@@stk6755 You have to make more than $23K a year to be taxed regardless of how you get the money , through pension or through employment . Why would anyone be exempt from paying taxes on income , especially if that income is large . Seniors , so called , are no different than young people in that they need to pay their fair share . Personally I am not a whining , complaining old guy . and always reject the seniors discount thing because I am in no need of any special discount. Whenever I do pull in extra money above the $23K limit then I end up paying taxes . So What ?
@@edwardmacnab354 Not correct, it is taxable. If this is your only income then likely you are not making enough to be taxed. My brother in law draws CPP and is also working, and I do his taxes and the CPP definitely increases his taxable income.
@@whiskeytango9769 yeah I know all that . What I'm trying to say is that my $23K a year government pension total is not taxed because I am considered on paper to be poor . However . I bank most of that $23K because I pay no rent , have no mortgage , own no vehicle and so have no real expenditures . If I make extra money then I do get taxed a small amount . I made sure I was in this position and quite frankly was amazed at just how much money the government pension delivered .
Am single, collected at 61. When I die I get squat to give to my family except $2500 for burial? What about all the money over the years I invested with CPP. Highway robbery from the crooked government!!!😳😬
Agreed! I just lost a dear friend who passed away at age 63. She had not yet retired. She was single and her and her employers paid into the pension for decades. Her family just gets $2500 to help with funeral costs. That's it. If CPP were a real pension, there would have at least been a commuted value for her heirs. CPP is a rip off for single people. Appalling.
I AGREE with you they just stilling for your You and your husband work so hard for so many years not when one pass away they just ,,GUVERMANT,, play the thift 🤦🏾♂️🤦🏼♀️😲🤢
My wife was a homemaker and never had any CPP . I worked and still work ( I’m 77 ) , however since my father died at 62 I took my CPP at 60 . My wife passed away at 65 and CPP magnanimously donated $2500 towards her burial costs. From that time onwards I have only received half of my CPP, that I busted my a§§ for . Americans can draw social security anywhere in the world, but we can only live outside of Canada for 6 months or chance losing our OAS . So what keeps people from living elsewhere? We used to brag about our country and its healthcare being free, well that’s a giant load of BS , I’ve been waiting 2 years for a shoulder replacement surgery . Government lawyers have stacked the deck against us and we blindly follow their orders.
Something is wrong with your comment. If a person has never made any CPP contributions, then they will not receive the $2,500 death benefit. Also, CPP is contributory, so you would not lose your own CPP if your spouse dies. You would lose her CPP only. Perhaps you mean you are now receiving half the OAS, which would make sense as her OAS would stop when she died, while your OAS will continue. I suspect your wife worked a bit prior to marriage and did contribute to CPP during that time. OAS and CPP are not the same. You can receive both CPP and OAS if you live outside of Canada during retirement, but there are rules around this. Some countries you can receive, while some countries you cannot. It depends on the treaty which are in place with each country.
What happens? The government steal's it from your love ones. That was actually very informative, contrary to other channels who gives just enough information to have you call them and pay for the answer. THANK YOU, for having an HONEST channel.
My father collected 9 cheques and died suddenly. The CPP gave a $2500 death benefit, which has not changed in 2 decades. A spouse can only get a top up to the maximum CPP benefit. So basically, unlike an RRSP, which is taxable in the year of death, the CPP is a scam. Contribute for decades and the money stays with the CPP.
45+yr mortgage at $3000+ a month, house never payed before retirement. Or apartment at over 2000/month. If your 55 or younger now, forget your retirement, you'll have to work till you die.
@@garth217hey, hard working folk here... I'll be working till I die unless there's some big changes. Started working at 12 and now almost 40. Consider yourself lucky to have been a hard working folk in a better time.
@@garth217 you have to be working at something that pays decent money AND be smart with what you do with your money I feel Rich on the $23K a year the government pays me because I bought my acreage with cash some 30 years ago enabling me to live rent and mortgage free and save most of my money so now I'm property AND cash rich . I save most of my pension money .
@shirleynoel916 it varies. My small house in an 8000 inhabitants town costs more in taxes than my bigger one with 60 acres of land in a 10x larger city.
Most of this is not true. I worked 2 x 8 jobs and paid CPP from each job. I get $600 in my CPP. This is highway robbery in Canada. People who worked less than me get more than me because I am paying to keep people who are on Welfare, Aish, and all the other programs. The Canadian Governemtn is not paiying these benefits out of their money, it is out of our money for all the hard work we put in.
amount of CPP depends on now much did you contrubute into CPP. You may have even 3 jobs, but if you do not make maximum pensionable earnings, you will not get maximum pension even though you worked 40 years. We have to contribute maximum as per maximum pensiobable earnings all 39 years. It's can happen that someone worked less years but was msking more money and contributed more to CPP, this is why his/her pension is higher.
i find it very offensive that if a partner dies, the other spouse gets a reduced amount of the person who dies. WHY. It all still should be paid to the partner. That is marriage. That is fair. he/she paid into it. Why should the govt keep it.
Only a spouse or the estate of the deceased is eligible to receive your cpp not dependent. That's why you need to make it a point to save money by either taking a life insurance that pays deagh benefit or save with a discipline where you do not have access to take out the money (UL)
No one in their right mind would voluntarily give money to a plan like this if it was offered by a private organization either a bank or an insurance company
Can you do the same presentation but add on a stay home mom who only made less than 10 years of CPP contributions. What if that earning spouse passes after retirement.
