Federal (with QC abatement) + Quebec provincial tax estimate
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Claim $100 Bonus →| Quebec Taxable Income | Rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $51,780 | 14% |
| $51,781 – $103,545 | 19% |
| $103,546 – $126,000 | 24% |
| Over $126,000 | 25.75% |
Quebec personal basic amount: $17,183. Federal QC abatement reduces federal tax by 16.5% before other credits. Quebec uses QPP (not CPP) and QPIP (not EI for parental benefits).
Quebec is unique in Canada: it collects its own provincial income tax through Revenu Québec (not via CRA). To avoid double-charging, the federal government gives Quebec residents a 16.5% reduction on their federal basic tax — called the Quebec abatement. This reduces federal tax but also means Quebec residents don't receive certain federal transfers directly.
Quebec workers pay into the Quebec Pension Plan (QPP) instead of CPP. The QPP contribution rate for 2026 is 6.4% on earnings between $3,500 and $73,200. Additionally, Quebec introduced a second QPP enhancement (QPP2) at 4% on earnings between $73,200 and $81,900. The employer matches these contributions.
Quebec has its own parental insurance plan (QPIP) which is more generous than EI for parental leave. Workers pay 0.494% on all insurable earnings (no cap at $63,200 — the full Quebec maximum insurable earnings apply). Quebec residents pay lower EI rates than other provinces because QPIP covers parental benefits.
Quebec residents must file two separate tax returns: one with CRA (federal) and one with Revenu Québec (provincial). Most tax software handles both, but be aware of the extra step. Revenu Québec has its own rules for deductions, credits, and tax planning that sometimes differ from federal rules.
The Quebec Solidarity Tax Credit helps lower and middle-income residents with housing costs, sales tax, and remote community costs. It's administered by Revenu Québec and paid monthly. Eligibility depends on income, family situation, and housing costs. This credit can be worth up to $2,000+ annually for eligible households.