By practice area, province, and years of experience
Lawyers in Canada earn widely varying incomes depending on practice area, firm size, geography, and whether they are salaried employees or equity partners. In 2026, the average salary for a licensed lawyer in Canada ranges from approximately $85,000 for junior associates to over $500,000 for senior partners at Bay Street firms.
The median lawyer salary for salaried employees (excluding equity partners) is approximately $128,000–$142,000. Government and public sector lawyers typically earn $90,000–$145,000 with strong benefits and pensions, while corporate/commercial lawyers at major firms can reach $200,000–$350,000 as senior associates.
| Practice Area | Average Salary Range |
|---|---|
| Corporate/M&A (Bay Street) | $120,000–$350,000 |
| Securities & Capital Markets | $115,000–$320,000 |
| Tax Law | $110,000–$280,000 |
| Litigation (Commercial) | $100,000–$240,000 |
| Real Estate | $90,000–$180,000 |
| Employment/Labour Law | $88,000–$175,000 |
| Criminal Defence | $75,000–$160,000 |
| Family Law | $72,000–$150,000 |
| Government/Crown Counsel | $90,000–$145,000 |
| In-House Counsel | $110,000–$220,000 |
| Province | Avg Lawyer Salary | Est. Take-Home |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario (Toronto) | $148,200 | $102,400 |
| Alberta | $138,600 | $99,800 |
| British Columbia | $134,400 | $94,600 |
| Quebec | $118,800 | $77,200 |
| Saskatchewan | $122,100 | $86,400 |
| Manitoba | $112,400 | $77,600 |
Lawyers who operate through a professional corporation (PC) can defer significant tax by retaining income in the corporation at the small business tax rate (9% federal) rather than paying full personal marginal rates of 40–53%. This strategy is most effective for lawyers earning $200,000+ with lower personal cash needs. Consult a tax lawyer or CPA to set up correctly.
At $130,000–$200,000, your RRSP contribution room is $23,400–$32,490 annually. Every dollar saved in RRSP at a 43–53% marginal rate represents significant future compounding. A lawyer contributing $30,000/year from age 30 to 60 accumulates approximately $2.5 million at 6% growth.
Annual Law Society dues ($2,000–$4,000), mandatory professional liability insurance (LAWPRO in Ontario: $3,000–$7,000), and continuing professional development costs are all deductible against employment income with a T2200 from your employer, or as business expenses if self-employed.
Contingency fee lawyers often have highly variable annual incomes. RRSP contributions can be carried forward for up to one year, allowing strategic deposits in high-income years. Work with a CPA to time contributions and installment payments to avoid interest charges.
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