2025 Canadian Tax Brackets: Federal and Provincial Rates Explained
Complete guide to all 5 federal tax brackets for 2025 (including the new 14.5% blended rate) and provincial rates for every province. See how your income is taxed.
Practical tax guides for Canadians filing their 2025 return. Plain language, no jargon, with calculators to see your exact numbers.
Tax season is open. The deadline to file your 2025 return is April 30, 2026 (self-employed: June 15, 2026). Estimate your tax now
Complete guide to all 5 federal tax brackets for 2025 (including the new 14.5% blended rate) and provincial rates for every province. See how your income is taxed.
The 2025 tax filing deadline is April 30, 2026. Self-employed deadline is June 15, 2026. Learn the penalties for late filing and how to avoid them.
Federal rate cut to 14.5%, capital gains increase cancelled, CPP2 second ceiling, new gig worker reporting rules, and more changes for the 2025 Canadian tax year.
No PST, highest basic personal amount ($22,323), and a 10% starting rate. See how much you'd save living in Alberta vs Ontario and BC.
British Columbia's 7 tax brackets (5.06% to 20.5%), basic personal amount, BC Climate Action Tax Credit, and how BC compares to Alberta and Ontario.
The proposed increase to 66.67% was deferred and then cancelled. For 2025, the capital gains inclusion rate is 50% for everyone. Here's how it works.
How long CRA takes to process your 2025 return and issue your refund. Online filing: ~2 weeks. Paper: ~8 weeks. How to check your refund status.
CRA treats crypto as a commodity. Selling, trading, or spending crypto triggers tax. Capital gains vs business income, ACB tracking, and why CRA is increasing audits.
Filing unlocks GST/HST credit, Canada Child Benefit, and provincial benefits. Here's who must file, who should file, and why skipping it costs you money.
$8,000/year, $40,000 lifetime. Tax-deductible contributions with tax-free withdrawals for your first home. The best registered account for first-time buyers.
Digital platforms now report your income directly to CRA. What this means for Uber drivers, DoorDash couriers, Etsy sellers, and Airbnb hosts filing their 2025 taxes.
You must register for GST/HST when your business revenue exceeds $30,000 in four consecutive quarters. How to register, what to charge, and input tax credits.
How to claim home office expenses on your 2025 tax return. Different rules for employees (T2200 required) and self-employed (T2125). Calculation method explained.
Pre-calculated tax breakdowns for 10 common salary levels across Ontario, BC, Alberta, and Quebec. Find your income and see your take-home pay for 2025.
Check your RRSP room on CRA My Account, your Notice of Assessment, or by calling CRA. Plus how RRSP room is calculated and what counts as earned income.
Why earning $1 more doesn't tax ALL your income at a higher rate. Clear explanation with examples showing how Canada's progressive tax system actually works.
Ontario's 5 tax brackets (5.05% to 13.16%), the Ontario surtax, and pre-calculated tax examples for common salaries. Compare Ontario to other provinces.
Why Quebec residents file two returns, how the 16.5% federal abatement works, QPP vs CPP, QPIP premiums, and what it all means for your take-home pay.
The 2025 RRSP contribution limit is $32,490 or 18% of earned income. The deadline was March 3, 2026. How RRSP deductions work and how to check your room.
Decision framework based on your income, tax rate, and goals. FHSA wins for first-time home buyers. RRSP wins at high income. TFSA wins for flexibility.
Everything self-employed Canadians need to know about taxes in 2025. Both halves of CPP (11.9%), deductible expenses, GST/HST registration, and filing deadlines.
The 2025 TFSA annual limit is $7,000. Cumulative room since 2009 is $102,000. How withdrawals re-add room, over-contribution penalties, and how to check your space.
The $2/day flat-rate method ended after 2022. For 2025, you must use the detailed method with a T2200 from your employer. Here's how it works.