Short Answer
The GIS income exemption for a single senior works like this:
- First $5,000 of employment income: fully exempt — no GIS reduction
- Employment income $5,000–$15,000: 50% counts toward GIS reduction
- All other income above $0: 50% clawback rate applies
GIS drops to zero at roughly $22,056 of other annual income for a single person in 2026.
2026 Maximum GIS Amounts and Income Cutoffs
| Marital Status | Maximum monthly GIS | Income cutoff (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| Single, widowed, divorced | ~$1,086/month | ~$22,056/year |
| Married/common-law — both on OAS | ~$654/month each | ~$29,136 combined |
| Married/common-law — spouse not on OAS | ~$1,086/month | ~$53,136 combined |
| Married/common-law — spouse on Allowance | ~$654/month | ~$38,736 combined |
Amounts are indexed quarterly. Check Service Canada for the most current figures.
What Counts as Income Against GIS
The GIS calculation uses your net income minus OAS, as reported on your tax return.
| Income type | Counts against GIS? |
|---|---|
| Employment income (first $5,000) | No — fully exempt |
| Employment income ($5,000–$15,000) | 50% counts |
| Employment income (above $15,000) | Yes — fully |
| Self-employment income | Yes |
| RRSP withdrawals | Yes |
| RRIF withdrawals | Yes |
| Pension income (CPP, company pension) | Yes |
| Investment income (interest, dividends) | Yes |
| Rental income (net) | Yes |
| Capital gains (taxable portion) | Yes |
| OAS pension | No — excluded |
| TFSA withdrawals | No — not income |
| GIS itself | No |
| Tax-free disability payments | No |
The Employment Income Exemption in Detail
Since 2020, seniors who work can earn up to $5,000 annually without any GIS reduction. Between $5,000 and $15,000, only half counts. This was designed to encourage low-income seniors to keep working without fear of losing their entire GIS.
Example: Single senior earning $8,000 from part-time work
| Step | Calculation |
|---|---|
| Total employment income | $8,000 |
| First $5,000 exemption | −$5,000 |
| Remaining $3,000 × 50% exemption | $1,500 counted |
| GIS reduction at 50 cents/$1 | $1,500 × 50% = $750/year |
| Monthly GIS reduction | $62.50/month |
Example: Single senior with $12,000 RRIF withdrawal
| Step | Calculation |
|---|---|
| Total RRIF income | $12,000 |
| Employment income exemption applies? | No — this is RRIF, not employment |
| GIS clawback on $12,000 | $12,000 × 50% = $6,000/year reduction |
| Monthly GIS reduction | $500/month |
This is why RRIF withdrawal timing matters so much for GIS recipients.
The TFSA Advantage for GIS Recipients
TFSA withdrawals are not counted anywhere on your tax return — they are not income and have no effect on GIS calculations. This makes the TFSA one of the most powerful tools for low-income seniors:
| Income source | Effect on GIS |
|---|---|
| $10,000 RRIF withdrawal | Reduces annual GIS by ~$5,000 |
| $10,000 TFSA withdrawal | No GIS reduction |
| $10,000 employment income (partially protected) | Partially counted |
Seniors who accumulated savings in RRSP/RRIF and need to draw them down may want to consider RRSP/RRIF meltdown strategies that draw income at lower effective rates before OAS/GIS age.
How GIS Payments Are Adjusted
GIS is not calculated in real time. The federal government uses:
- Your previous year’s tax return to set your GIS payments for the following July–June period.
- Annual renewal: You must file your taxes to keep receiving GIS — CRA sends your income data to Service Canada automatically.
- Voluntary declaration: If your income drops sharply this year (job loss, RRIF reduction), you can request a current-year income estimate to get a faster GIS adjustment rather than waiting for next July.
| Event | GIS adjustment timing |
|---|---|
| File taxes as usual | Adjusted following July |
| Income drops significantly mid-year | Submit voluntary declaration for faster adjustment |
| Miss filing taxes | GIS may be suspended until filed |
GIS and Other Benefits
| Benefit | Affected by GIS income rules? |
|---|---|
| OAS pension | Not reduced by GIS rules (separate program) |
| Allowance (for spouses 60–64) | Uses similar income testing rules |
| Provincial senior supplements | Usually calculated in coordination with GIS |
| CPP disability (under 65) | Converts to CPP retirement at 65 — then counts toward GIS income |