CPP Early vs Delay Calculator
Estimate the trade-offs of starting CPP earlier or delaying, including simplified inflation and optional tax adjustments.
Last updated: May 2026
CPP comparison summary
Plain-English explanation
Complete the form and run the calculator.
Warnings and insights
CPP basics and decision context
What is CPP?
CPP is a contributory public pension in Canada. Your actual payment depends on your contribution history and timing.
Starting CPP at 60 vs 65 vs 70
Starting earlier gives smaller monthly payments for longer. Delaying gives higher monthly payments for fewer years.
How CPP early reduction works
This tool uses a simplified reduction of 0.6% per month before age 65 (up to about 36% at age 60).
How CPP delayed increase works
This tool uses a simplified increase of 0.7% per month after age 65 (up to about 42% at age 70).
What break-even age means
Break-even age is the age where cumulative CPP from one start age catches up to another.
When taking CPP early may make sense
Early CPP may be considered when near-term income needs are higher or life expectancy assumptions are shorter.
When delaying CPP may make sense
Delaying may help if longevity is expected and higher guaranteed monthly income later is valuable.
Frequently asked questions
Is this my official CPP amount?
No. Use your Service Canada estimate for planning decisions.
Does this include every tax and benefit interaction?
No. This is a simplified educational estimate only.
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and is not financial, tax, retirement, legal, or government benefits advice. Results are estimates and may not reflect your personal situation. Use your official Service Canada CPP estimate before making decisions.
Trust, assumptions, and maintenance
Last updated: May 2026
Calculator Accuracy
Methodology summary
This calculator provides a simplified estimate based on your inputs and educational assumptions for planning scenarios.
Accuracy notes
Results are estimates. Actual outcomes can vary based on full tax rules, lender terms, benefit formulas, timing, and personal circumstances.
Assumptions
- Calculations are simplified and educational.
- Results depend on your inputs and scenario choices.
- Tax, benefit, mortgage, and government rules can change over time.
- Users should verify important decisions with official sources or qualified professionals.
When to verify with an official source or professional
Verify before filing taxes, signing mortgages or loans, drawing retirement income, making contribution decisions, or relying on benefits calculations.
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and is not financial, tax, legal, accounting, mortgage, debt, retirement, investment, or government benefits advice.
Found a mistake or outdated assumption? Contact us so we can review it.