CPP is a great program to ensure that people save for their retirement. Left to their own devices, many people wouldn't save anything. It is in everyone's best interest that everyone have some money put aside for their latter years. Every first world country has a similar program.
@AWalkWithWhizzy So many people have an input, but reality is far different. I have always worked, except for 7 yrs raising my kids, always was paid above table, always paid taxes, I can count the number of times on one hand that I had to utilize any hospital, personally, I hate hospitals. With all that said, I was very lucky to have money enough to pay bills, as well as food. Save money? No idea where that would come from. So many paydays, $10 was what I had left to figure out what was more important, eat or gas so I didnt have to walk the 2 miles to work in the morning, and I know I wasnt alone in this. Lets see how many argue with me about this, but this was a fact of MY life.
The maximum contribution to CPP is around $3,500 per year. Let's say you start at 18 and you worked non stop until 65. That's 47 years. 47 * $3,500 is $164,500. Let's assume you're eligible for the full amount, $1,254. It would take approximately 11 years for you to get your $164,500 back. If you live past 76, you will start getting free money. Instead, if you invest that $3,500 into a 5% investment account every single year until 65, in 47 years, you'll have around $650,000. So when people criticize Conservatives for wanting to scrap retirement security, this is why. Instead of relying on government to secure your retirement, you can instead learn how to put away the money you would otherwise pay to CPP into an investment. Note that this is only 5%. There are others like GIC, stocks, life insurance, etc. that pays way more. This is not even taking things like dividends into account.
Yeah, it’s easy to say : invest and get only 5%. Not many stocks make that for 47 years in a row. Plus every 7-10 years the majority of investments drop significantly and have to start over. The government investments are somehow safer because they are managed by professionals not like us independently. Yes, there are investments that have huge earnings some years but nobody knows prior so can transfer the funds there so can make big $$$. I still think the government should be responsible for the management of the pension.
No your children will not unless they are a dependent, if you have no dependents then you will get a one time payout of 2,500.00 and it will be taxed so , it will be much less. I have gone through this.
Yeah we don't get that much. basically under 500/month for him and under 400 for me. You have to work until you draw your last breath. I'm glad that our house will be paid for in less than 10 years because we are going to have to live somewhere and the streets are not an option. They don't take into account the years you raised kids at home and had no job. They don't believe women work when at home and it is not valued or paid labour. I took in two of my son's friends who had nowhere to go. I got no money for that and no thanks. This is where I'm at.
Very well explained. My question is if one spouse never worked so no CPP contribution therefore no CPP. What happens when the spouse who is getting CPP and dies
We singles always get the short end of the stick on financial matters. Even with RRSP contributions there are all sorts of benefits that married couples have in terms of being able to save taxes. We singles are screwed LOL
CPP should be optional because I’d sure as heck not make contributions, I’d be investing my own money for me and my family. I don’t need or want the government for anything.
Two husbands passed away. I was told i would receive a survivor’s pension based on the husband who had contributed the most. Hah! The first payment was LESS than what I had been receiving. And it was sent by mail instead of automatic deposit as they said would happen. Added woe QPP contributions had to be factored in. Took 11 months and I STILL don’t know if the figures are correct. How can one tell?
Due to the simple fact the money i earn today will be worthless in 50 years due to inflation, no matter what they may tell you, your CPP goes to the elderly of now, it isnt saved directly for you. That would be stupid.
Well said. A lot of people think it's a personal bank account of sorts, they don't understand that it's paying the elderly now, and if you never worked much, you don't get anything but old age security.
I spent 30 years in the military. If I die before my wife she only gets 1/2 of my pension. Her only income is OAS and a small CPP. Where is the justice?
My contribution to CPP max almost for last 34 years. Before that i contributed regular amount. My CPP is even less than 1000. It is way less than you mentioned. Why is that?
What irritates me is that the system is so rigged in favour of couples. As a single person, all I have is my own cpp...no top up after someone dies. Not to mention that couples often have more wealth than a single person anyway. What a crock.
I went to Service Canada to apply for my pension in my native country. The girl from the office instead to give me the right paper form to send my proof of work to Edmonton where they are processing the paper work ,she give me the paper erly retire in Canada. I was in totally shock when I receive a check of 297$. I am 62,currently on unemployment and I still want to work. How can I cancel this ? In my former country I am eleigible to retire at 62.
I have a question? My husband passed away in June 2023. I hab applied for survival benefits but I did get any because my husband did not work in Canada 10 years at least. Also I did applied for ODSP still did not any because of my assets. I work minimum wage. Can you explain why?
I wish I could opt out. I’d rather take the $4,000 a year and put it into my own retirement savings fund. Right now I’m getting 20% returns through my work group plan. CPP is a scam.
So please tell me what happens to the money one cannot claim. Does it go back to the government or where does it go. I’m very curious about this situation?
Rule 1 says Surviving spouse receives 60% of dead’s spouse’s CPP. In sample cases 2 of both spouses receive $1000. Why does the surviving spouse receives only extra $254 instead of $600(=$1000x60%) when other spouse passes away ? Just need to understand HOW you come up $254 which happen to be the Max CPP $1254-$1000 which is NOT 60% of surviving spouse’s CPP. PS: At end Spouse would regardless still receives only the max CPP $1254.
