As many B.C. business owners know, retirement works a little differently in Vancouver. Real estate wealth may be tied up in a principal residence, rental property, recreational property in Whistler or the Gulf Islands, or proceeds from a business built in the Lower Mainland. Add registered accounts, non-registered investments, pensions, corporate assets and charitable goals, and retirement income becomes a coordination exercise.
The goal is to draw income in a way that supports your lifestyle, manages tax and preserves flexibility for family, giving and future planning.
A Vancouver financial advisor can help connect these moving parts before retirement begins, so income decisions aren’t made one account at a time.
Start with income sequencing
The order you draw from your accounts can change the tax outcome. RRSPs and RRIFs create taxable income. TFSAs can provide tax-free withdrawals. Non-registered accounts may produce interest, dividends or capital gains. Corporate assets may create salary, dividends or other planning options.
For high-net-worth retirees, the question often becomes: which source of income should be used first, and how much should come from each?
Drawing too heavily from one account may create unnecessary taxable income. Leaving too much in another may reduce flexibility later. A strong retirement income plan maps out several years at once, not just the next withdrawal.
Look beyond the RRIF minimum
RRIF minimums provide a starting point, but they shouldn’t automatically drive the plan. Some retirees may benefit from drawing more than the minimum in certain years to smooth taxable income over time. Others may choose to preserve registered assets longer, depending on pension income, investment assets, corporate wealth and estate goals.
The right withdrawal strategy depends on your full income picture, your spouse or partner’s income, your age, your charitable plans and your estate priorities.
Coordinate investment income
Not all investment income is taxed the same way. Interest, eligible dividends, foreign income and capital gains can each affect your return differently after tax. For Vancouver families with larger non-registered portfolios, asset location can matter.
That may mean reviewing which investments belong in registered accounts, which belong in non-registered accounts and how much taxable income the portfolio is expected to generate each year.
A Vancouver financial advisor can work with your broader advisory team to help align portfolio structure with retirement income needs and tax planning.
Plan for corporate assets
Many high-net-worth Vancouverites have built wealth through private corporations, professional corporations or incorporated businesses. Retirement income may come partly from retained earnings, dividends, investment holdings inside a corporation or proceeds from a business sale.
These decisions should be coordinated with personal income planning. How and when money comes out of a corporation can affect tax, lifestyle cash flow, estate value and family planning.
Build charitable giving into retirement income
For families who want to give back, charitable giving can be built directly into retirement planning. Donations of publicly traded securities, planned gifts and giving over multiple years may help support causes you care about while improving tax efficiency.
This works best when giving is planned alongside income, investments and estate goals.
Make tax efficiency an ongoing strategy
Tax-efficient retirement income doesn’t come from one decision. It comes from reviewing income sources, account structure, withdrawal timing, investment mix and family goals together.
Working with a Vancouver financial advisor can help high-net-worth families turn accumulated wealth into income with more structure, more intention and fewer disconnected decisions.

