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- By Wei Landgraf
Receiving Social Security & CPP in Sint Maarten (2026 Guide)
You’ve earned the income. The question is mechanically: how does it land in your bank account when you live on an island in the Caribbean? And what does each home-country government withhold or claw back along the way?
This page covers how US Social Security, Canadian CPP, and OAS actually flow to retirees living in Sint Maarten. What works, what trips people up, and what to set up before you move.
Key Takeaways
- US Social Security is paid to retirees in Sint Maarten with no SSA withholding. You must complete Form SSA-7162 every two years to confirm you're alive.
- Direct deposit to a US bank is the simplest setup; SSA can also pay to a Sint Maarten bank account through international wire arrangements.
- Canadian CPP and OAS are paid to non-residents but subject to 25% non-resident withholding in non-treaty countries. Sint Maarten is non-treaty.
- OAS clawback still applies on worldwide income.
- A Section 217 election in Canada can recover much of the 25% withholding for moderate-income retirees.
US Social Security in Sint Maarten
Will I be paid?
Yes. The Social Security Administration pays retirement, survivors, and disability benefits to eligible US citizens regardless of country of residence, with very few exceptions (Cuba, North Korea. Sint Maarten is not on the list). Spousal and ex-spouse benefits also continue.
How is it taxed?
US side: Same federal tax rules as if you lived in Florida. Up to 85% of your benefit may be includable in taxable income depending on your “combined income” (modified AGI + tax-exempt interest + half of SS).
There is no SSA withholding on benefits paid to US citizens abroad. You settle the tax bill on your 1040 at year-end. You can voluntarily elect federal withholding via Form W-4V.
SXM side: If you’re under the Penshonado regime, your Social Security income is foreign-source and taxed at approximately 10%. You can use the Foreign Tax Credit on your 1040 to offset the US tax.
How does the money actually land?
Three options:
- US bank, then transfer. Most retirees use this. SSA direct-deposits to your US checking account, you transfer to your SXM account as needed via Wise, OFX, or Schwab international debit. Currency conversion is on you.
- SXM bank direct deposit. SSA’s Office of Earnings & International Operations can set up direct international deposit to a Sint Maarten bank using SWIFT codes. Slower to set up, but eliminates the transfer step. Call SSA’s international division at +1-410-965-0160 (yes, US number. Call from anywhere).
- Mailed check. Available but discouraged. Don’t.
The SSA-7162 alive-check
Once a year (sometimes once every two years, depending on age and country), SSA mails Form SSA-7162-OCR-SM to your address on file. You sign it, return it, and SSA confirms you’re still alive. If you don’t return it, your benefits are suspended.
Mistakes I’ve seen:
- The form goes to an old US address you didn't update. Update your address with SSA as soon as you move.
- The form gets lost in SXM mail. Set up email notifications via your My Social Security online account.
- The retiree assumes "I just got it last year, I'll deal with it later." Then the deposit stops in March.
Updating SSA when you move
Use your My Social Security account online to change your residence address and direct deposit. If you don’t have an online account, set one up before you move (it requires a US address and US-based ID verification, which is harder once you’re abroad).
Canadian CPP, OAS, and GIS in Sint Maarten
Will I be paid?
CPP: Yes, regardless of residence.
OAS: Yes if you’ve accumulated at least 20 years of Canadian residency after age 18. With less than 20 years, OAS stops 6 months after you cease residency in Canada.
GIS (Guaranteed Income Supplement): No. GIS is only paid to Canadian residents.
How is it taxed?
Canadian side:
- Standard 25% non-resident withholding tax on CPP and OAS paid to a Sint Maarten resident (no Canada–SXM treaty to reduce it).
- Section 217 return: elective annual return that re-calculates tax as if you were a resident. Often produces a refund for retirees with modest income.
- OAS clawback (Recovery Tax): triggers on worldwide income above ~CAD $90K (verify current threshold). The clawback is computed on your global income, not just Canadian-source.