So if you started with an investment of $4000 (annual CPP deduction) and every year you invested $4000 (annual CPP deductions from your pay) at 5% interest rates then compounded over a 40 year period (25-65 years of workable age) it would equal around $526,000. So technically speaking to receive that amount you would have to live until you are 99 years old if you retire at 65 years old. Average Canadian age at death is 84 years old, so on Average CPP gets to keep almost $255,000 from each Canadian….So never ever defer your CPP take it as soon as you can at 60. There’s a reason why anyone who offers financial services lives a very rich lifestyle 🙄🙄🙄 just take a look in the parking lot at your investment office/broker you deal with…
One spouse is still working and the other is collecting CPP. If the one collecting CPP dies, will the other spouse get something even though they haven’t reached 65?
Want to be even more frustrated with the scheme? Your employer also pays into the fund at a dollar for dollar amount relative to your payroll deduction. If you were to max out your payment with one employer and started a job with a different company the same year, the deductions start from $0 for both, but only your portion is refunded when you file your taxes. The employers matching overpayment amount stays in the hands of the CPP. So if you were to work 2 jobs and max out contributions at both you've added 3x your annual max deduction to the CPP (1 from you, 2 from your employers) but are not afforded any additional value at your retirement relative to someone who had a sole employer and maxed their contributions but ultimately only added 2x their annual maximum (1 from them, 1 from their employer). EI is a similar situation, but the employer actually contributes at 1.4x your deductions. Now that whole scheme is an entirely different can of worms and would collapse on itself incredibly quickly if it worked like an actual insurance underwriter.
I don’t know about u but if I pay in cpp more then once a yr, cause I only work shutdowns and cpp starts over I get it back on my taxes. U only pay cpp once a yr, regardless I can’t wait till Trudeau gets out, but then polivere will be taking out cpps anyways, so that why I have a $4000 month union pension screw the governments
@ChrisJones-rl5ow yeah, that's what I was getting at, you or I get back what we overpay, but the company doesn't get back their portion of overpayments. You have a deduction that comes out of your paycheck but what you don't see is the company you work for also pays in a matching amount until you max out. We get our overpayments back when we file taxes, but the companies matching dollar of overpayment isn't refunded to the company, it stays in government hands. Not trying to cry foul for any company here, but just pointing out how someone like us who goes over the max with multiple employers actually has had more total contributions added to the program but are still only eligible for the same maximum benefits at retirement as someone who has only had 1 employer and maxed out yearly. The plan gets their max, their employers matching amount and thats it. If we maxed out with two employers, the plan gets our max, employer 1 matched max and employer 2 matched max, we get back the overpayment we made at employer 2, but their payment stays in the plan and we don't get credit for that at the end of the day. If it happened every year, we wind up responsible for ultimately putting in 1.5 times what a single employer person puts in but are left with the notion that everyone puts in the same value because of the individual max deduction. They never touch on the employers matching contributions. The employers portion of the contributed money doesn't come out of our pocket, but it is on the back of our time punched and doesn't get reflected at retirement. Hope that explains it a bit better.
CPP should have a buy out for Canadian citizens that have paid into this for decades. For example, take buy out at 60= 150,000 or 65=250,000. All the money hard working people put into this then if you take early cpp and die just afterwards, Government gets to keep all this money . BS
sir. cpp is contributed pension by the employee. if same employee contribute in company pension after he past away he or she will get allmost 70 percent his company pension.cpp is contributed pension why goverment refuse to pay 70 percent to the survival person.
I am asking a question my son and I have been together all of 37 years he is basically my care giver for many of those years I have no spouse. So can my son get anything when it's my time to cross the pearly bridge . Please tell me his. Name is on my application when I filed for my pension. ? Thank you for your help !!!
I'm 60 and my wife is 53, i am not yet collecting cpp and wont till 65 because of some pension clawbacks i will suffer upon collecting. What will happen if i die before collecting with my cpp, will my wife get at least a credit for what i have paid? her cpp will be low as she is a new comer and her working years were not long. also what will she get if i die and she isnt collecting her cpp yet?
How can I tell a story of People who contribute and are not receiving the maximum.. There spouses have contributed maximum but chooses to deprive some Spouse by way of Aprisals
CPP is a very poor investment. If a person would contribute the same amount in an RRSP, the return would be exponentially greater and you don’t lose the estate doesn’t lose the funds when the person passes away.
The govn. Is doing cpp cause they don't think that the majority of people can handle their own money wisely or invest for themself. Some can and would, but some would spend it all then would be on the streets...
Absolutely ridiculous!!! Both my parents paid into their CPP their lives and neither them or their estate were able to withdraw a penny from what they paid into (they passed away before 65) Ps, it should not be capped if I or my wife dies and one of us are maximum eligible 🤬
And a tip from two friends who retired one was a teacher, and they both said that if they had turned thier rrsp's to resp's they would have had way less taxes to pay! Thier words not mine and they both folks of the cloth ( aka seniorty members of a church so no reason to lie )
Here’s the million dollar question though… what happens to your CPP you paid into throughout your working years if you pass away in your 30’s to 50’s? Where does it go then? Say you started working at 15 years old and pass away at age 45, where would your 30 years of contributing go then? And what if you don’t have a spouse? Does it default to your next of kin like your children??
