CA Tax Tools

Canadian Income Tax Calculator

Calculate your combined federal and provincial income tax. Includes the Basic Personal Amount (BPA) non-refundable credit and full bracket breakdown.

01INPUTS

Income Details

02RESULTS

Tax Breakdown

Gross Income$75,000
Federal Tax$9,268
Provincial Tax$3,997
Total Income Tax$13,265
After-Tax Income$61,735

Federal Effective Rate

12.0%

Combined Effective Rate

17.7%

Combined Marginal Rate

29.6%

03BREAKDOWN

Tax Composition

Federal Bracket Visualization

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Federal Tax Brackets

BracketRateTaxable AmountTax
$0$58,52314.0%$58,523$8,193
$58,523$117,04520.5%$16,477$3,378
Basic Personal Amount Credit$2,303

How Canadian Income Tax Works

Canada uses a progressive tax system with both federal and provincial income taxes. You pay two separate taxes: one to the federal government (CRA) and one to your province.

The Basic Personal Amount (BPA) reduces your tax by giving you a non-refundable credit equal to the BPA multiplied by the lowest rate in each jurisdiction. This effectively makes your first ~$16,452 of income tax-free federally.

Quebec residents file a separate provincial return with Revenu Québec and pay federal tax on a different basis (the federal tax is reduced by a Quebec Abatement of 16.5%).

Federal income tax brackets (2026)

These are the CRA federal rates only — your province adds its own brackets on top (see the combined rates below). The lowest federal rate dropped from 15% to 14% effective 1 July 2025.

Taxable income 2026 rate 2025 band
$0 – $58,523 14% $0 – $57,375 @ 14.5%
$58,523 – $117,045 20.5% $57,375 – $114,750 @ 20.5%
$117,045 – $181,440 26% $114,750 – $177,882 @ 26%
$181,440 – $258,482 29% $177,882 – $253,414 @ 29%
Over $258,482 33% Over $253,414 @ 33%

Federal Basic Personal Amount: $16,452 for 2026 (tapered to $14,829 for top-bracket earners), credited at 14%.

Marginal vs average tax rate — worked examples

Your marginal rate applies to your next dollar earned; your average (effective) rate is total tax ÷ total income and is always lower. The examples below are combined federal + Ontario tax for 2026, generated directly from the calculator engine. Other provinces differ — switch province in the calculator above.

Income Federal tax Ontario tax Total tax After-tax Avg rate Marginal
$50,000 $4,697 $1,869 $6,566 $43,434 13.1% 19.1%
$75,000 $9,268 $3,997 $13,265 $61,735 17.7% 29.6%
$100,000 $14,393 $6,285 $20,677 $79,323 20.7% 29.6%
$150,000 $26,455 $11,708 $38,163 $111,837 25.4% 37.2%

Employment income only, single filer, no additional credits or deductions. Add an RRSP deduction to cut tax at your marginal rate.

Combined top marginal rate by province (2026)

The highest combined federal + provincial marginal rate that applies to top-bracket income, by province or territory. Quebec's federal portion reflects the 16.5% Quebec abatement. Full province comparison.

Province / territory Top provincial rate Combined top marginal
Newfoundland and Labrador 21.8% 54.8%
Nova Scotia 21% 54.0%
British Columbia 20.5% 53.5%
Quebec 25.75% 53.3%
New Brunswick 19.5% 52.5%
Prince Edward Island 19% 52.0%
Manitoba 17.4% 50.4%
Alberta 15% 48.0%
Yukon 15% 48.0%
Saskatchewan 14.5% 47.5%
Northwest Territories 14.05% 47.1%
Ontario 13.16% 46.2%
Nunavut 11.5% 44.5%

Compare by province

Frequently asked questions

How is Canadian income tax calculated?

Canada uses a progressive bracket system stacking federal and provincial income tax. You pay two separate taxes: one to the federal government (CRA) and one to your province or territory. The two are combined on a single T1 return for every province except Quebec.

What is the Basic Personal Amount (BPA) in Canada?

The Basic Personal Amount is a non-refundable tax credit that effectively makes your first portion of income tax-free. The federal BPA is $16,452 for 2026 (tapered down to $14,829 for high earners above the second-top bracket). Each province has its own BPA — Alberta, Manitoba, Quebec and others differ materially from the federal amount.

What are the 2026 federal income tax brackets in Canada?

For 2026 the federal brackets are: 14% on the first $58,523, 20.5% on $58,523–$117,045, 26% on $117,045–$181,440, 29% on $181,440–$258,482, and 33% above $258,482. The lowest federal rate was reduced from 15% to 14% effective 1 July 2025.

What is the difference between my marginal and average tax rate?

Your marginal rate is the tax on your next dollar of income — the rate of your highest bracket (federal + provincial combined). Your average (effective) rate is your total tax divided by your total income, which is always lower because the early brackets and the BPA are taxed at low or zero rates. For example, a $100,000 earner in Ontario sits in a roughly 29.6% marginal bracket but pays an average rate of only about 20.7%. Use the marginal rate to judge an RRSP deduction or a raise; use the average rate to budget.

How can I reduce my Canadian income tax?

The most common levers are deductions that reduce taxable income — RRSP contributions, child-care expenses, union/professional dues and moving expenses — plus non-refundable credits (tuition, medical, donations). An RRSP deduction saves tax at your marginal rate, so it is worth most to higher-bracket earners. Income splitting (spousal RRSP, pension splitting) and TFSA growth (tax-free, but not deductible) round out the toolkit.

Should I use the 2025 or 2026 tax year?

Use 2025 if you are preparing the T1 return due now (the 2025 return is filed in spring 2026). Use 2026 to plan your current take-home pay and RRSP room for the year in progress. The calculator above defaults to 2026; switch the year selector to 2025 for filing.

Do I file separate federal and provincial tax returns?

In every province and territory except Quebec, you file a single T1 return with the CRA that calculates both federal and provincial tax. Quebec residents also file a separate provincial return with Revenu Québec and receive a 16.5% federal abatement on their CRA balance.

Sources

Last updated June 2026. Reflects 2026 and 2025 federal + provincial rates.

June 15 self-employed tools: quarterly instalments, GST/HST registration, self-employed tax buffer, June 15 filing guide, T2125 mistakes

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Last updated June 24, 2026Tax year 2026

Data sources: CRA (canada.ca)

This tool is general information only, not financial advice.

Reviewed by CA Tax Tools Editorial Desk

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