The CPP Disability Benefit (CPP-D) is a monthly payment for CPP contributors under age 65 who have a severe and prolonged disability. The maximum 2026 CPP-D is $1,741.20/month, significantly more than maximum CPP retirement at any age. CPP-D automatically converts to CPP retirement at age 65, typically at a higher amount than the recipient would have received from regular CPP retirement. CPP-D applicants must meet both medical and contribution requirements.
CPP-D versus CPP retirement: amount comparison
| Benefit type | 2026 maximum monthly amount | Composition |
|---|---|---|
| CPP retirement at 60 (early) | $964.90 | Earnings-related portion only, reduced 36% |
| CPP retirement at 65 | $1,507.65 | Earnings-related portion only |
| CPP retirement at 70 (deferred) | $2,140.86 | Earnings-related portion, increased 42% |
| CPP Disability (under 65) | $1,741.20 | Flat-rate $610.46 + earnings-related max $1,130.74 |
| CPP Post-Retirement Disability Benefit | $610.46 | Flat-rate only (recipient already receiving CPP retirement) |
The flat-rate portion ($610.46 in 2026) is what makes CPP-D exceed even the deferred CPP retirement maximum at age 70 for many recipients.
Eligibility for CPP-D
Three requirements must all be met:
- Medical: Severe and prolonged disability that prevents the recipient from doing any substantially gainful work. Severe means inability to work regularly at any job. Prolonged means the disability is long-term (at least one year) or expected to result in death.
- Age: Under age 65.
- Contribution history: Sufficient CPP contributions, typically four of the last six years (or three of the last six if the contributor has 25+ years of total CPP contributions).
Application process
Application is through Service Canada using Form ISP-1151 (Application for Canada Pension Plan Disability Benefits). The form requires medical documentation from the applicant’s doctor (Form ISP-2519, Medical Report for Canada Pension Plan Disability Benefits). Service Canada reviews both the contribution record and the medical evidence.
Processing typically takes 4 to 6 months. About 35% to 45% of initial applications are approved; the rest can be appealed through the Reconsideration process and then to the Social Security Tribunal.
Automatic conversion at age 65
CPP-D ends at age 65 and is automatically replaced by CPP retirement. Service Canada calculates the retirement amount as if the disability period had been a “drop-out” of low or zero earnings. This typically produces a higher CPP retirement amount than the contributor would have received without the disability — protecting them from the income loss caused by the disability.
Example: A 58-year-old who received CPP-D for 7 years has those years dropped out of the average earnings calculation. Retirement at 65 is calculated using their working-years earnings only (typically much higher than zero), producing a CPP retirement amount close to or at the maximum.
Working while receiving CPP-D
Recipients can earn up to a defined “Allowable Earnings” amount per year (approximately $7,200 in 2026) without losing CPP-D eligibility. Earning above this triggers a CPP “Vocational Rehabilitation Program” review or termination of benefits. Employment income above the threshold suggests the recipient is no longer “incapable of regular work” — the disability test for CPP-D.
The Allowable Earnings rule lets recipients test their work capacity gradually. Earnings count for CPP retirement contribution purposes, building post-retirement benefits.
CPP Children’s Benefit
Dependent children (under 18, or 18-25 if in full-time school) of a CPP-D recipient receive the CPP Children’s Benefit, a flat $307.81/month per child in 2026. The benefit is paid in addition to the parent’s CPP-D.
CPP-D and other benefits
CPP-D recipients may also be eligible for:
- Long-term disability (LTD) insurance through employer or private plans (CPP-D may offset LTD payments depending on plan terms).
- Provincial disability assistance (varies by province).
- The federal Disability Tax Credit (DTC) if approved by CRA via Form T2201. CPP-D approval does not automatically grant DTC; they are separate determinations.
- Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP) eligibility (requires DTC approval, not CPP-D).
CPP-D versus CPP retirement: which to apply for first
If a CPP contributor under 65 develops a disability, applying for CPP-D first is almost always the better choice when eligible. CPP-D pays more than early CPP retirement, includes the flat-rate portion, and converts automatically to a higher CPP retirement at 65. Taking CPP retirement early at 60 then later applying for CPP-D is rarely beneficial because the early-CPP reduction is locked in.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the maximum CPP Disability amount for 2026?
- $1,741.20/month, made up of a flat rate of $610.46 plus earnings-related portion of up to $1,130.74. Higher than maximum CPP retirement at any age.
- Who qualifies for CPP Disability?
- Contributors under 65 with a severe and prolonged disability that prevents any substantially gainful work, who have contributed in 4 of the last 6 years (or 3 of last 6 with 25+ total years).
- How is CPP Disability different from CPP retirement?
- CPP-D includes a flat-rate portion ($610.46 in 2026) that retirement does not. The medical requirement is strict. CPP-D ends at 65 and converts automatically to retirement.
- Can I work while receiving CPP Disability?
- Yes, up to approximately $7,200 in 2026 (Allowable Earnings). Above that, Service Canada reviews continued eligibility because the income suggests work capacity has returned.
- What happens to CPP-D at age 65?
- It automatically converts to CPP retirement. The disability period is treated as a drop-out, often producing a higher CPP retirement amount than would have been received without the disability.
- Does CPP-D approval grant the Disability Tax Credit?
- No. CPP-D and DTC are separate determinations. DTC requires Form T2201 and CRA medical review. Many CPP-D recipients qualify for DTC but it is not automatic.
- How long does CPP-D approval take?
- Typically 4 to 6 months. Initial approval rate is 35% to 45%; denied applications can be reconsidered and appealed to the Social Security Tribunal.