Mortgage and Retirement Planning Canada 2026: Pay Off or Keep Investing?
Updated
Should you enter retirement carrying a mortgage? Here is the math for Canadian retirees and near-retirees to make the right call.
The case for paying off before retirement
Why most Canadians should aim for mortgage-free retirement
Factor
Impact
Lower required income
No mortgage payment means you need $20,000–$35,000 less per year
Smaller RRSP/RRIF withdrawals
Lower taxable income → lower taxes → avoid OAS clawback
Cash flow certainty
Fixed retirement income covers only essentials — no risk of rate increases
Stress reduction
Surveys consistently show mortgage-free retirees report higher financial confidence
GIS eligibility
Lower income may qualify you for the Guaranteed Income Supplement
Retirement income reality check
Most Canadians see a significant income drop in retirement:
Income Source
Typical Amount (2025)
Notes
CPP (maximum, age 65)
$1,433/month ($17,196/yr)
Average is ~$815/month
OAS (maximum)
$727/month ($8,724/yr)
Full at 65 if 40+ years residency
RRSP/RRIF withdrawals
Varies
Taxable income
Company pension
Varies
Declining availability
TFSA withdrawals
Varies
Tax-free
Typical total (no pension)
$45,000–$65,000
50%–70% of working income
How a mortgage changes the math
Scenario
Annual Retirement Income Needed
RRSP/RRIF Withdrawal Needed
Marginal Tax Rate (Ontario)
OAS Clawback?
Mortgage-free
$50,000
$24,000
20.05%
No
$1,800/month mortgage
$71,600
$45,600
29.65%
No (but close)
$2,500/month mortgage
$80,000
$54,000
31.48%
Possible
$3,000/month mortgage
$86,000
$60,000
33.89%
Likely
Key takeaway: Carrying a mortgage forces larger taxable withdrawals, pushing you into higher brackets and risking OAS clawback at $90,997+ net income (2025).
Strategy by age: Your mortgage retirement plan
Age 45–50: 15–20 years to retirement
Strategy
How It Works
Accelerate payments now
Increase payments by 10%–20% per year using prepayment privileges
Choose shorter amortization at renewal
Switch from 25-year to 15- or 20-year at next renewal
Lump sum payments
Apply bonuses, tax refunds, and inheritances directly to mortgage
Target: Mortgage-free by 60–65
Math: $350,000 mortgage at 4.50%, 15-year amortization = paid off at 60
Age 50–55: 10–15 years to retirement
Strategy
How It Works
Maximize RRSP + mortgage paydown simultaneously
RRSP deductions generate refunds → apply refund to mortgage
Consider a shorter renewal term
3-year term aligns with payoff target even if rate is slightly higher
Lump sum attack
$10,000–$50,000 lump sum now saves $20,000–$80,000+ in interest over remaining term
Target: Mortgage-free by 60–65
Prioritize payoff over investment growth
Age 55–60: 5–10 years to retirement
Strategy
How It Works
Seriously evaluate downsizing
Sell → buy smaller/cheaper → no mortgage or tiny mortgage
Use TFSA for payoff fund
Build a TFSA balance earmarked to pay off the remaining balance at maturity
Avoid renewing into a new 25-year amortization
Resist lower payments — you need payoff, not comfort
Target: Mortgage-free before retirement
Every dollar of mortgage entering retirement costs $1.30–$1.50 after tax to service
Age 60+: At or near retirement
Strategy
How It Works
Lump sum payoff at maturity
Use RRSP/RRIF lump withdrawal (one-time tax hit) to clear mortgage
Downsize now
Use home sale proceeds to buy outright in a lower-cost area
Reverse mortgage (last resort)
Eliminates payments but erodes equity
Sell and rent
If equity exceeds long-term rental costs, freeing capital can make sense
When keeping a mortgage in retirement might make sense
In rare situations, keeping a mortgage can be rational:
Situation
Why It May Work
Risk
Very low mortgage rate locked in
Rate locked at 2%–3% while investments earn 6%+
Rate resets at renewal; market downturn
Rental property mortgage
Interest is tax-deductible; rental income covers payments
Vacancy risk; interest rate risk
Large TFSA/non-registered portfolio
Portfolio returns exceed mortgage cost after tax
Sequence-of-returns risk in early retirement
Business owner with corporate investments
Corporate funds earn more than mortgage rate
Complex tax planning needed
Important: These scenarios require substantial investment portfolios and high tolerance for risk. For most Canadians on CPP + OAS + modest RRSP savings, paying off the mortgage is the safer path.
