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Net Worth by Age in Canada: Percentiles & Benchmarks (2026)

Updated

How does your net worth compare to other Canadians your age? This page breaks down average and median net worth by age group using Statistics Canada data, with percentile tables so you can see exactly where you stand.

For overall net worth statistics (not broken down by age), see Canadian Net Worth: Average vs Median.

Net worth by age: average vs median

The table below shows both the average and median net worth for each age group. The gap between the two reveals how much high-net-worth outliers skew the numbers.

Age GroupAverage Net WorthMedian Net WorthGap (Avg vs Median)
Under 35$337,816$159,1002.1×
35 to 44$657,582$409,3001.6×
45 to 54$1,346,291$675,8002.0×
55 to 64$1,595,886$873,4001.8×
65 and over$1,123,174$738,9001.5×

Key insight: The median is the better benchmark. If your net worth is at or above the median for your age group, you are doing better than at least half of Canadian families in your cohort.

Source: Statistics Canada, Survey of Financial Security (SFS).

Net worth percentiles by age group

These tables show where you rank relative to your peers. The 50th percentile is the median — half of families have more, half have less.

Under 35

PercentileNet Worth
10th−$15,000
25th$35,000
50th (median)$159,100
75th$425,000
90th$850,000
Average$337,816

At the 10th percentile, Canadians under 35 have negative net worth — meaning their debts (student loans, credit cards) exceed their assets. By the 75th percentile, most have accumulated significant home equity or investment savings.

35 to 44

PercentileNet Worth
10th$15,000
25th$150,000
50th (median)$409,300
75th$875,000
90th$1,650,000
Average$657,582

This is the decade where homeownership creates the biggest divergence. Homeowners at age 40 with 5-10 years of mortgage payments have substantial equity, while renters may have higher liquid savings but lower total net worth.

45 to 54

PercentileNet Worth
10th$30,000
25th$250,000
50th (median)$675,800
75th$1,500,000
90th$3,200,000
Average$1,346,291

Peak earning years. Employer pensions begin to add significant value. The gap between the 10th and 90th percentile widens to over $3 million, reflecting the compounding effects of investment returns.

55 to 64

PercentileNet Worth
10th$40,000
25th$325,000
50th (median)$873,400
75th$1,900,000
90th$4,000,000
Average$1,595,886

The peak accumulation age group. Many Canadians at this stage have paid off or nearly paid off their mortgage, maximizing their home equity. This is the age when serious retirement planning becomes critical — use our retirement calculator to assess whether you are on track.

65 and over

PercentileNet Worth
10th$25,000
25th$235,000
50th (median)$738,900
75th$1,450,000
90th$3,000,000
Average$1,123,174

Net worth declines from the 55-64 group as retirees begin drawing down savings through RRIF withdrawals, spending home equity, or downsizing. Those with employer defined-benefit pensions may have lower visible net worth but strong guaranteed income streams.

What should your net worth be at each age?

A common rule of thumb is the salary multiplier approach — your net worth should be a multiple of your annual gross salary at each age:

AgeTargetExample ($70K Salary)Example ($100K Salary)
25Emergency fund + positive net worth$10,000+$15,000+
301× salary$70,000$100,000
352× salary$140,000$200,000
403× salary$210,000$300,000
454× salary$280,000$400,000
505–6× salary$350,000–$420,000$500,000–$600,000
557× salary$490,000$700,000
608× salary$560,000$800,000
6510× salary$700,000$1,000,000

Important caveats:

  • These targets include home equity. If you exclude your home, the targets are much lower.
  • Canadians with a defined-benefit pension (government, teacher, etc.) need less personal savings because the pension replaces a significant portion of retirement income.
  • The targets assume you want to maintain your current lifestyle in retirement. If you plan to downsize significantly, you may need less.

Net worth by province

Geography matters. Housing costs and local economies create significant differences in net worth by province:

ProvinceAverage Net WorthMedian Net Worth
British Columbia$1,265,400$773,500
Ontario$1,165,400$665,600
Alberta$942,800$457,100
Saskatchewan$824,800$394,600
Quebec$752,400$371,000
Manitoba$746,400$386,300
PEI$681,100$399,800
Nova Scotia$681,700$354,600
Newfoundland$664,800$333,500
New Brunswick$506,400$286,200

British Columbia and Ontario lead largely due to real estate values — homeowners in these provinces sit on significant home equity even if they have moderate incomes and investment portfolios. If you excluded the principal residence, the provincial differences would narrow considerably.

What’s included in net worth?

Assets (What You Own)Liabilities (What You Owe)
Principal residence (market value)Mortgage balance
Other real estateHELOC balance
RRSP / RRIF / LIRACar loans
TFSAStudent loans
FHSACredit card balances
RESPPersonal loans / lines of credit
Non-registered investmentsOther debts
Employer pension plan value
Vehicles
Cash and savings accounts
Business equity

Net Worth = Total Assets − Total Liabilities

The homeownership effect

The single biggest factor separating high- and low-net-worth Canadians is homeownership. The data is stark:

Family TypeMedian Net Worth
Homeowner families~$825,000
Renter families~$45,000

Homeowners have roughly 18× the median net worth of renters. This gap is driven by:

  1. Forced savings — Mortgage payments build equity automatically
  2. Leverage — A 20% down payment buys 100% of the asset’s appreciation
  3. Home price appreciation — Canadian home prices have risen significantly over the past two decades
  4. Tax-free capital gain — The principal residence exemption means all gains are tax-free

This doesn’t mean homeownership is the right choice for everyone — see the rent vs buy calculator for a full comparison — but it explains why the data shows such a large gap.

How to build net worth at any age

In your 20s: build the foundation

  • Eliminate high-interest debt (credit cards first, then student loans)
  • Build a 3-month emergency fund
  • Start contributing to a TFSA — even small amounts compound over 40+ years
  • Start investing early — time in the market matters more than timing the market

In your 30s: accelerate growth

  • Maximize TFSA and start RRSP contributions (especially if your marginal rate is above 30%)
  • Consider homeownership if it makes financial sense for your market
  • Increase income through career moves — this is often the highest-impact decade for salary growth
  • Avoid lifestyle inflation — direct raises toward savings

In your 40s: compound and protect

  • Ensure you’re on track for retirement using the retirement calculator
  • Maximize employer pension matching if available
  • Consider your mortgage payoff strategy — accelerating payments builds equity faster
  • Start planning for children’s education with RESP

In your 50s: prepare for retirement

  • Project your retirement income: CPP + OAS + pension + personal savings
  • Decide on a decumulation strategy (RRSP → RRIF timing, TFSA withdrawal order)
  • Pay off all debt, including the mortgage if possible
  • Consider downsizing to unlock home equity

In your 60s+: draw down strategically

  • Optimize RRIF withdrawals to minimize tax
  • Claim CPP at the right age (delaying to 70 increases payments by 42%)
  • Consider OAS clawback thresholds when planning withdrawals
  • Ensure estate planning is in order
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