Retirement Budget Planning in Canada: How Much Will You Actually Spend?#
This article explains concepts, options, and rules in Canada for general information only. It is not financial, tax, legal, or investment advice.
"How much do I need to retire?" — it's the central question of retirement planning. But the answer depends entirely on another question that often goes underexplored: "How much will I actually spend?"
Many Canadians use vague rules of thumb — "70% of pre-retirement income" or "$50,000/year is enough" — without building a real budget. These shortcuts can lead to either over-saving (working longer than necessary) or under-saving (running out of money in your 80s).
This guide provides a practical framework for building a realistic Canadian retirement budget, understanding how spending changes across phases of retirement, and working backward from spending to portfolio size.
The Retirement Spending Smile#
Research into actual retirement spending patterns (rather than projections) consistently shows that spending in retirement follows a curve called the "retirement spending smile":
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Early retirement (ages 60–75): Higher discretionary spending on travel, hobbies, home improvements, helping adult children, and experiences. Many retirees are healthy and active. Spending is at or near pre-retirement levels.
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Mid-retirement (ages 75–85): Spending declines as travel and discretionary activities reduce. Slower pace, fewer large expenses. This is the "sweet spot" where many retirees find they spend notably less than they expected.
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Late retirement (ages 85+): Spending potentially rises again, driven by healthcare costs, long-term care, home modifications, and support services.
The "smile" shape means many retirement projections that assume constant spending growth are pessimistic in mid-retirement and potentially optimistic about healthcare costs in late retirement.
Essential vs Discretionary Spending: A Framework#
A useful starting point is separating spending into essential (fixed) and discretionary (variable) categories.
Essential Spending (You'd Rather Cut Discretionary First)#
| Category | Notes |
|---|---|
| Housing (mortgage, rent, or maintenance/taxes on owned home) | If mortgage-free, taxes + maintenance + insurance still apply |
| Food (groceries) | Base food costs; eating out is discretionary |
| Utilities (heat, hydro, water, internet, phone) | Monthly fixed costs |
| Transportation (basic: insurance, gas or transit) | Car ownership or transit costs |
| Healthcare (insurance premiums, prescriptions, basic dental) | Becomes more essential as you age |
| Basic clothing | Modest replacement costs |
| Insurance (home, auto, life if applicable) | Fixed protection costs |
Discretionary Spending (Nice to Have; Adjustable)#
| Category | Notes |
|---|---|
| Travel (domestic and international) | Often the largest discretionary item early in retirement |
| Dining out and entertainment | Restaurants, events, hobbies |
| Gifts and charitable giving | Family gifts, donations |
| Hobbies (golf, skiing, sailing, woodworking, etc.) | Can be significant if expensive hobbies |
| Vacation home or cottage maintenance | Extra property costs |
| Home improvements / renovations | Capital improvements vs basic maintenance |
| Personal care (spa, fitness, grooming beyond basics) | Wellness spending |
| Subscription services | Streaming, clubs, memberships |
Average Retirement Spending in Canada (2026)#
Statistics Canada data and FP Canada surveys provide benchmarks. Average annual household spending for Canadian retirees (ages 65–74):
| Income Quintile | Average Annual Household Spending |
|---|---|
| Lowest 20% | $30,000–$40,000 |
| Second 20% | $45,000–$55,000 |
| Middle 20% | $55,000–$70,000 |
| Fourth 20% | $70,000–$90,000 |
| Highest 20% | $90,000+ |
These are household figures (couple or single). Single retirees typically spend 60–70% of what a couple spends (you don't cut every expense in half when living alone — housing, utilities, and insurance don't scale linearly).
FP Canada comfortable retirement estimates (2026, approximate):
- Single retiree (modest): $35,000–$45,000/year
- Single retiree (comfortable): $55,000–$70,000/year
- Couple (modest): $50,000–$65,000/year
- Couple (comfortable): $75,000–$95,000/year
These figures assume no mortgage, no dependants, and basic travel. High-travel retirees or those in expensive cities (Vancouver, Toronto) may spend significantly more.
