CPP Contributions for Gig Workers in Canada 2025

How CPP works for self-employed Canadians — rates, CPP2, deductions, and what you actually pay.

Key Difference from Employees: Self-employed gig workers pay BOTH the employee and employer portions of CPP — effectively double the employee rate. In 2025, the combined self-employed rate is 11.9% on net self-employment income.

How CPP Works for Self-Employed Workers

The Canada Pension Plan (CPP) is a mandatory retirement savings program. Employees contribute at one rate, and their employer matches it. Self-employed workers have no employer — so they pay both sides themselves.

CPP contributions are calculated on your net self-employment income (after deducting business expenses) up to the Year's Maximum Pensionable Earnings (YMPE). For 2025, the YMPE is approximately $71,300. There is also a basic exemption of $3,500 — CPP is not charged on the first $3,500 of earnings.

2025 CPP Contribution Rates

Contribution TypeRateMax Earnings (Approx.)
CPP1 — Employee portion5.95%$71,300 YMPE
CPP1 — Employer portion (self-employed pay this too)5.95%$71,300 YMPE
Total CPP1 — Self-employed11.9%$71,300 YMPE
CPP2 — additional contribution4% each side = 8% combined~$73,200 (Year's Additional Maximum)

Net income between the YMPE (~$71,300) and the Year's Additional Maximum Pensionable Earnings (~$73,200) is subject to CPP2. The CPP2 combined rate for self-employed is 8%.

Maximum CPP Contribution for Self-Employed (2025)

CPP1 maximum: ($71,300 − $3,500) × 11.9% = approximately $8,068

CPP2 maximum: ($73,200 − $71,300) × 8% = approximately $152

Total maximum CPP for a self-employed gig worker in 2025: approximately $8,220

This is a significant tax cost. If you earn $60,000 net from gig work, you'll pay approximately $6,718 in CPP alone — before income tax.

CPP Calculator for Gig Workers

How to Claim CPP on Your T1

CPP contributions are calculated on Schedule 8 (CPP Contributions on Self-Employment Income). The result flows to your T1 in two ways:

These two mechanisms together mean that while you pay double CPP, the tax cost is partially offset.

Is CPP Worth It for Gig Workers?

CPP contributions are mandatory for self-employed workers with net income over $3,500. However, they do build real retirement benefits — your CPP retirement pension is based on your lifetime contributions. Paying CPP as a self-employed worker means you will receive a CPP pension in retirement.

You can opt out of CPP contributions if you are 65–70 and already collecting CPP, or if you have a disability — but not simply because you prefer to save elsewhere.

CPP and Quarterly Installments

CPP owing is included in your total tax balance due. If your combined income tax + CPP exceeds $3,000 in taxes not withheld at source, quarterly installments are required. CPP can be a large component of installment amounts for gig workers with moderate-to-high income.

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Informational only. CPP rates and maximums are updated annually — verify current figures at canada.ca. Not tax or legal advice.