Retirement
How much do you need to retire in Manitoba?
Estimate the nest egg you'll need and whether you're on track — using Manitoba household spending, your expected government benefits, and life expectancy. Education, not advice.
Pre-filled with average {province} household spending — adjust to your plan.
CPP + OAS for one person, gross. A couple gets about double — which lowers the target a lot. Most receive less than the maximum.
Short by $243,888
Projected $478,203 at retirement. Save about $1,004/month more to close the gap.
Roughly $722,091–$818,729 depending on investment returns.
Planning from age 65 to about 85 (20.1 more years, life-table based).
Assumes a 3.5% real (after-inflation) return — 2% at the conservative end — withdrawals through your life expectancy, and today's dollars. Pre-tax and simplified: it doesn't model tax on withdrawals, RRIF minimums, or OAS clawback.
Retirement
Typical spending in Manitoba
Average household, per year — the basis for the pre-filled spending estimate.
Educational information only — not financial advice. This is a simplified, pre-tax estimate; speak with a qualified advisor for a real plan.
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