Building Your Personal Retirement Budget#
Rather than using averages, build a realistic budget based on your own life. Here's a category-by-category worksheet:
Housing#
If you're mortgage-free (the goal for most retirees), housing costs include:
- Property tax: varies widely by municipality ($3,000–$10,000+/year)
- Home insurance: $1,500–$4,000/year
- Maintenance and repairs: budget 1–2% of home value annually ($5,000–$15,000 on a $500K home)
- Utilities: hydro, gas, water, internet, phone ($400–$800/month)
If renting: budget rental cost, renters insurance, utilities
Estimated annual total (owned, mortgage-free): $15,000–$30,000 depending on home value and location
Food#
- Groceries: $600–$1,200/month for a couple ($7,200–$14,400/year)
- Dining out: $200–$800/month ($2,400–$9,600/year) depending on habits
Estimated annual total: $10,000–$25,000
Transportation#
- If you own a car: insurance ($1,500–$3,000/year), gas ($2,000–$4,000/year), maintenance ($1,000–$2,000/year), depreciation/replacement ($3,000–$5,000/year amortized)
- If car-free in retirement: transit, ride-sharing, occasional car rental
Estimated annual total (one car): $8,000–$15,000
Healthcare and Insurance#
- Provincial health: covered (but coverage gap at move or travel)
- Private health/dental insurance: $150–$500/month ($1,800–$6,000/year per person)
- Out-of-pocket dental: $800–$3,000/year depending on dental health
- Prescriptions (not covered): $500–$3,000/year depending on medications
- Vision: $300–$600/year
Estimated annual total (couple with private insurance + out-of-pocket): $8,000–$20,000
Travel#
This varies enormously. Common patterns:
- Casual travellers: one Canadian trip + one international trip/year ($5,000–$15,000/year)
- Active travellers: multiple international trips ($15,000–$40,000/year)
- Snowbirds: 3–4 months in warm climate ($10,000–$25,000/year net of Canadian savings)
Budget for what you actually plan to do.
Hobbies, Entertainment, Gifts#
- Golf: $2,000–$10,000/year (membership, equipment, green fees)
- Other hobbies: $1,000–$5,000/year
- Charitable giving: highly personal; often 1–5% of income
- Family gifts (grandchildren, adult children): $1,000–$10,000+/year
- Entertainment (events, subscriptions, dining): $2,000–$8,000/year
Estimated annual total: $5,000–$25,000
One-Time Large Expenses in Retirement#
Beyond annual recurring spending, plan for these predictable one-time costs:
| Expense | Typical Cost | When |
|---|---|---|
| Major home renovation | $20,000–$100,000 | Early retirement |
| Vehicle replacement | $30,000–$60,000 | Every 8–12 years |
| Travel bucket list trip | $10,000–$40,000 | Various |
| Long-term care costs (personal/facility) | $40,000–$150,000+/year | Late retirement |
| Estate planning legal fees | $2,000–$10,000 | One time |
| Home accessibility modifications | $10,000–$50,000 | Mid-to-late retirement |
From Budget to Portfolio: Working Backwards#
Once you have an annual spending estimate, calculate the portfolio you need:
Step 1: Identify Government Income#
Estimate annual CPP + OAS + DB pension at your planned start dates.
Step 2: Calculate the Income Gap#
Annual spending − government/pension income = annual portfolio withdrawal needed
Step 3: Apply the Safe Withdrawal Rate#
Portfolio needed = annual withdrawal ÷ safe withdrawal rate
At a 4% SWR: $30,000 annual withdrawal from portfolio → $750,000 portfolio needed
At a 3.5% SWR (more conservative): $30,000 → $857,000 portfolio
Step 4: Adjust for Healthcare Escalation#
In late retirement, healthcare costs may be $20,000–$50,000+/year higher than in early retirement. Ensure your portfolio can sustain this or build a dedicated healthcare reserve.
The "Retirement Reality Check"#
A useful planning exercise: track your actual current spending for 3–6 months (using your bank and credit card statements), then adjust:
- Remove: work-related expenses (commuting, work clothes, lunches out, business costs)
- Remove: savings contributions (RRSP, TFSA, employer deductions) — you won't be saving in retirement
- Add: travel, hobbies, healthcare insurance costs you don't currently have
- Adjust: meals, entertainment (may change significantly in retirement)
This real-data approach typically reveals that retirement spending is 70–90% of pre-retirement take-home pay — close to the old rule of thumb, but more precise for your specific situation.
The retirement withdrawal calculator lets you enter your estimated annual spending, planned CPP/OAS start dates, and account balances — then shows year-by-year cash flow and portfolio trajectory, including how your spending level affects how long your money lasts at different withdrawal rates.