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Locked-In Retirement Account (LIRA)

Canadian account used to hold pension assets transferred out of a registered pension plan while keeping them locked in for retirement use.

A locked-in retirement account (LIRA) is a Canadian retirement account used to hold pension assets that have been transferred out of a registered pension plan while preserving rules that restrict early access.

The word “locked-in” is the key idea: the assets remain designated for retirement rather than becoming fully flexible savings.

Why a LIRA Matters

A LIRA matters because it sits between pension accumulation and retirement income.

When workers leave an employer or move pension assets out of a plan, the LIRA can preserve retirement status without turning the money into ordinary spendable cash.

How It Works in Finance Practice

A LIRA is usually funded by a transfer from pension assets rather than by ordinary new annual contributions.

In practice, the account is used to:

  • preserve pension-origin assets for retirement

  • keep tax deferral in place

  • separate locked-in money from more flexible savings

  • prepare assets for later conversion into retirement-income vehicles

LIRA vs. RRSP

An RRSP is a broader Canadian retirement savings wrapper with contribution-driven accumulation. A LIRA is more specifically a holding structure for pension-derived money with withdrawal restrictions.

Locked-in does not mean non-invested

The account can still hold investments. The lock applies to access rules, not to whether the assets can be invested.

  • RRSP: A more flexible Canadian retirement wrapper often contrasted with a LIRA.

  • Registered Retirement Income Fund (RRIF)"): A retirement-income account used after the accumulation stage.

  • Locked-In Retirement Income Fund (LRIF)"): A later-stage income vehicle for locked-in retirement assets.

  • Pension Plan: The institutional retirement arrangement from which locked-in assets may originate.

Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026