@@danag812I don’t know if that’s 100% true because there’s the death benefit which I think they calculate based off your past earnings and amounts paid (so perhaps past CPP contributions are included) and I know you can apply for it on behalf of the decedent’s children because I’ve seen the required forms before.
i been working for the last 45 years and the only thing that know is that i will continued paying taxes to our worse enemy the government until the day that died plus I working for some time one extra part time
@@sjbutler2330 thanks if I don’t have any savings the cpp only $280 per month and only live here for 30 years according to the statistics 📈 at least $3000 a month can make the living. If no dependent financial support. How can we make a living
when one passes away your spouse gets topped up from your cpp, so, basically your money is gone down the toilet if you worked and studied hard and went to work each day you’re cpp is gone. Specifically if your cpp is already paying around the top amount. CPP is a rip off for the deceased who worked and paid into it and is left with NOTHING!!!! Start paying death benefits properly or loose CPP!!!!
If someone works for cash income no cpp and income deduction and get more income without paying any taxes when they retired why they can get the government benefits?
Don’t understand why anyone would wait till 70 to collect. That why the government offers more money when you’re 70 there’s a better chance they don’t have to pay out.
CPP wont exist by the time im able to collect. Too many immigrants in Canada now collecting our tax benefits without ever have contributed , not to mention everything has allready been spent by the GUV - meaning - the fund doesnt even exist , we just havent been told yet.. Next five years we are looking at digital dollar and UBI .
not true my ex. passed and still children at home with me and im disabled on my pension early..and I wasn't getting anything from the scummer or the gov't🤬
They've already given it to the "new Canadians" they can backdate their CPP they never paid into when they get their citizenship to the day they landed here.
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Title should read: What Happens To Your CPP When Your Spouse Passes Away? CPP is a rip off for single people. That $2500 is taxed at 50%.
Cpp should be non taxable income because one pays into it. The government keeps on taking
CPP IS non taxable. I get CPP +OAS + Supplement and never pay any tax on all that .
I AGREE with you ,how they can take taxes from SENIORS , how dare you? 😢😭😡
@@stk6755 You have to make more than $23K a year to be taxed regardless of how you get the money , through pension or through employment . Why would anyone be exempt from paying taxes on income , especially if that income is large . Seniors , so called , are no different than young people in that they need to pay their fair share . Personally I am not a whining , complaining old guy . and always reject the seniors discount thing because I am in no need of any special discount. Whenever I do pull in extra money above the $23K limit then I end up paying taxes . So What ?
@@edwardmacnab354 Not correct, it is taxable. If this is your only income then likely you are not making enough to be taxed. My brother in law draws CPP and is also working, and I do his taxes and the CPP definitely increases his taxable income.
@@whiskeytango9769 yeah I know all that . What I'm trying to say is that my $23K a year government pension total is not taxed because I am considered on paper to be poor . However . I bank most of that $23K because I pay no rent , have no mortgage , own no vehicle and so have no real expenditures . If I make extra money then I do get taxed a small amount . I made sure I was in this position and quite frankly was amazed at just how much money the government pension delivered .
Am single, collected at 61. When I die I get squat to give to my family except $2500 for burial? What about all the money over the years I invested with CPP. Highway robbery from the crooked government!!!😳😬
100 percent 👍
Agreed! I just lost a dear friend who passed away at age 63. She had not yet retired. She was single and her and her employers paid into the pension for decades. Her family just gets $2500 to help with funeral costs. That's it. If CPP were a real pension, there would have at least been a commuted value for her heirs. CPP is a rip off for single people. Appalling.
@@user-muller7does every bereaved family gets the $2500 ?
its a tax not a pension plan.
I get the minimum Government pension of $23K a year and I'm doing very well indeed on that because I am Debt free , car free , and wife free lol .
You forgot to add that when you pass away the government gets to keep the remaining money
You make a very good point; we appreciate you taking the time to leave feedback!
Government? No, other CPP recipients get it! (makes the pool of money go further)
What if there is a divorced spouse. And you are now the common law spouse?
No wonder they made the health care system so bad… people are dying waiting for treatment…
I AGREE with you they just stilling for your
You and your husband work so hard for so many years not when one pass away they just ,,GUVERMANT,, play the thift 🤦🏾♂️🤦🏼♀️😲🤢
GOV IS VERY HAPPY FINALLY THEY GET READ OF A OLD TIMER NO MOORE PENSION TO PAY
My wife was a homemaker and never had any CPP . I worked and still work ( I’m 77 ) , however since my father died at 62 I took my CPP at 60 . My wife passed away at 65 and CPP magnanimously donated $2500 towards her burial costs. From that time onwards I have only received half of my CPP, that I busted my a§§ for . Americans can draw social security anywhere in the world, but we can only live outside of Canada for 6 months or chance losing our OAS . So what keeps people from living elsewhere? We used to brag about our country and its healthcare being free, well that’s a giant load of BS , I’ve been waiting 2 years for a shoulder replacement surgery . Government lawyers have stacked the deck against us and we blindly follow their orders.
Something is wrong with your comment. If a person has never made any CPP contributions, then they will not receive the $2,500 death benefit. Also, CPP is contributory, so you would not lose your own CPP if your spouse dies. You would lose her CPP only. Perhaps you mean you are now receiving half the OAS, which would make sense as her OAS would stop when she died, while your OAS will continue. I suspect your wife worked a bit prior to marriage and did contribute to CPP during that time. OAS and CPP are not the same. You can receive both CPP and OAS if you live outside of Canada during retirement, but there are rules around this. Some countries you can receive, while some countries you cannot. It depends on the treaty which are in place with each country.
