What Is the CPP?
The Canada Pension Plan (CPP) is a mandatory, contributory public pension plan administered by the federal government. Every employed Canadian between the ages of 18 and 70 contributes a portion of their earnings to CPP, as does their employer. Self-employed Canadians pay both the employee and employer portions.
Your eventual CPP retirement benefit is based on how much you contributed and for how long. It is not a flat amount โ it varies significantly from person to person depending on their earnings history.
How CPP Contributions Work in 2026
| CPP Detail | 2026 Amount |
|---|---|
| Employee contribution rate | 5.95% |
| Maximum pensionable earnings | $74,600 |
| Basic exemption (not subject to CPP) | $3,500 |
| Maximum annual employee contribution | ~$4,230 |
| CPP2 rate (earnings $74,600โ$85,000) | 4.00% |
| CPP2 maximum contribution | ~$416 |
Employers match the employee CPP contribution dollar-for-dollar. Self-employed Canadians pay both sides โ effectively 11.9% of pensionable earnings โ but can deduct half of that amount on their tax return.
How Your CPP Benefit Is Calculated
Your CPP retirement pension is based on your average earnings throughout your working life, adjusted for inflation, and the number of years you contributed. The more years you worked at or near the maximum pensionable earnings, the higher your benefit.
The maximum CPP retirement pension in 2026 โ for someone who contributed the maximum for the full contributory period of approximately 39 years โ is around $1,400/month. However, the average CPP retirement pension received by Canadians is significantly lower, often in the range of $700โ$900/month, because most people did not contribute at the maximum every year.
When Should You Start Taking CPP?
You can begin collecting CPP as early as age 60 or as late as age 70. The standard starting age is 65. The timing you choose has a permanent effect on your monthly benefit:
| Starting Age | Effect on Benefit |
|---|---|
| Age 60 | Reduced by 36% permanently |
| Age 61 | Reduced by 28.8% permanently |
| Age 62 | Reduced by 21.6% permanently |
| Age 63 | Reduced by 14.4% permanently |
| Age 64 | Reduced by 7.2% permanently |
| Age 65 | Standard benefit (no change) |
| Age 66 | Increased by 8.4% permanently |
| Age 67 | Increased by 16.8% permanently |
| Age 68 | Increased by 25.2% permanently |
| Age 69 | Increased by 33.6% permanently |
| Age 70 | Increased by 42% permanently |
So when should you start?
For Canadians in good health who expect to live into their mid-80s or beyond, delaying CPP to age 70 is often mathematically advantageous. The break-even point for delaying from age 65 to 70 is approximately age 82 โ meaning if you live past 82, you will collect more in total by waiting.
If you have health concerns, need the income, or have no other retirement savings to draw from, taking CPP earlier may make more sense for your situation.
CPP Is One Piece of the Puzzle
A complete Canadian retirement income strategy typically combines three sources:
- CPP โ based on your contributions over your working life
- Old Age Security (OAS) โ a flat government benefit available to most Canadians at age 65, currently up to approximately $727/month
- Personal savings โ RRSP, TFSA, employer pension, and other investments
Together, these three sources form what financial planners often call the "three-legged stool" of Canadian retirement income.
Estimate your CPP retirement benefit
Our free CPP Estimator gives you a personalized benefit estimate based on your earnings history and planned retirement age.