Effective Tax Rate in Canada 2025: What You Actually Pay

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:

Effective Tax Rates by Income in Ontario 2025

IncomeTotal TaxEffective RateTake-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

Why Your Effective Rate Is Lower Than You Think

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.

How to Lower Your Effective Tax Rate

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.

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