Do you qualify
Your employment history is not a factor in determining eligibility. You can receive the Old Age Security (OAS) pension even if you have never worked or are still working.
If you are living in Canada, you must:
- be 65 years old or older
- be a Canadian citizen or a legal resident at the time we approve your OAS pension application
- have resided in Canada for at least 10 years since the age of 18
If you are living outside Canada, you must:
- be 65 years old or older
- have been a Canadian citizen or a legal resident of Canada on the day before you left Canada
- have resided in Canada for at least 20 years since the age of 18
Canadians working outside Canada for Canadian employers
Canadians working outside Canada for Canadian employers, such as the Canadian Armed Forces and banks, may have their time working abroad counted as residence in Canada.
To qualify this time working abroad as residence, you must have either:
- returned to Canada within 6 months of ending employment
- turned 65 years old while still employed and maintained residence in Canada during your time outside of Canada
You must provide the following 2 documents:
- proof of employment from the employer
- proof of physically returning to Canada (unless you turned 65 while still employed outside Canada).
Under certain conditions, spouses, common-law partners, dependents, and Canadians working abroad for international organizations may also count time spent abroad as residence in Canada.
If neither of the above scenarios applies to you, you may still qualify for the Old Age Security pension, a pension from another country, or from both countries if you have:
- lived in one of the countries Canada has established a social security agreement
or
- contributed to the social security system of one of the countries with which Canada has established a social security agreement.
Extra payments based on your income and your age
In addition to your Old Age Security pension, you and/or your spouse/common-law partner may be eligible for extra benefits and payments.
Other Old Age Security benefits:
You may be able to get this benefit if:
- you get the Old Age Security (OAS) pension
- you are 65 or older
- you are a Canadian citizen or a legal resident
- you live in Canada
- your income is below the maximum annual income threshold for the GIS based on your marital status
You may be able to get this benefit if:
- your spouse or common-law partner receives the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS)
- you are 60 to 64 years of age
- you are a Canadian citizen or a legal resident
- you have lived in Canada for at least 10 years since the age of 18
- you and your spouse or common-law partner’s combined income is below the maximum annual income threshold for the Allowance
You may be able to get this benefit if:
- your spouse or common-law partner has died and you have not remarried or entered into a common-law relationship
- you are 60 to 64 years of age
- you are a Canadian Citizen or legal resident
- you have lived in Canada for at least 10 years since the age of 18
- your annual income is less than the maximum annual income threshold for the Allowance for the Survivor
One-time payments:
- One-time payment for older seniors born before June 30, 1947
Retirement hub
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