Canada Net worth tracker
Private, browser-only snapshot of assets vs. liabilities.
Assets
Liabilities
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What net worth is and how to track it
Net worth is total assets minus total liabilities — a snapshot of your financial position at one moment in time.
Net worth = total assets − total liabilities
A negative number is normal in early adulthood (student loans, no investments yet). The trajectory matters more than the absolute number — most paths to wealth involve net worth that's low or negative for years before compounding takes over.
What counts as an asset
- Cash, savings, money-market funds
- Investment accounts (brokerage, retirement, education savings)
- Real estate at current market value (not what you paid)
- Vehicles at depreciated value (Blue Book / Glass's / RedBook)
- Valuable personal property with a documented resale market (jewellery, collectibles, art with provenance)
What to exclude
- Household furniture, kitchenware, clothing
- Consumer electronics older than 2–3 years
- Vehicles valued at "what I paid" (almost always overstated)
- "Sentimental" valuations — assets are worth their market price, not your memory of them
What counts as a liability
- Mortgage balance (current outstanding, not original)
- Student loans, auto loans, personal loans
- Credit card balances
- Lines of credit (currently drawn balance)
- Money owed to family or friends
- Tax owed but not yet paid
Worked example
Assets: Checking $4,500; HYSA emergency fund $15,000; 401(k) $87,000; Roth IRA $22,000; taxable brokerage $11,000; home $385,000; car $14,000 → Total $538,500
Liabilities: Mortgage $290,000; student loans $18,000; credit card $2,400; auto loan $11,500 → Total $321,900
Net worth: $216,600
How often to update
Monthly is the most common cadence — frequent enough to spot trends, infrequent enough that market noise doesn't dominate. Pick a fixed day each month for consistency. Quarterly is fine for casual tracking; annual is the minimum for long-term planning. Daily tracking creates anxiety without insight.
Common mistakes
- Including everything at retail price. Used cars, furniture, and electronics depreciate substantially. Be conservative.
- Counting unrealised options or RSUs at intrinsic value. They're not yours until vested.
- Including pension benefits as a lump sum. Defined-benefit pensions don't have a tradeable "value" — don't capitalise them.
- Forgetting to subtract the mortgage. A house is an asset; the mortgage on it is a liability. Both go on the tally.
- Comparing to other people. Net worth depends on age, geography, profession, family, and luck. Compare to your own past, not to averages.
Common benchmarks (US guidance)
- By age 30: 1× annual gross income invested
- By age 40: 3×
- By age 50: 6×
- By age 60: 8×
- By retirement: 10–12×
These are aggressive targets — many people fall behind without facing a crisis. The trajectory matters more than hitting any specific milestone.
What this calculator doesn't cover
- Future value projections (use the retirement or FIRE calculator)
- Tax-adjusted net worth (assets in tax-deferred accounts face tax on withdrawal)
- Specific asset valuation guidance (use Zillow / Redfin / Rightmove / realestate.com.au for property; KBB / Glass's / RedBook for cars)
- Foreign-currency-denominated assets at current exchange rates
- Estate planning value (insurance proceeds, expected inheritance)
Related calculators
Frequently asked questions
What counts as an asset?
What counts as a liability?
How often should I update my net worth?
Is my data saved anywhere?
What's a good net worth for my age?
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