Guide · 7 min read

2025 & 2026 Canadian Tax Brackets Explained — Every Province

Published July 1, 2026By AllTaxCalc

Tax brackets get updated every year to reflect inflation. If your 2025 numbers look slightly different from 2026, that's usually why — not a policy change, just indexing. This guide lays out both years for federal and each province, and explains what the numbers actually mean.

How brackets actually work

Canada uses a progressive tax system: your income is sliced into brackets, and each slice is taxed at its own rate. Only the portion of income within a bracket is taxed at that bracket's rate.

Example: if the first bracket is 14% up to $58,523, and you earn $60,000, then $58,523 is taxed at 14% and only the remaining $1,477 is taxed at the next rate. You do not lose money by "moving into a higher bracket" — a common myth.

Federal brackets: 2025 vs 2026

2025 (blended lowest rate of 14.5%):

2026 (lowest rate now 14%):

The federal Basic Personal Amount rose from $16,129 (2025) to $16,452 (2026) — meaning slightly more of your income is effectively tax-free.

Provincial brackets 2026: a quick tour

Ontario

5.05% up to $53,941 · 9.15% to $107,882 · 11.16% to $150,000 · 12.16% to $220,000 · 13.16% above. Plus an Ontario surtax that kicks in once your provincial tax exceeds certain thresholds. Basic Personal Amount: $12,983.

British Columbia

5.6% up to $50,363 · 7.7% to $100,729 · 10.5% to $115,647 · 12.29% to $140,430 · 14.7% to $190,405 · 16.8% to $265,545 · 20.5% above. BPA: $13,216.

Alberta

Flat-ish at low income: 8% up to $61,201, then 10%, 12%, 13%, 14%, 15% at higher levels. Alberta's real advantage is the BPA — $22,769, by far the highest in Canada. That means the first $22,769 you earn is effectively provincial-tax-free.

Quebec

14% up to $54,470 · 19% to $108,940 · 24% to $132,540 · 25.75% above. Higher-looking numbers, but Quebec residents get a 16.5% federal tax abatement and pay QPP instead of CPP. BPA: $18,988.

Manitoba

10.8% up to $47,564 · 12.75% to $101,200 · 17.4% above. BPA: $15,780.

Saskatchewan

10.5% up to $54,604 · 12.5% to $156,012 · 14.5% above. BPA: $19,396.

Nova Scotia

8.79% up to $31,142 · 14.95% to $62,285 · 16.67% to $97,878 · 17.5% to $157,866 · 21% above. Nova Scotia has among the higher combined rates for middle-income earners. BPA: $11,987.

New Brunswick

9.4% up to $52,434 · 14% to $104,870 · 16% to $194,240 · 19.5% above. BPA: $13,691.

Newfoundland & Labrador

Eight brackets, from 8.7% up to 21.8% at very high incomes. BPA: $11,311.

Prince Edward Island

9.5% up to $34,061 · 13.47% to $66,078 · 16.6% to $107,310 · 17.62% to $143,080 · 19% above. Plus a small surtax on high provincial tax amounts. BPA: $14,650.

Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut

The territories generally have lower provincial rates than most provinces. Yukon: 6.4%–15%. NWT: 5.9%–14.05%. Nunavut: 4%–11.5% (the lowest starting rate in Canada). BPAs are also high, reflecting cost of living: $16,452 (Yukon), $18,234 (NWT), $19,698 (Nunavut).

Try the calculator

See what you actually take home — every province, employee or self-employed.

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What actually changed from 2025 to 2026?

Most of the changes are simply indexing — bracket thresholds move up with inflation so you're not silently pushed into a higher bracket by rising wages. A few real policy shifts:

None of these are dramatic, but on the same salary, take-home in 2026 typically works out marginally better than 2025 — mostly thanks to the federal rate reduction and higher BPAs.

Combined marginal rates: the number that matters

Your combined marginal rate — federal + provincial together — is what determines the value of an RRSP contribution or an extra dollar earned. In 2026, a middle-income earner in Ontario faces a combined marginal rate near 29–30%. In Alberta it's closer to 25%. In Quebec, closer to 37–38%. Same salary, meaningfully different behaviour at the margin.

How to use this practically

Two useful moves once you know your bracket:

  1. If you're near a bracket edge, RRSP contributions or timing income (e.g. deferring a bonus) can save more than you'd expect.
  2. Comparing job offers between provinces? Look at combined take-home, not gross salary. A $75,000 Alberta offer often beats an $80,000 offer in Quebec.

Run your specific numbers through the calculator for either year. It handles all these brackets automatically — including surtaxes, abatements, and every province.

Frequently asked questions

Which province has the lowest income tax in Canada for 2026?
Alberta and the territories (Yukon, NWT, Nunavut) generally have the lowest provincial or territorial rates, and Alberta has the highest Basic Personal Amount at $22,769. That means high-income Alberta earners typically take home the most on the same salary.
Do provincial tax brackets change every year?
Yes — most provinces index their brackets to inflation, so thresholds move up slightly each year. Actual rate changes (as opposed to threshold indexing) are less common and are usually announced with a provincial budget.
What's the highest combined tax rate in Canada?
For 2026, high-income earners in provinces like Newfoundland & Labrador and Nova Scotia can face combined federal + provincial marginal rates of 54%+ on income above roughly $260,000. Alberta's combined top rate is closer to 48%.

Keep reading

How Canadian Income Tax Is Calculated (2026)

A plain-language walkthrough of federal, provincial, CPP/QPP, and EI.

Self-Employed Tax Rules in Canada

Freelancer taxes, expenses, CPP, GST/HST, and instalments.

RRSP vs TFSA: Which Saves You More Tax?

How each account works, and which fits your marginal rate.