The OAS recovery tax is an income-based repayment of Old Age Security. When the income measure used for the calculation exceeds the annual threshold, the basic recovery is 15% of the excess, up to the amount of OAS received. The threshold changes annually. The income level at which all OAS is recovered can also differ between recipients aged 65 to 74 and those aged 75 or older because their maximum OAS amounts differ.
The calculation is not limited to employment income. For most Canadian residents, it generally begins with net income before adjustments on line 23400 of the tax return, subject to specific adjustments in the federal worksheet. This is different from taxable income on line 26000. RRIF withdrawals, CPP/QPP benefits, pension income, interest, taxable Canadian dividends and taxable capital gains may all affect the calculation.
Cash flow and tax-return income are not the same. A RRIF withdrawal generally produces taxable income, while a TFSA withdrawal does not have to be included on the tax return and does not affect eligibility for federal income-tested benefits such as OAS.
The recovery period generally runs from July to June and is based on income from the previous calendar year. A large withdrawal, taxable gain or other one-time income event may therefore affect OAS payments after the year in which the income was received.
Reducing OAS recovery tax may be useful in some scenarios, but it is not the only planning objective. A complete comparison also considers ordinary income tax, available cash, required withdrawals, future income, investment exposure and estate implications.
Introduction
The Old Age Security pension is taxable income. When a recipient's income exceeds the applicable annual threshold, part or all of the pension may have to be repaid through the OAS recovery tax, commonly called the OAS clawback. Try the OAS Clawback Estimator.
The recovery tax can be surprising because it is connected to the income reported on a tax return rather than only to employment earnings. A RRIF withdrawal, pension payment, investment-income amount or taxable capital gain may affect the calculation even when the recipient is no longer working.
There can also be a timing delay. Income reported for one calendar year may affect OAS deductions during a later July-to-June recovery period.
This article explains how the recovery tax works, which income measure is used, how common retirement income sources may affect it, why cash flow and taxable income can differ, and why OAS recovery should be considered alongside the rest of a retirement income plan.
What the OAS Recovery Tax Is
The OAS recovery tax is an income-based repayment of Old Age Security. When the applicable income measure is above the annual threshold, part of the recipient's OAS may have to be repaid. At sufficiently high income, the full pension may be recovered.
The recovery tax does not mean that OAS was paid by mistake. It is part of the program's design for recipients whose income exceeds the applicable threshold.
"Clawback" is the commonly used informal term. "OAS recovery tax" is the official term and more accurately describes the mechanism.
The point at which the full pension is recovered is not one universal income amount. It depends on the annual threshold and the amount of OAS payable. Official tables therefore distinguish between recipients aged 65 to 74 and those aged 75 or older.
How the Basic Calculation Works
Under current rules, the simplified calculation is:
Estimated OAS recovery tax = 15% x income above the applicable threshold
The recovery cannot exceed the applicable OAS amount.
For example, if the relevant income measure is $10,000 above the annual threshold, the basic estimated recovery is:
$10,000 x 15% = $1,500
This example shows the basic mechanism only. The annual threshold, applicable adjustments, OAS received and official federal worksheet determine the actual result.
The 15% rate is not the recipient's total marginal tax rate. It is the OAS recovery component. Ordinary federal and provincial or territorial income tax may also apply to the income that caused the recovery.
Which Income Measure Applies
For most Canadian residents, the OAS recovery calculation generally begins with net income before adjustments on line 23400, followed by the specific adjustments required by the federal worksheet.
This is not the same as taxable income on line 26000. Taxable income is calculated later in the return after additional deductions. A deduction that reduces taxable income does not necessarily reduce the income measure used for OAS recovery.
Canada.ca also uses the term net world income, particularly in general and non-resident guidance. Some non-resident OAS recipients must file an Old Age Security Return of Income and may be subject to different filing, withholding and treaty rules.
The applicable tax-return instructions should therefore be used rather than relying on a general estimate when residency or international income is involved.
The Calculation Is Individual
OAS recovery tax is based on the recipient's individual income rather than combined household income. Two spouses or common-law partners with the same household cash flow may therefore have different recovery-tax results if their individual income amounts differ.
This individual calculation differs from benefits such as the Guaranteed Income Supplement, where marital status and combined income can affect eligibility and payment amounts.
A household comparison may still be useful for understanding total after-tax cash flow, but each person's OAS recovery exposure must be calculated separately.
Income Sources That May Affect Recovery Tax
The important question is not simply whether an amount provides cash. It is whether the amount is included in the income measure used for the recovery-tax calculation.
CRA guidance identifies OAS, CPP/QPP, pensions, RRIF payments and RRSP withdrawals as reportable pension or savings-plan income. RRIF amounts paid out are taxable on receipt. Try the RRIF Minimum Withdrawal Calculator.
A large one-time amount can create a different recovery-tax pattern from the same income spread across several years. That does not mean one timing pattern is automatically preferable. The comparison may also change ordinary tax, liquidity, future required withdrawals and investment outcomes.
Why Taxable Dividends Require Special Attention
Cash dividends and taxable dividend income are not always the same amount.
