July 7: BEST FROM THE BLOGOSPHERE
July 7, 2025

62 per cent of Canadians surveyed see homeownership as a key retirement strategy: HOOPP study
More than half of Canadians recently surveyed by the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan (HOOPP) said they “were depending on the sale of their home to put a retirement plan in place,” reports The Financial Post.
Relying on your home to provide retirement income is a strategy that has “issues” associated with it, the Post notes.
“Sixty-two per cent of people surveyed by HOOPP said homeownership is `a key part of their retirement strategy, either as a financial investment or a source of stability in retirement,’” the article states.
“Forty-four per cent of people said they were depending on the sale of their home to put a retirement fund in place, up from 42 per cent last year and 38 per cent in 2023,” the Post article continues.
“When people are younger, they have to save for two key assets in life, one being a house and one being retirement,” states Jennifer Rook, HOOPP’s vice-president of strategy, global intelligence and advocacy, in the Post article. “As the house becomes more expensive, you are kind of forced to choose a little bit more. What we are seeing is people are really still striving for the house and putting stock in (it),” she adds.
Surprisingly, one-third of survey respondents “said they would remortgage their homes to fund their retirement — the first time HOOPP asked that question in the seven years of the survey,” the article points out.
Planning to sell your house to pay for retirement costs is a move “that is a lot less certain than it was when you embarked on that path many years prior,” Rook tells the Post.
And having a mortgage to pay down – in retirement – is seen as a possibility by 65 per cent of homeowners surveyed. “They (the 65 per cent) are worried that they will still have a mortgage by the time they are ready to retire, up from 51 per cent in 2024 and 45 per cent in 2023,” the article notes.
And while the survey found 48 per cent are “worried about being able to afford their current or future mortgage payments,” a drop from 52 per cent last year, 62 per cent of those surveyed who don’t own a home “doubt they will ever be able to purchase a home based on current interest rates.”
“The survey said younger generations are more likely to be banking on homeownership to fund their so-called golden years, with 55 per cent of those aged 18 to 34 saying they are going to rely on their home to `set them up for retirement,’ compared to half of those aged 35 to 54 and 41 per cent of those aged 55 to 64,” the article continues.
“When you’re young, you think of things differently than you do as you get a bit older,” Rook tells the Post. “But it might also speak to the availability of a pension.”
“Perhaps that’s why 88 per cent of those surveyed by HOOPP said they would be willing to contribute regular instalments to a defined-benefit pension plan, which is structured to guarantee payments for life once you stop working,” the article concludes.
It’s a great closing point. Having a pension plan through your workplace is an excellent way to provide yourself with additional retirement income, over and above the modest benefits offered by the Canada Pension Plan and Old Age Security. If you have access to a pension plan at your workplace, be sure to join up and contribute to the max.
If you don’t have a plan through your work, have a look at the Saskatchewan Pension Plan. With SPP, you decide how much to contribute each year – we do the rest. We’ll invest your pension savings in our professionally managed, low-fee pooled fund. You can join as an individual, or – if you are an employer – you can leverage SPP as your company pension plan.
At retirement, SPP members have numerous options for turning their savings into income, including a range of lifetime annuity payment options or the more flexible Variable Benefit.
Check out SPP today!
Join the Wealthcare Revolution – follow SPP on Facebook!
Written by Martin Biefer

Martin Biefer is Senior Pension Writer at Avery & Kerr Communications in Nepean, Ontario. A veteran reporter, editor and pension communicator, he’s now a freelancer. Interests include golf, line dancing and classic rock, and playing guitar. Got a story idea? Let Martin know via LinkedIn.
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