What happens? The government steal's it from your love ones.
That was actually very informative, contrary to other channels who gives just enough information to have you call them and pay for the answer.
THANK YOU, for having an HONEST channel.
An excellent explanation of the system work. Very clear that yer getting screwed at every turn.😢
My father collected 9 cheques and died suddenly. The CPP gave a $2500 death benefit, which has not changed in 2 decades.
A spouse can only get a top up to the maximum CPP benefit. So basically, unlike an RRSP, which is taxable in the year of death, the CPP is a scam.
Contribute for decades and the money stays with the CPP.
If y die before the 15th of the month it gets clawed back.
45+yr mortgage at $3000+ a month, house never payed before retirement. Or apartment at over 2000/month. If your 55 or younger now, forget your retirement, you'll have to work till you die.
@@garth217hey, hard working folk here... I'll be working till I die unless there's some big changes. Started working at 12 and now almost 40. Consider yourself lucky to have been a hard working folk in a better time.
@@amandawilliams7121if you don’t own a house now,you r priced out,houses r in the millions…tough for the younger generation
@@garth217 you have to be working at something that pays decent money AND be smart with what you do with your money I feel Rich on the $23K a year the government pays me because I bought my acreage with cash some 30 years ago enabling me to live rent and mortgage free and save most of my money so now I'm property AND cash rich . I save most of my pension money .
Wow, move to the country and find yourselves a home in an unorganized town. Taxes are cheeper
@shirleynoel916 it varies. My small house in an 8000 inhabitants town costs more in taxes than my bigger one with 60 acres of land in a 10x larger city.
Most of this is not true. I worked 2 x 8 jobs and paid CPP from each job. I get $600 in my CPP. This is highway robbery in Canada. People who worked less than me get more than me because I am paying to keep people who are on Welfare, Aish, and all the other programs. The Canadian Governemtn is not paiying these benefits out of their money, it is out of our money for all the hard work we put in.
It's really unfair...
What a joke .
Would be more fair if you get a % of what you contributed .
amount of CPP depends on now much did you contrubute into CPP. You may have even 3 jobs, but if you do not make maximum pensionable earnings, you will not get maximum pension even though you worked 40 years. We have to contribute maximum as per maximum pensiobable earnings all 39 years. It's can happen that someone worked less years but was msking more money and contributed more to CPP, this is why his/her pension is higher.
don't forget their (govt employees) life pension fund. That must be filled to the extreme before being moral and fair
True, old people who never worked in Canada received $1800 per month but I worked 35 years and only received way less
My dad is 99 years old this month and I'd still collecting three pensions! 😅
He is very lucky, bec some of my pensions stop at age 80 and I am still have mortgages
i find it very offensive that if a partner dies, the other spouse gets a reduced amount of the person who dies. WHY. It all still should be paid to the partner. That is marriage. That is fair. he/she paid into it. Why should the govt keep it.
Because nowadays people are getting greedy and refusing to have kids. That money the gov keeps should go to people with kids
But someone from india can here and get all the benifits available without lifting a finger to build this once great country... thank you trudeau
Ya, that’s not how it works. No contributions, no pension
That's right. Don't you have to pay into CPP 10 yrs before you can receive CPP
Wrong
Very informative thanks!
If you absolutely need the money to get by, you better keep working longer. If you are fine already without the CPP, take it asap. Simple.
For a single mom with dependent PWD son, and I passes away, will my depended disabled son received survivor benefit?
Only a spouse or the estate of the deceased is eligible to receive your cpp not dependent. That's why you need to make it a point to save money by either taking a life insurance that pays deagh benefit or save with a discipline where you do not have access to take out the money (UL)
No one in their right mind would voluntarily give money to a plan like this if it was offered by a private organization either a bank or an insurance company
Can you do the same presentation but add on a stay home mom who only made less than 10 years of CPP contributions. What if that earning spouse passes after retirement.
CPP is a great program to ensure that people save for their retirement. Left to their own devices, many people wouldn't save anything. It is in everyone's best interest that everyone have some money put aside for their latter years. Every first world country has a similar program.
So tell me. What does $1254 get you these days?
@AWalkWithWhizzy So many people have an input, but reality is far different. I have always worked, except for 7 yrs raising my kids, always was paid above table, always paid taxes, I can count the number of times on one hand that I had to utilize any hospital, personally, I hate hospitals. With all that said, I was very lucky to have money enough to pay bills, as well as food. Save money? No idea where that would come from. So many paydays, $10 was what I had left to figure out what was more important, eat or gas so I didnt have to walk the 2 miles to work in the morning, and I know I wasnt alone in this. Lets see how many argue with me about this, but this was a fact of MY life.
@@BawkBawkBawk666 enmax, direct energy bills cellphone and property tax in cheaper area
The crime minister steals it
The maximum contribution to CPP is around $3,500 per year. Let's say you start at 18 and you worked non stop until 65. That's 47 years. 47 * $3,500 is $164,500. Let's assume you're eligible for the full amount, $1,254. It would take approximately 11 years for you to get your $164,500 back. If you live past 76, you will start getting free money.
