Canadian Tax Brackets 2026 — Federal & All Provinces

Complete 2026 marginal tax rates for Canada. Interactive calculator showing federal + provincial combined rates, marginal vs effective tax rate.

Canada uses a graduated (progressive) tax system where higher income is taxed at higher rates. But the higher rates only apply to income within each bracket — not to all your income. Understanding your marginal rate (the rate on your next dollar) versus your effective rate (average tax on all income) is essential for smart tax planning. This guide covers federal brackets plus all 10 provinces for the 2026 tax year.

2026 Federal Tax Brackets

Taxable IncomeFederal RateTax on Bracket
$0 – $57,37515%Up to $8,606
$57,376 – $114,75020.5%Up to $11,762
$114,751 – $158,51926%Up to $11,380
$158,520 – $220,00029%Up to $17,829
Over $220,00033%33% on excess
Basic Personal Amount 2026: The federal basic personal amount is $16,129 (2025 indexed amount; 2026 expected ~$16,514). This creates a 15% federal non-refundable credit of approximately $2,419 — effectively meaning the first ~$16,514 of income is tax-free federally.

Tax Bracket Calculator — Federal + Provincial

Calculate Your 2026 Combined Tax

Federal tax (before credits):
Federal basic personal credit (15%):
Net federal tax:
Estimated provincial tax:
Total estimated tax:
Effective tax rate:
Marginal rate (federal + provincial):

Provincial Tax Brackets 2026

Ontario

$0–$51,4465.05%
$51,447–$102,8949.15%
$102,895–$150,00011.16%
$150,001–$220,00012.16%
Over $220,00013.16%

British Columbia

$0–$45,6545.06%
$45,655–$91,3107.70%
$91,311–$104,83510.50%
$104,836–$127,29912.29%
$127,300–$172,60214.70%
$172,603–$240,71616.80%
Over $240,71620.50%

Alberta

$0–$148,26910%
$148,270–$177,92212%
$177,923–$237,23013%
$237,231–$355,84514%
Over $355,84515%

Quebec

$0–$51,78014%
$51,781–$103,54519%
$103,546–$126,00024%
Over $126,00025.75%

Manitoba

$0–$47,00010.8%
$47,001–$100,00012.75%
Over $100,00017.4%

Saskatchewan

$0–$49,72010.5%
$49,721–$142,05812.5%
Over $142,05814.5%

Nova Scotia

$0–$29,5908.79%
$29,591–$59,18014.95%
$59,181–$93,00016.67%
$93,001–$150,00017.50%
Over $150,00021.00%

New Brunswick

$0–$49,9589.40%
$49,959–$99,91614.00%
$99,917–$185,06416.00%
Over $185,06419.50%

PEI

$0–$32,6569.80%
$32,657–$64,31313.80%
$64,314–$105,00016.70%
$105,001–$140,00018.00%
Over $140,00018.75%

Newfoundland & Labrador

$0–$43,1988.70%
$43,199–$86,39514.50%
$86,396–$154,24415.80%
$154,245–$215,94317.80%
$215,944–$275,87019.80%
Over $275,87021.80%

Marginal vs. Effective Tax Rate — What's the Difference?

Your marginal tax rate is the rate you pay on your next dollar of income. It's the relevant rate for deciding whether to contribute to an RRSP, earn additional income, or make a deductible investment. For most Canadians, the combined federal + provincial marginal rate ranges from about 20% to 54%.

Your effective tax rate is the total taxes paid divided by your total income. Because lower brackets are taxed at lower rates, your effective rate is always lower than your marginal rate. A person with $100,000 of taxable income in Ontario has a marginal rate of ~43.41% (federal 26% + Ontario 9.15%) but an effective rate of roughly 25–28%.

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