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πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ Canada Salary Calculator

Calculate your net salary after federal income tax, provincial income tax, CPP contributions, and EI premiums. Based on 2026 Canadian tax rates β€” select your province for a province-specific estimate.

Net Salary
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Gross Salary
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Income Tax (Federal + Provincial)
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CPP Contributions
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EI Premiums
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Total Deductions
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Monthly Net
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Estimate only β€” federal brackets (14/20.5/26/29/33%), CPP (5.95% to the YMPE), and EI (1.63%) are current 2026 figures. Provincial tax uses a simplified representative bracket set per province, not the exact official table for every province. Verify with official CRA sources; rates as of 2026.

Salary Breakdown
GUIDE

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01

Understanding Canadian Income Tax: Federal and Provincial

Canada uses a dual-layer progressive income tax system: federal tax plus provincial/territorial tax, both applied to the same taxable income. 2025 federal brackets (approximate, indexed annually): 15% up to roughly $57,000, 20.5% up to roughly $114,000, 26% up to roughly $178,000, 29% up to roughly $253,000, and 33% above that. The federal Basic Personal Amount (BPA) β€” around $15,700-$16,100 depending on the year and indexation β€” is tax-free. Provincial rates vary widely: Ontario runs roughly 5.05%-13.16% across five brackets (combined top marginal rate around 53.5%), British Columbia roughly 5.06%-20.5% (combined top rate around 53.5%), Alberta has Canada's lowest provincial rates at roughly 10%-15% (combined top rate around 48%), and Quebec runs its own system at roughly 14%-25.75%. Because two systems stack, your combined marginal rate β€” not just your bracket β€” determines how much of your next dollar earned is taxed. Note: exact bracket thresholds are indexed to inflation each year; verify current figures with the CRA before relying on this for filing.

02

CPP Contributions (Canada Pension Plan)

The Canada Pension Plan is a mandatory payroll deduction that funds your future retirement pension. Employees contribute roughly 5.95% of pensionable earnings between a basic exemption (around $3,500) and the Year's Maximum Pensionable Earnings (YMPE, roughly $68,000-$71,000 depending on the year), with the employer matching the same amount. Since 2024 there is also a second, additional tier ("CPP2") of roughly 4% on earnings between the YMPE and a higher ceiling (the Year's Additional Maximum Pensionable Earnings), which mainly affects higher earners. Self-employed workers pay both the employee and employer portions. Maximum annual employee CPP contribution is roughly $3,800-$4,000 for the base tier, higher earners paying somewhat more once CPP2 applies. Figures are indexed yearly β€” confirm the current year's exact limits with Service Canada/CRA before budgeting precisely.

03

EI Premiums (Employment Insurance)

Employment Insurance is a second mandatory payroll deduction that funds temporary income support for unemployment, parental/maternity leave, and sickness benefits. Employees contribute roughly 1.6%-1.7% of insurable earnings up to the annual Maximum Insurable Earnings (MIE, roughly $63,000-$66,000 depending on the year), for a maximum annual employee premium of roughly $1,000-$1,100. Employers pay about 1.4 times the employee rate. Quebec runs a parallel, separate program (QPIP) alongside a reduced EI rate, since Quebec's own parental-leave plan covers what EI covers for maternity/parental leave elsewhere in Canada. As with CPP, exact rates and maximums are set annually β€” treat the figures above as stable, order-of-magnitude estimates rather than the exact current-year numbers.

04

Why Your Province Matters (and this calculator's limitation)

Because provincial income tax is layered on top of federal tax and rates differ substantially by province β€” from Alberta's comparatively low rates to Quebec's higher, separately-administered system β€” the same gross salary can produce meaningfully different net pay depending on where you live and work. This calculator now lets you select your province or territory and applies that province's own bracket set, but the provincial tables used are a simplified, representative estimate rather than the CRA's exact figures (surtaxes and some credits are not modeled). For an exact number, cross-check with the CRA payroll deductions calculator β€” treat the "Income Tax" figure here as a province-aware approximation, not a pay-cheque-accurate result.

05

Gross vs. Net Salary: Negotiating Job Offers in Canada

Canadian job offers are almost always quoted as gross annual salary, before federal tax, provincial tax, CPP, and EI are deducted. A $70,000 gross offer in Ontario typically nets out to roughly $54,000-$56,000 annually (about $4,500-$4,700 monthly) after all statutory deductions β€” actual take-home varies by province and any additional deductions like pension contributions or union dues. When comparing offers across provinces, always convert to net pay rather than comparing gross figures directly, since a lower gross salary in a lower-tax province can sometimes net out similarly to a higher gross salary in a higher-tax province. When negotiating, it also helps to separate statutory deductions (tax/CPP/EI, which you cannot change) from optional benefits (extended health, RRSP matching, vacation days), since a smaller gross increase paired with strong benefits can outperform a larger gross number with none.

06

Using This Calculator

Enter your gross annual salary to see an estimated breakdown into federal + provincial income tax, CPP contributions, EI premiums, total deductions, and net salary (both annual and monthly). Use it to sanity-check a job offer, estimate take-home pay before signing a contract, or compare how a raise changes your net monthly income. Because this tool uses a single representative provincial rate rather than a province selector, treat results as a directional estimate β€” for pay-cheque-accurate numbers, use the official CRA payroll deductions online calculator with your actual province and TD1 information.

Frequently asked questions

Why does selecting a different province change my income tax?
Provincial tax is layered on top of federal tax and each province sets its own brackets, so the same gross salary is taxed differently depending on where you live β€” for example Alberta's rates are generally lower than Ontario's or BC's. Selecting your province applies that province's representative bracket set instead of a fixed default.
Are CPP and EI the same as income tax?
No. CPP and EI are separate mandatory payroll contributions, not income tax. CPP funds your future retirement pension and EI funds unemployment/parental leave benefits β€” both are calculated as a percentage of earnings up to their own annual maximums, independent of the income tax brackets.
Why does CPP or EI stop increasing after a certain salary?
Both CPP and EI only apply up to an annual earnings ceiling (the YMPE for CPP and the MIE for EI). Once your income exceeds that ceiling, no additional CPP or EI is deducted on the excess, so higher earners pay a capped maximum amount rather than a percentage of their full salary.
Is this calculator accurate enough to use for my actual paycheck?
Treat it as a directional estimate only. It uses simplified representative provincial brackets rather than the CRA's exact official tables, and does not model surtaxes or personal credits. For a pay-cheque-accurate number, use the CRA's official payroll deductions online calculator with your real TD1 information.
Why is Quebec different from the other provinces?
Quebec administers its own separate income tax system and its own parental insurance plan (QPIP) instead of relying solely on the federal EI program for maternity/parental benefits, so Quebec's EI rate is reduced accordingly and its provincial tax brackets differ from every other province.