Finance · Canada 🇨🇦 · Tax Guide 2025–2026
Canada Income Tax
2025–2026: CRA Rates,
Brackets & Calculator
Your salary and your take-home pay are two different numbers. Federal income tax, provincial income tax, CPP contributions, and EI premiums all come off before you see a dollar. Understanding exactly how Canada’s tax system works — what rates apply to which income, what you can deduct, and how 2026 differs from 2025 — puts you in control of every financial decision you make.
This guide covers both the 2025 tax year (T1 return filed by April 30, 2026) and the 2026 tax year (your current paycheque). All rates are verified against official CRA payroll deduction tables and TaxTips.ca, which cross-references CRA directly. No estimates, no outdated numbers.
What Changed Between 2025 and 2026
The headline change: the lowest federal tax rate dropped from 15% to 14% on July 1, 2025. That half-year timing creates the “14.5% blended rate” that appears on your 2025 T1 return — not a new bracket, just the arithmetic of two different rates applied to two halves of the same year.
The bracket thresholds increase every year by the CRA’s indexation factor — 2% for 2026. This prevents “bracket creep,” where inflation pushes earners into higher brackets without any real income gain. For a typical $70,000 earner, the combination of the 14% rate and higher thresholds saves approximately $350–$450 in federal tax compared to 2025.
Federal Tax Brackets 2026 — All 5 Bands Explained
These are the official 2026 federal brackets confirmed in the CRA’s T4032 payroll deduction tables. They’re marginal rates — each rate applies only to the income within that band, never to your total income.
14% on the first $58,523 of taxable income. This is the rate reduced from 15% (via 14.5% blended in 2025) by Bill C-4. Maximum federal tax at this band: $8,193. After the BPA credit of $2,303, the effective federal tax on a $58,523 income is approximately $5,890.
Federal tax: ~$4,693
After BPA credit: ~$2,390
Effective fed rate: 4.8%
20.5% on income from $58,523 to $117,045 — a $58,522 range. Unchanged in rate from 2025. At $80,000, only $21,477 of income falls in this band. Your marginal rate on the next dollar is 20.5%, but your effective rate across all income is much lower.
Tax this band: ~$4,403
Band covers $21,477
Effective fed rate: ~16%
26% on income from $117,045 to $181,440. Rate unchanged from 2025, threshold up 2%. At $150,000, approximately $32,955 falls in this band. This is the point where RRSP contributions are most tax-efficient for many high earners — each $1,000 RRSP saves $260 in federal tax.
Tax this band: ~$8,568
Band covers $32,955
Effective fed rate: ~22%
29% on income from $181,440 to $258,482. Note: within this range, the Basic Personal Amount also phases down from $16,452 to $14,829, which creates a slightly higher effective marginal rate of approximately 29.29% through this band for the BPA taper effect.
Tax this band: ~$5,367
Band covers $18,560
Effective fed rate: ~28%
33% on every dollar above $258,482. Only the income above this threshold is taxed at 33% — all income below it is taxed at the lower rates applicable to those bands. At $300,000, only $41,518 falls here. Combined with provincial top rates, the marginal rate in most provinces exceeds 50%.
Tax this band: ~$13,701
Band covers $41,518
Combined top rate: 50%+
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Use the Free Calculator →2025 Federal Brackets — For Your T1 Return Filed in 2026
Your 2025 T1 return (due April 30, 2026 for most Canadians; June 15, 2026 if you or your spouse are self-employed) uses these brackets:
| Taxable Income | Federal Rate | Max Federal Tax (This Band) | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to $57,375 | 14.5% | $8,319 | Blended: 15% Jan–Jun, 14% Jul–Dec 2025 |
| $57,375 – $114,750 | 20.5% | $11,762 | Rate unchanged from 2024 |
| $114,750 – $177,882 | 26% | $16,414 | Rate unchanged from 2024 |
| $177,882 – $253,414 | 29% | $21,904 | BPA taper applies in this range |
| Above $253,414 | 33% | No cap | Top federal rate |
The Basic Personal Amount — Your Tax-Free Threshold
The Basic Personal Amount (BPA) is the most important non-refundable credit in the Canadian tax system. For 2026, the federal BPA is $16,452. It gives you a non-refundable tax credit worth $2,303 ($16,452 × 14%) — effectively making your first $16,452 of income federal-tax-free.
Every Canadian gets the BPA automatically — you don’t need to claim it separately. It’s calculated as a tax credit, not a deduction, which means it reduces your tax owing rather than your taxable income.
The BPA Taper for High Earners
For Canadians with income above $181,440 in 2026, the BPA starts to phase down. It reduces gradually from $16,452 until it reaches $14,829 at income of $258,482. This taper is what creates the slightly elevated effective marginal rate within Band 4 mentioned above.
Each province has its own BPA that operates independently. Ontario’s provincial BPA is $11,865. Alberta’s is $21,003 — the highest in the country, which contributes to Alberta having the lowest combined income tax of any province at most income levels.
