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Savings Rate by Income Canada (2026): What Are Canadians Actually Saving?

Updated

Canada’s household savings rate has increased since the pandemic but remains below internationally recommended benchmarks for most income groups. Understanding where you sit relative to your income peers — and what a healthy savings rate looks like at your income level — is the first step to improving it.

Canadian household savings rate over time

YearHousehold Savings Rate (% of Disposable Income)Notes
20173.3%Pre-pandemic historic low
20182.9%Near-record low
20192.5%Pre-pandemic low
202014.9%–28.2%Pandemic peak (forced savings)
202112.7%Post-pandemic elevated saving
20226.5%Returning to trend
20237.0%Modest rebound
20247.8%Inflation-driven savings rebuild
20257.2% (est.)Moderate

Source: Statistics Canada.

Canada’s savings rate historically trails countries like Germany (12–17%) and Australia (9–12%), but has outpaced the US (typically 3–7%) in most years since 2020.

Average savings rate by income in Canada

Income Range (Gross, Individual)Avg. Savings RateMedian Annual SavingsNotes
Under $30,0002–5%$600–$1,500Essentially no discretionary savings; CPP only
$30,000–$50,0004–8%$1,200–$4,000TFSA contributions; limited RRSP room used
$50,000–$75,0008–12%$4,000–$9,000Growing RRSP use; down payment saving common
$75,000–$100,00012–18%$9,000–$18,000Maxing or near-maxing TFSA; RRSP growing
$100,000–$150,00015–22%$15,000–$33,000FHSA, RRSP, TFSA; investment accounts starting
$150,000+20–35%$30,000–$52,000+High savings potential; RRSP contribution room large

Estimates based on Statistics Canada Survey of Financial Security and National Accounts data.

The following targets are based on saving enough to maintain your current lifestyle in retirement, alongside CPP and OAS:

AgeSavings Rate TargetContext
22–3010–15%Habit building; FHSA/TFSA first
30–4015–20%Peak earning growth period; RRSP accelerating
40–5018–25%Mortgage potentially reducing; savings can grow
50–6020–30%Peak earnings; catch-up contributions
60–6515–25%CPP/OAS starting to factor in; reduce if on track

What “enough” looks like at retirement (age 65):

  • CPP at average benefit: ~$9,000/year ($750/month)
  • OAS at standard: ~$8,500/year ($700/month)
  • Savings needed to make up the rest: depends on your target income
Retirement Income GoalCPP + OAS ProvidesSavings Must ProvideNest Egg Required
$40,000/year~$17,500~$22,500~$562,000 (at 4% withdrawal)
$55,000/year~$17,500~$37,500~$937,500
$70,000/year~$17,500~$52,500~$1,312,000
$90,000/year~$17,500~$72,500~$1,812,000

4% withdrawal rate assumes a balanced portfolio lasting 30 years.

How to calculate your own savings rate

Formula:

$$\text{Savings Rate} = \frac{\text{Annual Savings}}{\text{Gross Annual Income}} \times 100$$

What counts as savings:

  • RRSP contributions
  • TFSA contributions
  • FHSA contributions
  • Employer pension plan contributions (both your share and employer’s match)
  • CPP employee contributions
  • Cash deposited to non-registered investment accounts
  • Extra mortgage principal payments (above required amortization)
  • Emergency fund builds

What does NOT count as savings:

  • Paying down credit card balances to zero each month (that’s just not going into debt)
  • Buying a car (depreciating asset)
  • Spending that was budgeted

Example calculation:

ItemAnnual Amount
RRSP contributions$8,000
TFSA contributions$7,000
CPP employee contributions$4,200
Employer pension match$3,000
Total savings$22,200
Gross income$95,000
Savings rate23.4%

How to improve your savings rate by income level

IncomeHighest-Impact ActionExpected Rate Improvement
Under $40KAuto-transfer $50–$100 to TFSA on payday+2–4%
$40K–$60KTake full employer RRSP match; switch to budget cell plan+2–5%
$60K–$80KAdd FHSA (if first-time buyer); maximize TFSA before other spending+3–6%
$80K–$120KMaximize RRSP contribution to reduce marginal tax; redirect refund to TFSA+4–8%
$120K+Maximize RRSP ($31,560 limit) + TFSA + FHSA; consider taxable account+5–10%

Savings rate vs. net worth growth by age

A savings rate tells you your flow. Net worth tells you your stock. Here is how they relate over time at a 15% savings rate on $70,000 income (investing returns ~5% / year):

AgeAnnual SavingsCumulative SavingsEst. Portfolio Value
25$10,500$10,500$10,500
30$10,500$52,500$65,000
35$10,500$105,000$150,000
40$10,500$157,500$275,000
45$10,500$210,000$450,000
50$10,500$262,500$685,000
55$10,500$315,000$1,000,000
65$10,500$420,000$1,750,000+

Growth compounds significantly in later decades when the existing portfolio is large.