS deferral |
| 71 | RRSP must convert to RRIF |