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CPP Increase 2026: Canada Pension Plan Payments Rise 2%—Official Payment Dates, New Contribution Ceilings, and What “Revalorisation” Really Means
27 December 2025
4 mins read

CPP Increase 2026: Canada Pension Plan Payments Rise 2%—Official Payment Dates, New Contribution Ceilings, and What “Revalorisation” Really Means

Canadians who rely on the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) are set to see a bigger monthly deposit starting in January 2026—an increase tied to inflation, not a one-time bonus.

Service Canada’s official CPI adjustment confirms that CPP benefits paid in 2025 will increase by 2.0% for 2026, applying from January through December 2026.

That timing matters for household budgets: the first CPP payment that reflects the 2026 increase is scheduled for January 28, 2026, and payments continue monthly on set dates through the year.

Below is what’s changing, what’s not, and how to check your updated amount—plus why many pension discussions use terms like “indexation” and “revalorisation” to describe the same underlying mechanism.


What’s changing in 2026: a confirmed 2.0% CPP indexation increase

CPP is designed to protect purchasing power over time. The Government of Canada states that CPP amounts are adjusted once a year in January, and the annual adjustment is based on the percentage change between two consecutive 12‑month CPI periods.

For 2026, that formula results in a 2.0% increase for benefits paid in 2025, setting a higher baseline for the entire 2026 calendar year.

This inflation adjustment applies broadly to CPP benefit categories—including retirement, disability, and survivor benefits—because they’re all part of the CPP payment system administered by Service Canada.


Official CPP payment dates for 2026

Service Canada publishes the payment schedule in its Benefits Payment Dates calendar. For CPP in 2026, the official dates are:

  • January 28, 2026
  • February 25, 2026
  • March 27, 2026
  • April 28, 2026
  • May 27, 2026
  • June 26, 2026
  • July 29, 2026
  • August 27, 2026
  • September 25, 2026
  • October 28, 2026
  • November 26, 2026
  • December 22, 2026

Service Canada also notes that it may take a few days for payments to arrive, with additional delays possible if you’re receiving cheques rather than direct deposit (and it advises allowing 5–10 business days for mailed cheques).


How much more will you get from the 2% CPP increase?

The simplest way to estimate the 2026 inflation adjustment is:

Your current monthly CPP amount × 0.02 = your approximate monthly increase

A few real-world reference points from Government of Canada figures:

  • The maximum CPP retirement pension at age 65 (January 2025) is $1,433.00/month. A 2% indexation would add about $28.66/month (roughly $343.92/year), all else equal.
  • The average retirement pension for new beneficiaries (July 2025) is $848.37/month. A 2% indexation would be about $16.97/month (roughly $203.64/year), all else equal.

Your actual deposit can differ from “clean math” because CPP amounts vary by:

  • when you started CPP,
  • how long and how much you contributed,
  • which CPP benefit type you receive,
  • and the program’s calculation rules.

One common misconception: many headlines focus on the maximum, but most people receive less than that because the maximum generally requires long, high, consistent contributions near annual limits. The Government of Canada itself emphasizes that maximum and average amounts aren’t guaranteed and depend on contribution history and start age.


Why January 2026 matters: it’s not just about retirees

CPP news tends to spike around year-end for a reason: December is typically the last payment under the current year’s rates, and January is when the new inflation-adjusted baseline takes effect.

Personal-finance coverage aimed at newcomers has also highlighted the confirmed 2% increase and the 2026 payment calendar—pointing readers back to Service Canada for verification.

But workers still contributing to CPP will notice a different set of changes in 2026—especially those earning above CPP’s annual ceilings.


2026 CPP contribution ceilings are higher: YMPE rises to $74,600 and YAMPE to $85,000

Alongside benefit indexation, CPP has a second “moving part” that affects working Canadians: contribution ceilings, which are tied to wages.

For 2026, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) sets:

  • YMPE (Year’s Maximum Pensionable Earnings): $74,600
  • YAMPE (Year’s Additional Maximum Pensionable Earnings): $85,000

These ceilings matter because CPP enhancement introduced a second tier of contributions (“CPP2”) for higher earners.

CRA explains that CPP2 contributions apply to earnings above the first ceiling (YMPE) up to the second ceiling (YAMPE), and that:

  • employees contribute 4% on earnings between YMPE and YAMPE (and employers match 4%),
  • self-employed individuals contribute 8% on that same range.

Meanwhile, CRA’s contribution table shows that the maximum annual employee (and employer) contribution in 2026 for the base CPP calculation is $4,230.45 (with a maximum self-employed contribution of $8,460.90).


“Revalorisation” vs. indexation: what Canadians are actually talking about

You’ll often see a mix of terms in online pension discussions—indexation, inflation adjustment, revaluation, and revalorisation—especially in explainers and commentary.

In plain language, the idea is the same: periodic adjustments meant to keep benefits aligned with economic reality, typically inflation (and sometimes wage growth). Commentary describing “revalorisation” often frames it as maintaining purchasing power as living costs rise. Meyka

For CPP specifically, the Government of Canada’s documentation makes the mechanics clear:

  • Benefits are indexed annually to CPI (2.0% for 2026).
  • Contribution limits and enhancement thresholds are tied to wage-based ceilings (YMPE and YAMPE), which rise over time and expand the earnings range protected by CPP.

So if you’re seeing “revalorisation” in your feed, the practical takeaway is: verify the number and the rule (CPI vs. wage ceilings), because different programs and plan components can move for different reasons.


How to confirm your new CPP amount

If you want the most accurate answer for your deposit—especially if you started CPP recently, added a post‑retirement benefit, or changed banking details—Service Canada points people toward official account tools and support:

  • Use My Service Canada Account (MSCA) to view payment information and benefit estimates.
  • Review your Statement of Contributions to see your CPP contribution history and pensionable earnings record.
  • Consider direct deposit to avoid delays, particularly during periods when mail service disruptions may affect correspondence.

Beware of viral “bonus payment” claims

As the Government of Canada’s Benefits Payment Dates calendar warns, there have been false online posts claiming one-time payments (including widely shared figures like “$680” or “$2,000 relief”). The government advises Canadians to rely on official federal and provincial/territorial websites for accurate benefit information. Canada


Expert context: is CPP financially sustainable?

Inflation adjustments naturally raise a big question: can the system support higher payments over time?

Canada’s actuarial oversight says yes. In a December 8, 2025 release tied to the 32nd Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan, the Office of the Chief Actuary emphasized CPP’s stability. Chief Actuary Assia Billig said the report reaffirms that CPP is “on solid financial footing” and will provide reliable retirement income “for decades to come.” OSFI

CPP Investments President & CEO John Graham has also underscored how central CPP is to Canadian households, noting that approximately six million Canadians received CPP benefits in 2024 and describing CPP’s role as a long-term “pension promise.” CPP Investments


Bottom line

The headline for 2026 is straightforward:

  • CPP benefits rise 2.0% in 2026 due to CPI indexation.
  • The first increased payment arrives January 28, 2026, with the rest of the year following the published schedule.
  • Working Canadians will also see higher CPP ceilings (YMPE $74,600; YAMPE $85,000), shaping contributions—and eventually, benefits—under CPP enhancement rules.

If you want to plan precisely, the most reliable step is simple: check your updated payment details through Service Canada tools—then budget around the official 2026 deposit dates.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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