Financial Planning in Your 30s in Ontario
Financial planning in your 30s in Ontario means balancing mortgages, growing families, and long-term wealth goals. Here's what to focus on and when to get professional help.
Marc Pineault
Your 30s have a way of arriving with a lot of moving parts all at once. Careers accelerate, families grow, mortgages get signed, and suddenly you're making the most financially consequential decisions of your life — often without a clear plan guiding them. For Ontarians in this decade, financial planning isn't about getting rich quick. It's about building a structure that can absorb the complexity of everything happening at the same time.
Mortgages, Debt, and the Balance Between Paying Down and Building Up
One of the most common questions people in their 30s wrestle with is whether to aggressively pay down the mortgage or prioritize investing. The answer isn't one-size-fits-all — it depends on your interest rate, your TFSA and RRSP room, your income level, and your household goals.
In Ontario's high-cost housing markets, many families are carrying significant mortgage balances. While it's tempting to throw every extra dollar at the mortgage for psychological comfort, this can sometimes come at the cost of tax-sheltered investment growth. A financial planner can help you run the numbers specific to your situation and find an approach that doesn't leave either goal entirely behind.
This is also the decade where consumer debt from the 20s — car loans, credit cards, student debt — ideally gets cleared. Carrying high-interest debt into your 40s becomes increasingly costly as family expenses grow.
Planning for a Growing Family
If you have children — or are planning to — the financial picture shifts considerably. The Registered Education Savings Plan (RESP) is one of the most valuable tools available to Ontario families. The Canadian government provides a 20% grant on annual RESP contributions up to $2,500 per year (the Canada Education Savings Grant), meaning a consistent contribution habit generates free money that compounds over 15+ years.
Beyond education savings, a growing family raises serious questions about life insurance and disability coverage. If your household relies on two incomes and one disappears, can you maintain your mortgage and standard of living? Many Ontario families in their 30s are dangerously underinsured — not because they don't care, but because no one has helped them quantify what they actually need.
Wills and powers of attorney also become urgent the moment you have children. These aren't just legal documents — they're financial planning tools that ensure your estate is directed where you intend.
Maximizing RRSP Contributions as Income Grows
Your 30s are often when income starts to climb in a meaningful way. This is typically when RRSP contributions begin to make more tax sense than in your 20s. The higher your marginal tax rate, the more valuable the RRSP deduction becomes. A contribution that generates a 40%+ tax refund is a very different proposition than one that generates 20%.
The challenge is that money feels tight in this decade — kids, mortgage, savings all compete for the same dollars. Building a systematic contribution strategy, even at modest amounts, is far more effective than waiting for a "good year" to catch up. Contribution room accumulates, but so does opportunity cost.
Protecting the Income You've Built
Your ability to earn income is your most valuable financial asset in your 30s. Disability insurance — which replaces a portion of your income if illness or injury prevents you from working — deserves serious attention in this decade. If you're self-employed or in a profession without strong group coverage, individual disability insurance is often worth investigating.
Life insurance needs also tend to increase significantly in the 30s. A term policy that made sense at 25 may be inadequate now that you're carrying a mortgage and raising children. Reviewing coverage amounts and beneficiary designations should be a recurring part of any financial plan.
Financial planning in your 30s isn't about doing everything perfectly — it's about having a coordinated approach so that mortgage, savings, insurance, and family goals are all pulling in the same direction. If you're an Ontario family looking for clarity on how to prioritize and structure your finances, Marc Pineault at Pineault Wealth Management works with clients across London and southwestern Ontario to build plans that reflect real life — not just a textbook scenario.
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.
Learn more about me →Enjoyed this article?
Get the next one in your inbox. Financial planning tips from Marc Pineault — practical, Ontario-specific, no spam.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.