Instead, if you invest that $3,500 into a 5% investment account every single year until 65, in 47 years, you'll have around $650,000. So when people criticize Conservatives for wanting to scrap retirement security, this is why. Instead of relying on government to secure your retirement, you can instead learn how to put away the money you would otherwise pay to CPP into an investment. Note that this is only 5%. There are others like GIC, stocks, life insurance, etc. that pays way more. This is not even taking things like dividends into account.
Not $3500
Yeah, it’s easy to say : invest and get only 5%. Not many stocks make that for 47 years in a row. Plus every 7-10 years the majority of investments drop significantly and have to start over. The government investments are somehow safer because they are managed by professionals not like us independently. Yes, there are investments that have huge earnings some years but nobody knows prior so can transfer the funds there so can make big $$$. I still think the government should be responsible for the management of the pension.
Watching all the way from Canada
What if I’m not married? Will my kids receive it?
I am asking the same question.
No, they will not , there will be a 2,500.00 payout and it will be taxed.
No your children will not unless they are a dependent, if you have no dependents then you will get a one time payout of 2,500.00 and it will be taxed so , it will be much less. I have gone through this.
@@pushnookyou get the $2500 automatically do u hv to apply for it?
Yeah we don't get that much. basically under 500/month for him and under 400 for me. You have to work until you draw your last breath. I'm glad that our house will be paid for in less than 10 years because we are going to have to live somewhere and the streets are not an option. They don't take into account the years you raised kids at home and had no job. They don't believe women work when at home and it is not valued or paid labour. I took in two of my son's friends who had nowhere to go. I got no money for that and no thanks. This is where I'm at.
Apparently there is a way to access the full amount but you have to do ot the right way or theyll get you
How
Very well explained. My question is if one spouse never worked so no CPP contribution therefore no CPP. What happens when the spouse who is getting CPP and dies
@@hartplanet356 thanks
@@hartplanet356 and the rest goes to Ukraine
Totally miss single people? (answer big fat zero---so message to singles-start right away)
We singles always get the short end of the stick on financial matters. Even with RRSP contributions there are all sorts of benefits that married couples have in terms of being able to save taxes. We singles are screwed LOL
CPP should be optional because I’d sure as heck not make contributions, I’d be investing my own money for me and my family. I don’t need or want the government for anything.
like we will worry🙂in the afterlife.
Two husbands passed away. I was told i would receive a survivor’s pension based on the husband who had contributed the most. Hah! The first payment was LESS than what I had been receiving. And it was sent by mail instead of automatic deposit as they said would happen. Added woe QPP contributions had to be factored in. Took 11 months and I STILL don’t know if the figures are correct. How can one tell?
Great video. One question though. What if the surviving spouse is under 60 and is still working? What pension would they get?
Due to the simple fact the money i earn today will be worthless in 50 years due to inflation, no matter what they may tell you, your CPP goes to the elderly of now, it isnt saved directly for you. That would be stupid.
Well said. A lot of people think it's a personal bank account of sorts, they don't understand that it's paying the elderly now, and if you never worked much, you don't get anything but old age security.
I spent 30 years in the military. If I die before my wife she only gets 1/2 of my pension. Her only income is OAS and a small CPP. Where is the justice?
A 1 bedroom apt in Edmonton is about $1200 a month.
Food, gas, insurance, vet bills, people are struggling!
Don't come to Ontario because the rents range from $1500-2000$.
@ Thankyou ✨☕️✨🇨🇦🐿
My contribution to CPP max almost for last 34 years. Before that i contributed regular amount. My CPP is even less than 1000. It is way less than you mentioned. Why is that?
Mine too!
What happens when both A&B pass away like both parents ?
Where does the rest of that pension go?
Government Or to their adult children?
What irritates me is that the system is so rigged in favour of couples. As a single person, all I have is my own cpp...no top up after someone dies. Not to mention that couples often have more wealth than a single person anyway. What a crock.
Great video!👍👍
I went to Service Canada to apply for my pension in my native country. The girl from the office instead to give me the right paper form to send my proof of work to Edmonton where they are processing the paper work ,she give me the paper erly retire in Canada. I was in totally shock when I receive a check of 297$. I am 62,currently on unemployment and I still want to work. How can I cancel this ? In my former country I am eleigible to retire at 62.
What if my spouse passes away at age 65 but i am not collecting CPP at the moment would i receive a survivor benefit?
Yes 60% of it until the time you go to collect cpp and then your spouses amount will be less
The people who support the CPP program are the same type of people that believe the primary purpose of photo radar is to increase road safety.
Do one needs a residency of ten years before receiving cop?
I have a question? My husband passed away in June 2023. I hab applied for survival benefits but I did get any because my husband did not work in Canada 10 years at least. Also I did applied for ODSP still did not any because of my assets. I work minimum wage. Can you explain why?
I wish I could opt out. I’d rather take the $4,000 a year and put it into my own retirement savings fund. Right now I’m getting 20% returns through my work group plan. CPP is a scam.
Is this different from old age benefit or is that a separate amount given
So please tell me what happens to the money one cannot claim. Does it go back to the government or where does it go. I’m very curious about this situation?
If I had to guess, it likely goes to transition people from welfare to CPP. Also for people on government disability.