CPP and EI — What Comes Off Every Paycheque
Income tax isn’t the only deduction from your pay. CPP contributions and EI premiums come off every paycheque, and they interact with your take-home in ways that many Canadians don’t fully track.
Provincial Tax — How It Stacks on Top of Federal
Every Canadian pays two income taxes: federal and provincial. Except for Quebec — where residents file a separate provincial return with Revenu Québec — both taxes appear on the same T1 return and are administered by the CRA.
Your total marginal tax rate is the sum of your federal and provincial marginal rates. This is why top combined rates in provinces like Ontario and BC exceed 53% — it’s federal top rate (33%) plus provincial top rate (20%+).
| Province | Lowest Provincial Rate | Top Provincial Rate | Top Combined Rate (Fed+Prov) | Tax Burden |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alberta | 10% | 15% | 48% | Lowest |
| Saskatchewan | 10.5% | 14.5% | 47.5% | Low |
| British Columbia | 5.06% | 20.5% | 53.5% | Mid–High |
| Ontario | 5.05% | 20.53% | 53.53% | High |
| Quebec | 14% | 25.75% | 53.31% | High |
| Manitoba | 10.8% | 17.4% | 50.4% | Mid |
| Nova Scotia | 8.79% | 21% | 54% | Highest |
| New Brunswick | 9.4% | 19.5% | 52.5% | Mid-High |
Alberta’s flat 10% provincial rate and no provincial sales tax makes it the lowest-tax province in Canada by a clear margin. A $100,000 earner in Alberta pays approximately $4,500 less in combined income tax than the same earner in Ontario.
Real Take-Home Pay at Every Salary Level — Ontario, 2026
These figures use Ontario provincial rates plus federal 2026 rates, CPP, and EI. All amounts are approximate. The Ontario surtax applies at higher incomes and adds complexity — use the calculator for exact results.
| Gross Salary | Federal Tax | Ontario Tax | CPP + EI | Total Deducted | Take-Home/Yr | Take-Home/Mo | Eff. Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $40,000 | $3,291 | $1,562 | $3,428 | $8,281 | $31,719 | $2,643 | 20.7% |
| $60,000 | $7,199 | $3,302 | $4,453 | $14,954 | $45,046 | $3,754 | 24.9% |
| $80,000 | $11,730 | $5,418 | $5,095 | $22,243 | $57,757 | $4,813 | 27.8% |
| $100,000 | $16,830 | $8,286 | $5,769 | $30,885 | $69,115 | $5,760 | 30.9% |
| $120,000 | $21,945 | $12,050 | $5,769 | $39,764 | $80,236 | $6,686 | 33.1% |
| $150,000 | $29,945 | $17,450 | $5,769 | $53,164 | $96,836 | $8,070 | 35.4% |
| $200,000 | $44,945 | $29,300 | $5,769 | $80,014 | $119,986 | $9,999 | 40.0% |
Ontario 2026 provincial rates applied. CPP capped at max contributions. Figures are estimates — individual situations vary. Use the free income tax calculator for your exact province and circumstances.
Worked Example: $80,000 Salary in Ontario, 2026
Here’s the step-by-step calculation for an Ontario employee earning $80,000 gross in 2026. No RRSP contributions assumed, standard TD1 claim code.
RRSP and TFSA — Two Legal Ways to Cut Your Tax Bill
RRSP — Registered Retirement Savings Plan
2026 limit: $33,810 (or 18% of 2025 earned income)Contributions reduce your taxable income dollar for dollar. Tax is deferred until withdrawal — ideally in retirement when your income (and marginal rate) is lower. The 2025 RRSP deadline is March 1, 2026. Unused room carries forward indefinitely. The Home Buyers’ Plan lets first-time buyers withdraw up to $60,000 from their RRSP tax-free for a qualifying home purchase.
TFSA — Tax-Free Savings Account
2026 annual limit: $7,000 (cumulative room from 2009+)Contributions come from after-tax income — no immediate tax saving. All growth, dividends, and withdrawals inside a TFSA are completely tax-free. Unlike an RRSP, there’s no deadline, no income requirement, and withdrawals restore contribution room the following year. Cumulative TFSA room since 2009 is $102,000 for Canadians who have never contributed.
The practical choice between RRSP and TFSA: if your current marginal rate is higher than your expected retirement marginal rate, RRSP is more tax-efficient. If they’re similar or your retirement rate might be higher, TFSA is better. Many Canadians benefit from contributing to both. Your RRSP contribution limit appears on your most recent Notice of Assessment from the CRA.
Capital Gains Tax in Canada
Canada has no separate capital gains tax rate — instead, a portion of capital gains is added to your regular taxable income and taxed at your marginal rate. That portion is called the inclusion rate.
