FAT FIRE+ · Canada

Can You Retire on $10M in Toronto?

The honest math. Standard FIRE assumptions, cost-of-living data from our Toronto guide, and the caveats most retirement calculators skip.

The Answer

Yes, comfortably

At the standard 4% safe withdrawal rate, you'd generate meaningfully more than local cost of living, with buffer for lifestyle upgrades, healthcare, and inflation.

At 4% rule, you have

$33,333/mo

Local cost of living

$2,668/mo

Monthly buffer

+$30,665

What $10M Actually Generates

Withdrawal StrategyMonthly Incomevs Cost of LivingHorizon
Conservative (3.25%)
Wade Pfau's horizon-adjusted rate for 50-year early retirement
$27,083+$24,41550+ years
Moderate (3.5%)
Pfau-Kitces research for 40-year FIRE retirement
$29,167+$26,49940 years
Standard 4% Rule (Bengen)
Classic Bengen/Trinity 30-year safe rate
$33,333+$30,66530 years
Aggressive (5%)
Trinity Study showed ~83% success over 30 years; more reliable for shorter horizons
$41,667+$38,999~20 years

Based on William Bengen's 4% rule (1994) and horizon-adjusted extensions by Wade Pfau and Michael Kitces. See Safe Withdrawal Rate by Age for details on choosing your rate.

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These numbers use generic FIRE assumptions. Run your personal plan with your actual portfolio, spending, expected return, and tax situation — free, no signup required.

Where the $2,668/month Goes in Toronto

Rent (1BR, city center)
$2,000
Groceries & food
$348
Utilities
$120
Transportation
$50
Healthcare
$150

Numbers are for a comfortable solo lifestyle. Couples typically run 1.5× these costs; families with kids 2–2.5×. For full lifestyle data, see the Toronto city guide.

The Full FIRE Number for Toronto

If you want to retire in Toronto using the standard 4% rule with a clean 30-year buffer, your FIRE number is:

$800,400($32,016 annual × 25)

You have $10,000,000. That's $9,199,600 above target.

What Taxes Would You Pay in Canada?

Canada taxes worldwide income.

What This Analysis Doesn't Include

Your actual tax drag

We assume baseline SWR. Your real post-tax income depends on account mix (Roth/traditional/taxable), Social Security, and where funds are held.

Healthcare pre-Medicare

The healthcare line uses local averages. US expats pre-65 often face much higher costs; EU and Thai retirees often much lower.

Sequence of returns risk

A 4% rule works historically — but not if your first decade has bad returns. See our sequence risk guide.

Currency & visa

FX swings and visa renewal requirements change the math for non-nationals. Research the specific visa pathway to Canada before committing.

Build your personal retirement plan — free

These are generic assumptions. Your plan depends on your actual portfolio, expected returns, tax situation, Social Security, healthcare needs, and timeline. Create a free account to save your plan, track progress over time, and get AI coaching tailored to you.

Other Amounts in Toronto

With $10M, You Could Also Afford

$10M comfortably supports retirement in Toronto. It also works in these similar-or-somewhat-pricier cities.

Go Deeper

Cost-of-living data sourced from Numbeo, government sources, and research; tax data from state/country sources with per-page provenance. Educational content only — consult a fiduciary advisor before acting on any retirement plan.