Rule 1 says Surviving spouse receives 60% of dead’s spouse’s CPP. In sample cases 2 of both spouses receive $1000. Why does the surviving spouse receives only extra $254 instead of $600(=$1000x60%) when other spouse passes away ?
Just need to understand HOW you come up $254 which happen to be the Max CPP $1254-$1000 which is NOT 60% of surviving spouse’s CPP.
PS: At end Spouse would regardless still receives only the max CPP $1254.
The PS part answers it. 1254 is the max, regardless of the fact 600 remains
The government is not stupid, there is airways a cap at $1254, would b great to get 60% of $1000 , $600,government saved $346 to fund useless programs
Is this amount is only on Canada (Federal) or included the Provincial too for the 1254$ per month
So if you started with an investment of $4000 (annual CPP deduction) and every year you invested $4000 (annual CPP deductions from your pay) at 5% interest rates then compounded over a 40 year period (25-65 years of workable age) it would equal around $526,000. So technically speaking to receive that amount you would have to live until you are 99 years old if you retire at 65 years old. Average Canadian age at death is 84 years old, so on Average CPP gets to keep almost $255,000 from each Canadian….So never ever defer your CPP take it as soon as you can at 60. There’s a reason why anyone who offers financial services lives a very rich lifestyle 🙄🙄🙄 just take a look in the parking lot at your investment office/broker you deal with…
One spouse is still working and the other is collecting CPP. If the one collecting CPP dies, will the other spouse get something even though they haven’t reached 65?
What happens to ex MPs government pensions when they pass away?
Thank you for this video! Can CPP transfer to minor children after death?
Want to be even more frustrated with the scheme?
Your employer also pays into the fund at a dollar for dollar amount relative to your payroll deduction. If you were to max out your payment with one employer and started a job with a different company the same year, the deductions start from $0 for both, but only your portion is refunded when you file your taxes. The employers matching overpayment amount stays in the hands of the CPP.
So if you were to work 2 jobs and max out contributions at both you've added 3x your annual max deduction to the CPP (1 from you, 2 from your employers) but are not afforded any additional value at your retirement relative to someone who had a sole employer and maxed their contributions but ultimately only added 2x their annual maximum (1 from them, 1 from their employer).
EI is a similar situation, but the employer actually contributes at 1.4x your deductions. Now that whole scheme is an entirely different can of worms and would collapse on itself incredibly quickly if it worked like an actual insurance underwriter.
The government is nothing more than an organized crime syndicate.
I don’t know about u but if I pay in cpp more then once a yr, cause I only work shutdowns and cpp starts over I get it back on my taxes. U only pay cpp once a yr, regardless I can’t wait till Trudeau gets out, but then polivere will be taking out cpps anyways, so that why I have a $4000 month union pension screw the governments
@ChrisJones-rl5ow yeah, that's what I was getting at, you or I get back what we overpay, but the company doesn't get back their portion of overpayments. You have a deduction that comes out of your paycheck but what you don't see is the company you work for also pays in a matching amount until you max out. We get our overpayments back when we file taxes, but the companies matching dollar of overpayment isn't refunded to the company, it stays in government hands.
Not trying to cry foul for any company here, but just pointing out how someone like us who goes over the max with multiple employers actually has had more total contributions added to the program but are still only eligible for the same maximum benefits at retirement as someone who has only had 1 employer and maxed out yearly. The plan gets their max, their employers matching amount and thats it.
If we maxed out with two employers, the plan gets our max, employer 1 matched max and employer 2 matched max, we get back the overpayment we made at employer 2, but their payment stays in the plan and we don't get credit for that at the end of the day.
If it happened every year, we wind up responsible for ultimately putting in 1.5 times what a single employer person puts in but are left with the notion that everyone puts in the same value because of the individual max deduction. They never touch on the employers matching contributions. The employers portion of the contributed money doesn't come out of our pocket, but it is on the back of our time punched and doesn't get reflected at retirement.
Hope that explains it a bit better.
what happens if you are divorced?
Would the person have to working in Canada for more the. 10 yrs
CPP should have a buy out for Canadian citizens that have paid into this for decades.
For example, take buy out at 60= 150,000 or 65=250,000.
All the money hard working people put into this then if you take early cpp and die just afterwards, Government gets to keep all this money . BS
sir. cpp is contributed pension by the employee. if same employee contribute in company pension after he past away he or she will get allmost 70 percent his company pension.cpp is contributed pension why goverment refuse to pay 70 percent to the survival person.
I am asking a question my son and I have been together all of 37 years he is basically my care giver for many of those years I have no spouse. So can my son get anything when it's my time to cross the pearly bridge . Please tell me his. Name is on my application when I filed for my pension. ? Thank you for your help !!!
I'm 60 and my wife is 53, i am not yet collecting cpp and wont till 65 because of some pension clawbacks i will suffer upon collecting. What will happen if i die before collecting with my cpp, will my wife get at least a credit for what i have paid? her cpp will be low as she is a new comer and her working years were not long. also what will she get if i die and she isnt collecting her cpp yet?
How can I tell a story of People who contribute and are not receiving the maximum..
There spouses have contributed maximum but chooses to deprive some Spouse by way of Aprisals
Question what happens they weren’t married legally?
I wonder whether the common law applies here, for common law allows tge division of assets in a divorce. Good question tho.
CPP is a very poor investment. If a person would contribute the same amount in an RRSP, the return would be exponentially greater and you don’t lose the estate doesn’t lose the funds when the person passes away.
