Quebec has some of the highest provincial income tax rates in Canada, but also provides more extensive social programs. Quebec residents also contribute to QPP (Quebec Pension Plan) instead of CPP, and QPIP (Quebec Parental Insurance Plan) instead of some EI. Enter your gross income for an estimate.
Quebec operates the most distinct tax system of any Canadian province. Several key differences apply to Quebec residents:
Quebec residents receive a 16.5% reduction on their federal income tax (called the Quebec abatement). This is because Quebec administers its own income tax system separately from the federal government — Quebecers file two separate income tax returns (one federal, one provincial), and the abatement offsets the cost of Quebec administering its own tax collection.
Quebec residents contribute to the Quebec Pension Plan (QPP) instead of the Canada Pension Plan (CPP). The QPP contribution rate for 2025 is slightly higher (6.40%) than CPP (5.95%), with a slightly higher contribution on the same maximum pensionable earnings ($73,200).
Quebec has its own Parental Insurance Plan (QPIP) that provides maternity, paternity, and adoption leave benefits. Quebec EI premiums are lower to offset QPIP contributions. Quebec's parental leave is more generous than EI parental benefits in other provinces.
| Quebec Income | QC Rate | Combined (Federal + QC)* |
|---|---|---|
| $0 – $17,183 (QC BPA) | 0% | ~0–12.52% |
| $17,184 – $51,780 | 14% | ~28.53% |
| $51,781 – $103,545 | 19% | ~37.12% |
| $103,546 – $126,000 | 24% | ~41.12% |
| Over $126,000 | 25.75% | ~53.31% |
*Combined rates include the 16.5% federal abatement for Quebec residents. Top combined rate of 53.31% is among the highest in Canada.
| Gross Income | Total Deductions | Net Annual | Net Monthly | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | ~$13,500 | ~$36,500 | ~$3,040 | ~27% |
| $75,000 | ~$22,800 | ~$52,200 | ~$4,350 | ~30.4% |
| $100,000 | ~$33,400 | ~$66,600 | ~$5,550 | ~33.4% |
| $120,000 | ~$43,200 | ~$76,800 | ~$6,400 | ~36% |
| $150,000 | ~$59,500 | ~$90,500 | ~$7,540 | ~39.7% |
KOHO is available to all Canadians including Quebec residents. Spend smarter, earn cash back, and save automatically — all with no monthly fees. Disponible en français.
Get KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYAQuebec funds a broader array of provincial social programs than other provinces, including subsidized childcare ($10–$15/day), more generous parental leave (QPIP), a public prescription drug plan (RAMQ), and historically larger public sector. The higher tax rates fund these programs — for families with young children, the net financial benefit of Quebec's social programs can outweigh the higher taxes.
Two. Quebec residents file a federal income tax return (T1) with the CRA and a separate provincial return (TP-1) with Revenu Québec. Both returns have different forms, different credits, and different deadlines (though both are due April 30). Some financial software handles both simultaneously.
No. This calculator shows gross tax owing before Quebec's solidarity tax credit (a refundable credit for low and moderate-income Quebecers worth up to approximately $1,500/year for a family). Families receiving this credit will have a lower effective rate than shown.