SXM side:
- Under Penshonado, CPP and OAS are foreign-source income taxed at ~10%.
How does the money land?
Service Canada offers direct deposit to Sint Maarten bank accounts through its international payment program. You’ll need:
- Your SXM bank's full SWIFT code
- Account number
- Service Canada Form CPT41 for international direct deposit (or use the My Service Canada Account online tool)
This is more straightforward than the US setup. Service Canada has a dedicated international payments division. Allow 4–8 weeks for the first international deposit to arrive.
Alternatively, keep direct deposit to a Canadian bank and transfer.
Updating Service Canada when you move
- Use My Service Canada Account online to update address.
- Notify the CRA of your departure date via your final part-year return. This is what triggers your non-resident status for tax purposes.
- File NR73 if you want CRA confirmation of non-residency (optional but useful).
A worked example
Take Susan, age 67, moving from Vancouver to Cupecoy:
- CPP: CAD $1,200/month
- OAS: CAD $700/month
- RRIF withdrawals: CAD $3,000/month
- Modest dividend income: CAD $500/month
- Total Canadian-source: ~CAD $66,000/year
Without planning:
- 25% non-resident withholding on all of it = CAD $16,500/year withheld.
- No SXM optimization.
With planning (Section 217 election + Penshonado):
- Section 217 recomputes Canadian tax at progressive resident rates → effective Canadian tax ~CAD $7,000.
- Refund of ~CAD $9,500 from withholding.
- SXM tax: ~10% on foreign-source income = ~CAD $6,600.
- Combined tax: ~CAD $13,600 instead of CAD $16,500 + provincial.
- Annual savings vs staying in BC: roughly CAD $8,000–$12,000 (BC marginal rates would have been higher).
The savings are real but require active election filings. They don’t happen automatically.
Mistakes to avoid
- Not setting up online accounts before you move. Both SSA and Service Canada online portals are easier to access from a US/Canadian IP address with US/Canadian phone verification.
- Forgetting to update address with the home-country agency. You miss the alive-check form, your benefits suspend.
- Assuming CPP and OAS work like US Social Security. They don’t. Canada withholds, the US does not.
- Skipping the Section 217 election. It’s annual and worth doing.
- Not coordinating with your CPA. The Form 1116 (US FTC) and Section 217 mechanics interact with the rest of your tax picture.
Common questions
Can I take Social Security early (age 62) and live in Sint Maarten? Yes. The early retirement benefit is paid normally; the early-retirement reduction applies the same as if you stayed in the US.
Will my Social Security benefit be reduced because I live abroad? No. The benefit amount is unchanged by residence. Some non-citizen spouses lose benefits after 6 months abroad, but US citizens are not affected.
Can I delay my OAS to increase the benefit? Yes. OAS deferral up to age 70 increases the benefit by 0.6%/month (7.2%/year) up to a 36% maximum at age 70. This works the same for non-residents.
What happens to my US Medicare premium if I move to Sint Maarten? Medicare doesn’t cover you in SXM, so you may consider whether to keep paying Part B premiums. If you drop and re-enroll later, you face the late-enrollment penalty of 10% per 12-month period without coverage. Most retirees keep Part B as a “parachute” for emergency US trips.
Will my CPP / OAS be reduced if I’m working in Sint Maarten? CPP. No, once you’re past 65 there’s no clawback for working. OAS. Yes, the OAS Recovery Tax applies on worldwide income above the threshold.
Can I have both US Social Security and Canadian CPP/OAS? Yes. Many cross-border retirees do. The US-Canada Totalization Agreement coordinates the two systems. Each is taxed by its respective home country first.
What to do next
01
Set up your online accounts (My Social Security, My Service Canada Account) before you move.
02
Decide direct-deposit-to-US-bank vs direct-deposit-to-SXM-bank.
03
Calendar the SSA-7162 alive-check (US side) and Service Canada non-resident reporting (Canada side).
04
Coordinate your withholding strategy with your CPA before your first SXM tax year.
05
US tax rules and Canadian tax rules for the full picture.