For individuals in 2025-2026: 50% inclusion rate on the first $250,000 of annual capital gains, and 66.67% inclusion rate on gains above $250,000. This means if you sell investments with a $20,000 gain, $10,000 (50%) is added to your taxable income. On a $500,000 gain, the first $250,000 has 50% included, and the excess $250,000 has 66.67% included.
Capital gains inside a TFSA: not taxed at all. Inside an RRSP: not taxed until withdrawal, then taxed as income. Gains on your principal residence: fully exempt regardless of amount. The Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (LCGE) shelters up to $1.25 million of qualifying small business shares or farm/fishing property in 2026.
Who Needs to Understand This?
Filing Your 2025 T1 Return
Your 2025 T1 uses the 14.5% blended lowest rate and the $57,375 first bracket ceiling. The deadline is April 30, 2026 for most Canadians (June 15, 2026 if you or your spouse are self-employed, though any balance owing is still due April 30). Use the calculator to estimate your refund or balance owing before filing — it prevents surprises and helps you decide whether to top up your RRSP before March 1.
Evaluating a Job Offer or Raise
You’ve been offered $95,000. Your marginal federal rate on income above $58,523 is 20.5% — so the next $36,477 is taxed federally at 20.5%, not 14%. Add Ontario provincial tax and you keep approximately 65–67 cents of each dollar in that range. Running the real numbers before negotiating means you know exactly what take-home increase you’re actually getting.
Considering a Province Move
Tax residency in Canada is determined by where you live on December 31 of the tax year. Moving from Ontario to Alberta on December 30 makes you an Alberta taxpayer for the entire year — a saving of approximately $4,500 for a $100,000 earner. Moving from Alberta to Ontario on December 31 has the opposite effect. The province on the last day of the year is what counts.
Self-Employed or Contractor
If you’re self-employed, you pay both the employee and employer portions of CPP — 11.9% total in 2026, up to $74,600 in earnings. That’s significantly more than the 5.95% an employee pays. You can deduct business expenses from income before calculating tax, and you must make quarterly tax instalments if your previous year’s net tax owing exceeded $3,000 ($1,800 in Quebec).
5 Tax Mistakes Canadians Make
Missing the RRSP deadline
The RRSP contribution deadline for the 2025 tax year is March 1, 2026. Contributions after that date apply to 2026. Many Canadians miss the deadline because they confuse the tax-filing deadline (April 30) with the RRSP deadline (March 1). They’re two months apart and both matter — the RRSP deadline for immediate 2025 tax savings is earlier.
Not claiming CPP and EI credits
CPP contributions generate a non-refundable tax credit at the 14% rate (federal). EI premiums also generate a non-refundable credit at 14%. These credits appear automatically on a software-prepared return, but manual filers sometimes miss them. On maximum contributions, these credits reduce your federal tax owing by approximately $592 (CPP) plus $157 (EI) in 2026.
Confusing marginal rate with effective rate
Your marginal rate is what you pay on the next dollar. Your effective rate is what you actually pay on average. A $100,000 Ontario earner has a marginal rate of about 43.4% (federal 20.5% + Ontario 9.15% + surtax), but an effective rate closer to 31%. Using the marginal rate to estimate take-home always overstates the tax burden significantly.
Ignoring carry-forward room
Unused RRSP room and TFSA room carry forward indefinitely. If you haven’t contributed to either account for several years, you may have significant room available. Check your Notice of Assessment from the CRA — it shows your exact RRSP limit. Your CRA My Account shows your TFSA room. Canadians who have never contributed to a TFSA since 2009 have $102,000 in cumulative room available in 2026.
Not paying instalments when required
If you owe more than $3,000 in net tax for 2025 (after withholding), the CRA will require quarterly tax instalments for 2026. Missing instalments triggers interest charges at the prescribed rate plus 4%. The CRA sends instalment reminders — don’t ignore them. Self-employed Canadians and those with significant investment income are most commonly affected.
Pro Tips to Reduce Your Canadian Tax Bill
Frequently Asked Questions — Canada Income Tax 2025-2026
Final Notes
Canada’s income tax system for 2026 is simpler than most Canadians assume. Five federal brackets, a BPA that makes the first $16,452 effectively tax-free, and CPP and EI that are straightforwardly calculated. The complexity comes at the margins — provincial stacking, capital gains inclusion rates, the RRSP vs TFSA choice, and instalment obligations for higher earners.
Two actions that help most people: file your 2025 T1 before April 30, 2026, and check your unused RRSP and TFSA room through CRA My Account. Most Canadians have more room than they realize, and the tax savings from using it are immediate and real.
Use the calculator for your exact province and salary. The table above gives you a solid Ontario baseline — but if you’re in Alberta, BC, or Quebec, the numbers are meaningfully different.
Calculate Your Canadian Income Tax — Free
Federal + provincial tax, CPP, EI, and take-home pay for 2025 and 2026. All 13 provinces and territories. Enter your income and get instant results.
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