CATaxTools

2025-01-15

Understanding Canadian Income Tax Brackets 2025

A plain-English guide to how Canada's progressive federal and provincial income tax brackets work, including the Basic Personal Amount and how to calculate your tax.

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Canada uses a progressive income tax system, meaning higher income is taxed at higher rates. But — crucially — those higher rates only apply to the portion of income above each threshold, not your entire salary.

Federal Tax Brackets 2025

Income RangeFederal Rate
$0 – $57,37515%
$57,375 – $114,75020.5%
$114,750 – $158,46826%
$158,468 – $220,00029%
Over $220,00033%

How Brackets Work in Practice

If you earn $80,000, here’s how your federal tax is calculated:

  • First $57,375 × 15% = $8,606.25
  • Remaining $22,625 × 20.5% = $4,638.13
  • Gross federal tax = $13,244.38

Then, subtract the Basic Personal Amount (BPA) credit:

  • BPA $16,129 × 15% = $2,419.35 credit
  • Federal tax payable = $10,825.03

Provincial Tax Is Additional

Every province and territory also levies its own income tax with its own rates and brackets. Ontario, for instance, adds:

Income RangeOntario Rate
$0 – $52,8865.05%
$52,886 – $105,7759.15%
$105,775 – $150,00011.16%

Your combined marginal rate is the sum of federal and provincial rates. At $80,000 in Ontario, that’s 20.5% + 9.15% = 29.65% on your next dollar.

What Is the Marginal vs. Effective Rate?

  • Marginal rate: The rate on your next dollar of income (e.g., 29.65%)
  • Effective rate: Total tax ÷ total income — always lower than marginal rate

Understanding this distinction matters for RRSP planning: every $1 contributed to an RRSP saves you tax at your marginal rate, not your effective rate.

Quebec Is Different

Quebec residents file a separate provincial return with Revenu Québec and pay an additional 16.5% “abatement” that reduces federal tax payable in Quebec. Quebec’s provincial rates are higher (up to 25.75%), but the federal abatement partially offsets this.

Key Takeaway

With average combined federal + provincial marginal rates ranging from roughly 20% (low incomes in Alberta) to over 50% (top earners in some provinces), understanding your tax bracket is essential for effective RRSP, investment, and income-splitting planning.

Use our calculators to apply these concepts to your own income. Tax information is for general guidance only — consult a CPA for advice specific to your situation.