Tax Deadline: April 30, 2026
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The effective tax rate is the percentage of your total income that goes to all taxes combined — federal, provincial, CPP, and EI. It's almost always lower than your marginal rate because of how progressive tax brackets work.
Effective Tax Rate:
| Income | Total Tax | Effective Rate | Take-Home |
|---|---|---|---|
| $30,000 | ~$5,200 | ~17.3% | ~$24,800 |
| $50,000 | ~$10,668 | ~21.3% | ~$39,332 |
| $75,000 | ~$20,733 | ~27.6% | ~$54,267 |
| $100,000 | ~$29,635 | ~29.6% | ~$70,365 |
| $150,000 | ~$50,958 | ~34.0% | ~$99,042 |
| $200,000 | ~$76,422 | ~38.2% | ~$123,578 |
Many Canadians overestimate their tax burden because they confuse marginal and effective rates. If someone says "I'm in the 43% tax bracket," they mean their marginal rate — the rate on their top slice of income. Their actual effective rate on all income might be 28–32%. The basic personal amounts, CPP exemptions, and progressive bracket structure all reduce the effective rate significantly.
RRSP contributions: reduce your taxable income and move income into retirement when rates may be lower. TFSA: no tax reduction today, but all future growth is tax-free. Childcare deductions, tuition credits, medical expenses, and home office deductions all reduce the income used to calculate tax, lowering your effective rate.
After taxes and deductions, every dollar counts. KOHO's no-fee account means you stop paying $15-$30/month in bank fees. Plus cash back on groceries and gas. Use code BREMO2026 for a bonus.
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