Forget the response, put same amount in GICs and you won't have to pay taxes on cashing in .
@@frankroy9423 👍
RRSP's are just a backup scam. Worst idea ever.
The govn. Is doing cpp cause they don't think that the majority of people can handle their own money wisely or invest for themself.
Some can and would, but some would spend it all then would be on the streets...
Unfortunately a lot of people don't or can't save for retirement, so this is one way to make sure they have some money along with their OAS/GIS.
an even better question is , "What happens to your CPP if you go to jail" ?
Absolutely ridiculous!!! Both my parents paid into their CPP their lives and neither them or their estate were able to withdraw a penny from what they paid into (they passed away before 65)
Ps, it should not be capped if I or my wife dies and one of us are maximum eligible 🤬
Spouse A receives CPP and dies. Does Spouse B get anything if they have never contributed to CPP?
60%, thats it. the other 40% goes to Ukraine and Turdeau's cronies.
@@traceym1778 60%.....I'm surprised.
can ur parents pass along there cpp to there children ?
Yes what happen if you passed before you retire.
Govt get it.
TRUDEAU GETS IT
A joke, give that CPP to Trudeau and other in government workers 😢
U think Trudeau made the CPP rules?
Pretty much slavery.
Thanks
And a tip from two friends who retired one was a teacher, and they both said that if they had turned thier rrsp's to resp's they would have had way less taxes to pay! Thier words not mine and they both folks of the cloth ( aka seniorty members of a church so no reason to lie )
Here’s the million dollar question though… what happens to your CPP you paid into throughout your working years if you pass away in your 30’s to 50’s? Where does it go then? Say you started working at 15 years old and pass away at age 45, where would your 30 years of contributing go then? And what if you don’t have a spouse? Does it default to your next of kin like your children??
Then you're SOL.The money stays in the plan and pays the cpp of strangers...that's how it works. 🤷🏼♀️
@@danag812I don’t know if that’s 100% true because there’s the death benefit which I think they calculate based off your past earnings and amounts paid (so perhaps past CPP contributions are included) and I know you can apply for it on behalf of the decedent’s children because I’ve seen the required forms before.
@@Godschosenfollower ok so you get $2500 out but I'm quite sure the rest stays in the plan.
i been working for the last 45 years and the only thing that know is that i will continued paying taxes to our worse enemy the government until the day that died
plus I working for some time one extra part time
Can I cancel paying cpp permanently?
If no spouse no dependent can you give it to your nephew
No
@@sjbutler2330 thanks if I don’t have any savings the cpp only $280 per month and only live here for 30 years according to the statistics 📈 at least $3000 a month can make the living. If no dependent financial support. How can we make a living
when one passes away your spouse gets topped up from your cpp, so, basically your money is gone down the toilet if you worked and studied hard and went to work each day you’re cpp is gone. Specifically if your cpp is already paying around the top amount. CPP is a rip off for the deceased who worked and paid into it and is left with NOTHING!!!! Start paying death benefits properly or loose CPP!!!!
I'm not married, but my wife was
If someone works for cash income no cpp and income deduction and get more income without paying any taxes when they retired why they can get the government benefits?
@@queenlucky4289no
@@queenlucky4289how can you get cpp if you didn’t contribute lol
Your pension is only allocated for apartment bill, just line up at food bank for your food when you’re retired🤣🤣🤣
GOOD JOB IT WAS EASY TO UNDERSTAND ....👌👌👌👌👌🤘🤘🤘👆👆👆👆👍👍👍👍
Don’t understand why anyone would wait till 70 to collect. That why the government offers more money when you’re 70 there’s a better chance they don’t have to pay out.
If I pass away and I have a dependent disabled son.will he geyt my pension?
Yes
If you take your pension at 60 and live well past 65 then in actuality you are getting more than you paid into it.
In other words, the government keeps it.
They give your CPP to Punjabi and Nigerian refugees.
CPP wont exist by the time im able to collect. Too many immigrants in Canada now collecting our tax benefits without ever have contributed , not to mention everything has allready been spent by the GUV - meaning - the fund doesnt even exist , we just havent been told yet..
Next five years we are looking at digital dollar and UBI .
I won’t make it to 60 so glad I’ve never really paid into CPP.
Why do you use the euphemism "passed away" instead of "died". It just emphasizes how bad and scary death is; that we shouldn't say the word.
It's a choice! deal with it
It’s death . You’re DEAD when you die . Grow up !
Info I didn't know
So why are immigrants over 60 eligible to collect cpp
not true my ex. passed and still children at home with me and im disabled on my pension early..and I wasn't getting anything from the scummer or the gov't🤬
Why somebody paid for cpp for whole life and when passes away his wife gets nothing or some of it ? Government deserves more than wife ?
Elbert Island
R.I.P. off.
Why do you have to call to postpone CPP?
no you have to apply for it .OAS you get automaticli after reaching 65 so if you like to postpone call them
The politicians take it and give themselves a big fat raise! Or they find ways to waste it in the porc bills they write!
May as well work.
In order words avoid taxes as much as possible and don't rely on the govt for anything.
I permanently left canada, is it possible to refund or reimburse my contributions from cpp..
They've already given it to the "new Canadians" they can backdate their CPP they never paid into when they get their citizenship to the day they landed here.