The downsizing option
Financial impact of downsizing in retirement
Current Home
Sale Price
Sell Costs (5%)
Downsize To
Purchase Price
Net Cash Released
3-bed suburban house
$800,000
$40,000
2-bed condo
$450,000
$310,000
4-bed house (GTA)
$1,200,000
$60,000
2-bed condo (Hamilton)
$500,000
$640,000
3-bed house (Vancouver)
$1,500,000
$75,000
2-bed (Kelowna)
$600,000
$825,000
What freed equity provides
$500,000 invested conservatively at 4% generates $20,000/year — equivalent to eliminating a $1,667/month mortgage payment, with the capital preserved.
Net Cash Released
Conservative Income (4%)
Balanced Income (5%)
$300,000
$12,000/yr ($1,000/mo)
$15,000/yr ($1,250/mo)
$500,000
$20,000/yr ($1,667/mo)
$25,000/yr ($2,083/mo)
$800,000
$32,000/yr ($2,667/mo)
$40,000/yr ($3,333/mo)
Reverse mortgages: Last resort option
How the CHIP Reverse Mortgage works
Feature
Details
Provider
HomeEquity Bank (only Canadian provider)
Age requirement
55+ (both spouses)
Maximum LTV
Up to 55% of home value
Interest rate
Typically 2%–3% above conventional rates
Payments required
None — interest compounds on the loan
Repayment
When you sell, move, or pass away
The compounding cost of reverse mortgages
$200,000 reverse mortgage at 6.50%:
Year
Loan Balance
Equity Eroded
0
$200,000
$200,000
5
$274,000
$274,000
10
$375,000
$375,000
15
$513,000
$513,000
20
$702,000
$702,000
On a $700,000 home, a $200,000 reverse mortgage could consume the entire home value within 20 years (assuming only modest home appreciation). Your estate inherits nothing.
Use a reverse mortgage only when: You have no other options, want to stay in your home, and have limited concern about leaving a housing estate to heirs.
OAS clawback: The hidden cost of mortgage payments in retirement
Net Income
OAS Clawback
Annual OAS Lost
Mortgage Connection
Below $90,997
0%
$0
Safe zone
$100,000
15% of amount above threshold
~$1,350
Extra RRIF withdrawals to pay mortgage push income up
$120,000
15% of amount above threshold
~$4,350
Significant loss
$142,609+
100%
$8,724
Full OAS eliminated
A mortgage-free retiree withdrawing $55,000 from RRSP/RRIF keeps full OAS. The same retiree needing $85,000 (to cover a $2,500/month mortgage) may lose $0–$4,000+ in OAS annually.
Mortgage payoff plan: Work backward from retirement
Step-by-step calculation
Step
Your Numbers
1. Target retirement age
_____
2. Years until retirement
_____
3. Current mortgage balance
$_____
4. Current mortgage payment
$_____ /month
5. Remaining amortization at current payment
_____ years
6. Gap (years past retirement)
Step 5 − Step 2 = _____
7. Required monthly payment to pay off by retirement
Use mortgage calculator
8. Extra monthly payment needed
Step 7 − Step 4 = $_____
Example: $300,000 balance, 18 years remaining, retire in 10 years
Approach
Monthly Payment
Extra Needed
Total Interest Savings
Current pace (18 years)
$2,220
—
Retire with 8 years of payments left
Pay off in 10 years
$3,100
$880
$72,000 in interest saved
Pay off in 10 years (with $20K lump sums year 1 & 5)
$2,650
$430
$81,000 in interest saved
RRSP meltdown strategy for mortgage payoff
A common pre-retirement strategy: withdraw RRSP in lower-income years to pay off the mortgage.
Year
RRSP Withdrawal
Tax (at 20%)
Net Cash
Applied to Mortgage
Year 1 (age 60)
$30,000
$6,000
$24,000
$24,000
Year 2 (age 61)
$30,000
$6,000
$24,000
$24,000
Year 3 (age 62)
$30,000
$6,000
$24,000
$24,000
Total
$90,000
$18,000
$72,000
$72,000
Why this works: In the gap years between early retirement and CPP/OAS starting at 65, your income may be very low — meaning RRSP withdrawals are taxed at a low bracket. The alternative — keeping the RRSP and withdrawing later when CPP + OAS are active — often results in higher marginal tax rates.