Retirement readiness is not determined by age alone. It is a review of whether spending needs, income sources, tax treatment, benefit rules, records, household priorities and flexibility are aligned well enough to support the next stage of life.

A useful readiness review begins with spending. Essential expenses, flexible lifestyle spending, debt payments, housing costs, healthcare, family support and irregular expenses create the income requirement that retirement resources must support.

Income readiness means understanding both amount and character. CPP/QPP, OAS, workplace pensions, RRSP/RRIF withdrawals, TFSA withdrawals, non-registered investments, rental income, employment income and other sources can differ in timing, predictability, taxation, indexing, liquidity and survivor treatment.

Tax and benefit readiness matters because gross income, taxable income, cash flow and after-tax spending power are not the same. A withdrawal can provide cash and also create taxable income; another source may provide cash without appearing on the tax return. GIS and OAS recovery tax use program-specific income rules and timing.

Readiness also depends on resilience. A base projection is useful, but a readiness review should also test less favourable conditions such as higher spending, lower returns, higher inflation, longer life, a market decline early in retirement, a change in work plans or a change in household structure.

The purpose of a readiness review is not to prove that retirement will be perfect. Its purpose is to separate confirmed facts from estimates and pending decisions, make assumptions visible, and show which tradeoffs deserve more attention before or during retirement.