Free · All Provinces · CRA 2026

Income Tax Canada 2026

Advertisement

Interactive calculator

Enter values above
--
Advertisement

Canadian Income Tax Overview

Canadians pay federal income tax plus provincial income tax, both progressive. The combined marginal rate matters for RRSP contributions, capital gains timing, and income splitting decisions. Federal brackets in 2026: 15% on first $57,375, 20.5% to $114,750, 26% to $158,519, 29% to $220,000, and 33% above that.

Combined Rates by Province at $100K

Alberta: 33.0%. British Columbia: 40.7%. Ontario: 43.4%. Quebec: 45.7%. Nova Scotia: 46.5%. Alberta has the lowest combined rates due to its flat 10% provincial rate. Nova Scotia and Quebec have the highest combined rates for most income levels.

Key Deductions

RRSP and FHSA contributions reduce taxable income at your marginal rate. Capital gains include only 50% in income under $250,000 annually. Eligible dividends receive a dividend tax credit. Pension income splitting allows allocating up to 50% of eligible pension to a lower-income spouse in retirement.

Advertisement

Financial Planning in Canada

Canadian financial planning requires understanding the federal and provincial tax systems together. Provincial income tax rates vary significantly across Canada from Alberta with a flat 10% rate to Nova Scotia with rates above 17% for middle incomes. Choosing where to live can change your after-tax income by several thousand dollars annually. The registered account system forms the core of Canadian tax efficiency with TFSA for flexibility, RRSP for high earners deferring tax to lower-bracket retirement years, FHSA for first-time home buyers combining the deduction of RRSP with the tax-free withdrawal of TFSA, RESP for education savings with the 20% Canada Education Savings Grant on first $2,500 per year per child, and RDSP for people with disabilities receiving the Canada Disability Savings Grant and Bond.

Coordinating CPP, OAS and RRIF in Retirement

Canadian retirement income planning must coordinate Canada Pension Plan, Old Age Security, RRIF minimum withdrawals, and any employer pension income to manage marginal tax brackets and avoid OAS clawback. The OAS clawback begins at $90,997 of net income in 2026. TFSA withdrawals do not count as net income and do not trigger the clawback, making TFSA the most powerful tool for managing income in years when other sources push you near the threshold. RRSP meltdown strategy involves drawing down RRSP in lower-income early retirement years before CPP at 70, OAS, and mandatory RRIF minimums all combine to create peak retirement income and highest tax rates.

2026 Key Canadian Financial Limits

TFSA annual limit: $7,000, cumulative $109,000 from 2009. RRSP annual limit: 18% of prior year earned income to maximum $32,490. FHSA annual limit: $8,000, lifetime maximum $40,000. Canada Pension Plan Year Maximum Pensionable Earnings: $71,300. Employment Insurance maximum insurable earnings: $65,700. Federal Basic Personal Amount: approximately $16,129. OAS clawback threshold: $90,997. CPP maximum monthly pension at 65: approximately $1,365. OAS monthly payment at 65: approximately $728. These amounts adjust annually for inflation and wage growth. Canadian financial planning rewards consistent use of registered accounts and tax-efficient strategies. Review your contribution room annually, optimize your account mix based on your current and expected retirement marginal tax rates, and consider professional advice from a fee-only Certified Financial Planner when making major decisions involving significant amounts. CalcPhi calculators use the latest 2026 CRA rates and are updated annually to reflect changes in federal and provincial tax legislation, contribution limits, and benefit thresholds.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much income tax do Canadians pay?+
Federal rates range from 15% to 33%. Provincial rates add 5 to 25% on top. Combined marginal rates range from about 20% on first $57K to 54%+ for top earners in high-rate provinces.
What is the basic personal amount in Canada 2026?+
The federal Basic Personal Amount is approximately $16,129 in 2026, making this amount effectively tax-free at the federal level. Each province also has its own basic personal amount.
How can I reduce Canadian income tax?+
RRSP and FHSA contributions reduce taxable income at your marginal rate. Capital gains include only 50% in income under $250,000. Pension income splitting and TFSA use in retirement also reduce effective rates significantly.
Related Calculators
Advertisement