Old Age Security is a federal retirement benefit based mainly on age, legal status, and Canadian residence. It is different from CPP/QPP because it is not based on employment contributions. OAS can generally start at age 65. In Canada, eligibility usually requires at least 10 years of residence in Canada after age 18; outside Canada, the residence requirement is generally longer and may be affected by international agreements.
OAS payment amounts depend on residence history, start age, and income-tested rules. A full OAS pension generally requires 40 years of Canadian residence after age 18. A partial pension is usually based on qualifying years divided by 40. Payments are adjusted quarterly for inflation, an additional increase applies after age 75, and higher income can reduce or eliminate OAS through the recovery tax.
Deferring OAS can increase the monthly payment, but it is not automatically better. OAS can generally be delayed from age 65 to as late as age 70. The monthly pension increases for each month of deferral, up to a maximum increase of 36%. Deferral also means not receiving OAS during the delay period, and it may affect the timing of GIS or Allowance benefits.
OAS should be viewed as one layer of retirement income. It is taxable and interacts with CPP/QPP, pensions, RRSP/RRIF withdrawals, TFSA withdrawals, non-registered investments, and other income sources. For planning, OAS is best considered alongside the full retirement cash-flow picture rather than as a standalone answer.
Introduction
Old Age Security (OAS) is one of the main public retirement income programs in Canada. It provides a monthly payment to many older Canadians and is often discussed alongside the Canada Pension Plan (CPP), Quebec Pension Plan (QPP), workplace pensions, RRSPs, RRIFs, TFSAs, and other sources of retirement income.
OAS is sometimes misunderstood because it looks like a pension but does not work like CPP/QPP or an employer pension. It is not based on how much someone contributed while working. Instead, eligibility and payment amounts are tied mainly to age, legal status, Canadian residence history, start age, and income-tested rules.
What OAS Is
OAS is a federal public pension program. It is funded from general government revenues rather than from a personal account or a worker contribution history. This makes it different from CPP/QPP, which is contributory and tied to pensionable earnings and contributions.
For many retirees, OAS provides a predictable layer of income. It is usually not large enough to support retirement on its own, but it can be an important part of the retirement income base when combined with CPP/QPP and personal savings.
Who May Qualify
OAS eligibility depends on age, legal status, and Canadian residence. The rules can differ depending on whether the person lives in Canada or outside Canada when applying.
| Situation | General residence rule |
|---|---|
| Living in Canada | Generally at least 10 years of residence in Canada after age 18, plus legal-status requirements. |
| Living outside Canada | Generally at least 20 years of residence in Canada after age 18, subject to applicable rules and international agreements. |
Because residence rules can be fact-specific, people with time spent outside Canada, immigration history, or international work history should check current official rules before relying on an estimate.
Full and Partial OAS
A full OAS pension generally requires 40 years of residence in Canada after age 18. If someone qualifies but has fewer than 40 years, the pension is generally prorated. A simplified way to think about the calculation is:
Partial OAS = full OAS amount x qualifying years of residence / 40.
For example, if someone has 20 qualifying years of Canadian residence after age 18, a simplified estimate would be 20/40, or 50% of the full OAS pension. This is only a planning-level explanation; official entitlement depends on the current program rules and the person’s specific residence history.
Starting or Deferring OAS
OAS can generally begin at age 65. A person may also choose to defer OAS, generally up to age 70. Deferring increases the monthly amount by a set percentage for each month of delay, up to a maximum increase of 36%.
Deferral is a tradeoff. A higher monthly amount later may be valuable for someone who expects a long retirement or has other income sources early in retirement. But deferral also means giving up payments during the delay period. It can also affect access to income-tested benefits such as GIS during the deferral period.
Indexing and the Increase at Age 75
OAS payments are reviewed quarterly and adjusted for changes in the cost of living. This indexing helps reduce the effect of inflation over time, though it does not make OAS a complete inflation solution for retirement spending.
OAS also includes an additional increase for people age 75 and older. This means a person’s OAS amount can change over time because of both indexing and age-related program rules.
Taxation and Recovery Tax
OAS is taxable income. It may also be reduced through the OAS recovery tax when income is above the applicable threshold. The recovery tax is often called the OAS clawback. You can use the OAS Clawback Calculator to explore a simplified recovery-tax estimate.
The recovery tax is based on income, so OAS planning often overlaps with taxable income planning. RRSP/RRIF withdrawals, pension income, employment income, taxable non-registered investment income, and other income sources may all matter. The effect can be different from one retiree to another even when their gross cash flow looks similar.
How OAS Differs From GIS
The Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS) is separate from OAS. GIS is generally intended for lower-income OAS pensioners. Unlike OAS, GIS is not taxable, and it is strongly income-tested. This means that income from other sources can reduce GIS eligibility or payment amounts.
OAS deferral can also matter for GIS because GIS generally depends on receiving OAS. For someone who may qualify for GIS, the decision to defer OAS needs careful review rather than a simple “higher later payment” comparison.
Automatic Enrolment and Applying
Some people are automatically enrolled for OAS if Service Canada has enough information. Others must apply. People approaching age 65 may receive a letter explaining whether they are automatically enrolled or need to apply.
If the letter is not received or the information does not match the person’s situation, the official Service Canada process should be checked directly. This is especially important when residence history is complicated or when the person lives outside Canada.
How OAS Fits Into Retirement Income
OAS should be considered as one layer of retirement income. It may sit beside CPP/QPP, employer pensions, RRSP/RRIF withdrawals, TFSA withdrawals, non-registered investments, part-time work, rental income, and other resources. The Retirement Calculator can help place OAS into a broader retirement-income projection.
The planning question is not only “How much OAS will I receive?” It is also how OAS interacts with taxable income, benefit rules, inflation, timing decisions, and the rest of the retirement cash-flow plan.
Key Takeaways
- OAS is based mainly on age, legal status, and Canadian residence, not employment contributions.
- A full OAS pension generally requires 40 qualifying years of Canadian residence after age 18.
- Partial OAS is generally prorated based on qualifying residence years.
- OAS can generally start at age 65 or be deferred to increase the monthly amount.
- OAS is taxable and may be reduced by the recovery tax at higher income levels.
- GIS is separate from OAS and is generally income-tested for lower-income OAS pensioners.
- OAS should be reviewed as part of the full retirement income plan, not in isolation.
Important Notes
This article is for educational purposes only. OAS rules, payment amounts, residence requirements, income thresholds, recovery-tax rules, GIS rules, and application processes may change. International agreements and individual residence history may affect eligibility.
Before making personal planning decisions, check current official sources and consider professional guidance when the situation involves cross-border residence, income-tested benefits, tax planning, or benefit timing decisions.