Financial Planning for Physicians in Ontario
Physicians in Ontario face unique financial planning challenges — late career starts, incorporation decisions, and complex tax structures. Here's how a financial planner can help.
Marc Pineault
Physicians in Ontario often reach their peak earning years later than most professionals — after nearly a decade of medical school, residency, and fellowship, many doctors are in their mid-to-late thirties before they're earning a full attending income. That compressed timeline, combined with student debt, complex compensation structures, and the decision of whether to incorporate, makes financial planning both more important and more complicated for physicians than for most Canadians.
Marc Pineault is a financial planner with Pineault Wealth Management and The Co-operators, serving clients across Ontario. He works with physicians and other high-income professionals who need a structured, tax-aware financial plan that reflects the realities of their career and income profile.
The Physician Corporation Question
One of the most common financial planning questions physicians ask is whether they should incorporate. A physician corporation can offer significant advantages — income splitting with family members, tax deferral on corporate retained earnings, and the ability to invest inside the corporation at a lower effective tax rate. But incorporation also introduces complexity: additional accounting costs, passive income rules, and decisions about how to extract income (salary vs. dividends) in a tax-efficient way.
Whether incorporation makes sense depends on how much of your income you can consistently leave inside the corporation rather than drawing out for living expenses. A financial planner working alongside your accountant can help you model different scenarios and understand what the after-tax outcomes actually look like over a 10- or 20-year horizon.
Managing Student Debt and Investment Timing
Many physicians carry significant debt from their training years — medical school loans, lines of credit used during residency, and sometimes a mortgage taken on before income stabilized. A key financial planning question is how to balance paying down debt against contributing to registered accounts and building investment assets.
The right answer depends on interest rates, your marginal tax rate, and your overall balance sheet. There's no universal rule. A financial plan helps you prioritize with intention rather than defaulting to whichever feels most urgent in the moment. For many physicians, the early post-residency years are the most important time to establish good financial habits — because income jumps sharply while spending habits can quickly expand to match it.
Retirement Planning Without a Pension
Most Ontario physicians — particularly those in fee-for-service or blended billing models — don't have access to a traditional defined benefit pension. That means retirement income depends almost entirely on personal savings, corporate investment accounts, CPP contributions, and OAS.
The good news is that high-income physicians who plan well often have significant flexibility in how they structure retirement income. The challenge is that they also have more complexity: deciding when and how to wind down a corporation, managing RRSP and TFSA room, and coordinating CPP timing with other income sources.
At Pineault Wealth Management, Marc works with physician clients to build a retirement income strategy that accounts for the full picture — not just the registered accounts, but the corporate investments, real estate holdings, and practice-related assets that often make up a significant share of a physician's net worth.
Insurance and Risk Planning
Physicians have a high-value income stream that depends entirely on their ability to practice. Disability insurance is arguably the most important financial protection a physician can have. Group coverage through the OMA or a hospital may not be sufficient — particularly if your income has grown substantially or if your practice structure means that disability benefits are calculated differently than you'd expect.
Life insurance, critical illness coverage, and liability considerations are all part of a comprehensive financial plan for physicians. These aren't just products — they're structural protections that make the rest of your financial plan more resilient.
Work With a Financial Planner Who Understands Your Career
Marc Pineault, financial planner, based in London, Ontario, works with professionals across Ontario through Pineault Wealth Management. If you're a physician navigating incorporation, student debt paydown, or retirement planning without a pension, a structured financial plan built around your specific situation can make a significant difference.
Reach out to Marc today to start a conversation about your financial plan.
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personalized financial advice. Please consult a qualified financial planner before making any financial decisions.
Marc Pineault
Financial Planner in London, Ontario
I help families and business owners in London, Ontario build clear financial plans for retirement, taxes, and investments — then I manage it all so they can stop worrying and start living.
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