Dividends from taxable Canadian corporations are reported using a taxable amount that includes a gross-up. The amount included in income can therefore be higher than the cash dividend received. A dividend tax credit may reduce the tax payable later in the calculation, but the taxable dividend amount still enters the income calculation.
This distinction can matter for OAS recovery tax. Looking only at the cash dividend may understate how much income appears on the tax return.
Foreign dividends and other investment income can follow different tax rules. The income type and the amount reported on the return should therefore be identified before estimating the recovery-tax effect.
TFSA Withdrawals and OAS
TFSA withdrawals are often discussed in OAS planning because they can provide spendable cash without creating income on the tax return.
CRA guidance states that TFSA income and withdrawals do not affect federal income-tested benefits and credits, including OAS and GIS.
This creates an important contrast:
- A $10,000 RRIF withdrawal generally provides cash and creates taxable income.
- A $10,000 TFSA withdrawal provides cash but generally does not create taxable income or OAS recovery-tax exposure.
The difference does not make a TFSA withdrawal automatically preferable. TFSA balances, investment objectives, contribution room and recontribution timing remain part of the broader comparison. A withdrawn amount is generally added back to TFSA contribution room in the next calendar year, unless other available room already permits an earlier contribution.
Recovery-Period Timing
The recovery period generally runs from July to June and is based on income from the previous calendar year.
For example, income reported for one tax year may affect deductions from OAS payments beginning the following July. The recovery is generally spread across 12 monthly OAS payments rather than collected only as one lump sum.
This delay can make the recovery tax appear disconnected from the income event that caused it. A large RRIF withdrawal or taxable gain in one year may reduce OAS payments during part of each of the next two calendar years.
The amount withheld during the recovery period and the final calculation on the tax return are related but distinct. Recovery tax withheld from OAS payments is reported on the recipient's OAS tax slip and accounted for when the return is filed.
When income is expected to be substantially lower in the following year, CRA provides a process for requesting reduced recovery-tax withholding at source. The current eligibility requirements and form should be checked directly with CRA.
Why Clawback Is Only One Planning Factor
Reducing OAS recovery tax may increase the amount of OAS retained, but that does not automatically improve the entire financial outcome.
A decision that reduces income in one year may shift income into a later year. It may also affect:
- ordinary income tax
- available cash
- required RRIF withdrawals
- benefit eligibility
- investment flexibility
- account balances
- future taxable income
- after-tax estate value
The relevant comparison is therefore broader than the OAS amount alone. Gross income, the income measure used for recovery tax, taxable income, tax payable and after-tax cash flow are related but different figures.
A scenario that produces more OAS may still leave less spendable cash after considering other taxes or constraints. Another scenario may produce some recovery tax but more overall after-tax income. The result depends on the full set of assumptions rather than one visible benefit amount.
Common Misunderstandings
"Only employment income causes OAS clawback." Employment income can matter, but so can pensions, CPP/QPP, RRIF withdrawals and taxable investment income.
"The calculation is based on taxable income." For most Canadian residents, it generally begins with net income before adjustments on line 23400, subject to specific adjustments. Taxable income on line 26000 is a different tax-return amount.
"Cash received and income are the same." A TFSA withdrawal creates cash without generally creating tax-return income. A RRIF withdrawal generally creates both cash and taxable income.
"A TFSA withdrawal causes clawback because it increases spending money." TFSA withdrawals do not have to be reported as income and do not affect OAS under current federal rules.
"The 15% recovery rate is the total tax rate." The 15% is the OAS recovery component. Ordinary income tax may also apply.
"The threshold stays the same." Minimum and maximum recovery thresholds are indexed and change over time. Current official figures should be used for each relevant income year and recovery period.
"Clawback should always be avoided." OAS recovery is one part of the comparison. Avoiding it at the cost of substantially higher future tax, reduced liquidity or less financial flexibility may not improve the overall result.
Final Thoughts
The OAS recovery tax is easier to understand when three questions are kept separate:
- What income appears in the recovery-tax calculation?
- When will that income affect OAS payments?
- How does the result interact with ordinary tax and available cash?
The monthly OAS amount is only one part of the picture. RRIF withdrawals, pensions, investment income and taxable gains can increase the income measure, while TFSA withdrawals can provide cash without generally affecting it.
Understanding those differences helps explain why retirement income decisions can have effects beyond the immediate amount withdrawn. The useful comparison is not simply how much OAS is recovered, but how income, tax, benefits, account balances and spendable cash work together over time.
Key Takeaways
- The OAS recovery tax is commonly called the OAS clawback.
- Under current rules, the basic recovery is 15% of income above the applicable threshold.
- For most Canadian residents, the calculation generally begins with net income before adjustments, not taxable income.
- The calculation applies to individual income rather than combined household income.
- RRIF withdrawals, CPP/QPP, pension income and taxable investment income may increase recovery-tax exposure.
- Taxable Canadian dividends can affect the calculation based on a grossed-up taxable amount rather than only the cash received.
- TFSA withdrawals generally do not create taxable income or affect OAS.
- The recovery period runs from July to June using income from the previous calendar year.
- Recovery tax may apply in addition to ordinary income tax.
- Reducing recovery tax is one planning factor, not the only measure of a financial outcome.
- Current thresholds and rules should be confirmed through official sources.