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

Updated

Self-Employed Retirement — The Core Gap

The main challenge here is replacing the pension structure traditional employees get automatically, so this guide pairs well with small business owner retirement planning in Canada, how much you need to retire in Canada, and am I saving enough for retirement in Canada. If you are deciding where to direct limited cash flow, compare TFSA vs RRSP for beginners and use the retirement calculator to turn the strategy into a target.

Employed (with pension)Self-EmployedYour Action
DB pension — employer fundsNothing — you fund 100%RRSP + TFSA + corp investment
Employer RRSP matchingNo employer matchMax your own RRSP first
Group benefits at retirementCoverage ends when you stop workingBudget for individual health/dental (~$200–$350/month)
CPP — employer pays halfSelf-employed pay both halvesBoth halves partially deductible
65+ OASSameSame

RRSP Room for Self-Employed — How It Works

YearNet Self-Employment IncomeRRSP Room Earned (18%)Dollar LimitActual 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 LevelRecommended Priority
Under $50,000 net incomeTFSA first — marginal rate low; future retirement rate may be similar
$50,000 – $80,000Balanced; RRSP if in the 33% bracket (ON); TFSA if near bottom of bracket
$80,000 – $150,000RRSP dominant — deduction saves 40%+; likely lower rate in retirement
$150,000+Max both; then invest inside corporation (incorporated only)
Incorporated — any income levelRRSP up to max room; TFSA $7,000; remainder in corp investment account

CPP Contributions — Self-Employed 2026

ItemAmount (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 halfNon-refundable tax credit (~15% of employee half)

Investment Options for Retirement Savings

AccountAnnual LimitTax TreatmentBest For
RRSP18% of prior-year income, max $32,490Deductible now; taxable on withdrawalHigh-income years; tax rate arbitrage
TFSA$7,000/year (2026)No deduction; growth tax-free; withdrawal tax-freeAny income level; flexibility; estate
FHSA$8,000/year (max $40,000 lifetime)Deductible; tax-free if used for first homeSelf-employed first-time buyers only
Corporate retained earnings (incorporated)No limitCorporate tax 9–12% SBD; personal tax on extractionHigh-income incorporated owners
Non-registered accountNo limitInvestment income taxable annuallyAfter maxing registered accounts
IPP (incorporated only)Actuarially determined; often exceeds RRSPTax-deductible corp contribution; deferred until retirementIncorporated owner, 45+, $175K+ salary

Retirement Income Stack — Building Your Pension Substitute

SourceAnnual Amount (illustrative, 2026$)Tax Status
CPP (if contributed 30+ yrs)$8,000–$12,000Taxable
OAS (at 65)~$8,500Taxable
RRSP/RRIF withdrawalsAs neededTaxable
TFSA withdrawalsAs neededTax-free
Corporate retained earnings (incorporated)Dividends or salaryVarious
Non-registered investment incomeDividends, capital gains, interestVarious

Target Savings by Retirement Age (Illustrative)

Target Retirement AgeTarget 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.

Frequently asked questions

Do self-employed Canadians get CPP? Yes, but you pay both the employee and employer portions. In 2025, the combined CPP contribution rate is approximately 11.9% on earnings between the basic exemption ($3,500) and the maximum pensionable earnings ($73,200). This means a self-employed person earning $73,200+ pays about $8,068 in CPP contributions annually. The benefit: you accumulate CPP entitlement just like an employee, and those contributions are deductible.

What is the best retirement account for self-employed Canadians? The RRSP is typically the most important account. Self-employed income (from a sole proprietorship) counts as earned income for RRSP purposes — 18% of net self-employment income generates RRSP room (up to $32,490 in 2025). If incorporated, you receive T4 income, which also generates RRSP room. For incorporated businesses with surplus retained earnings, an Individual Pension Plan (IPP) or holding company investment account may also be appropriate.

Can I contribute to an RRSP if I have no T4 income? If you have no employment or self-employment income reported on a T1 return, you generate no new RRSP room for that year. However, you can use any unused RRSP room from prior years. Incorporated business owners who take dividends (not salary) also generate no RRSP room — this is why many incorporated professionals take at least some salary specifically to generate contribution room.

When should a self-employed person consider incorporating for retirement purposes? Incorporation makes most sense when you have more income than you need for personal living expenses. The deferral benefit: corporate tax rates (15–26%) are significantly lower than top personal rates (40–54%), so retained earnings inside a corporation grow faster than money pulled out and taxed personally, then invested.