Provincial
Tax Calculators
Free tax calculators for all Canadian provinces and territories. See provincial tax brackets, compare rates, and calculate your 2025 taxes.
Choose Your Province or Territory
Ontario
5.05% - 13.16%
Includes Ontario surtax and health premium calculations
→ ⚜️Quebec
14% - 25.75%
QPP and QPIP instead of CPP/EI. Separate filing.
→ 🏔️Alberta
10% - 15%
Lowest provincial taxes. No PST, no health premium.
→ 🌲British Columbia
5.06% - 20.5%
7 tax brackets. No MSP premiums.
→Manitoba
10.8% - 17.4%
→Saskatchewan
10.5% - 14.5%
→Nova Scotia
8.79% - 21%
→New Brunswick
9.4% - 19.5%
→Newfoundland & Labrador
8.7% - 21.8%
→Prince Edward Island
9.65% - 18.75%
→Yukon
6.4% - 15%
→Northwest Territories
5.9% - 14.05%
→Nunavut
4% - 11.5%
→2025 Provincial Tax Rate Comparison
| Province | Lowest Rate | Highest Rate | Top Combined* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alberta | 10% | 15% | 48% |
| British Columbia | 5.06% | 20.5% | 53.5% |
| Manitoba | 10.8% | 17.4% | 50.4% |
| New Brunswick | 9.4% | 19.5% | 52.5% |
| Newfoundland | 8.7% | 21.8% | 54.8% |
| Nova Scotia | 8.79% | 21% | 54% |
| Ontario | 5.05% | 13.16% | 53.53% |
| PEI | 9.65% | 18.75% | 51.75% |
| Quebec | 14% | 25.75% | 53.31% |
| Saskatchewan | 10.5% | 14.5% | 47.5% |
*Combined includes federal tax. Surtaxes may apply in some provinces.
Understanding Canadian Provincial Taxes
Canada has a unique tax system where residents pay both federal and provincial/territorial income taxes. Each province sets its own tax brackets and rates, resulting in significant differences in total tax burden across the country.
Lowest Taxes: Alberta and Saskatchewan generally have the lowest overall tax burden due to their low provincial rates and, in Alberta's case, no provincial sales tax.
Highest Taxes: Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and Quebec have the highest combined marginal rates, exceeding 53% for top earners.
Special Cases: Quebec administers its own tax system and pension plan (QPP instead of CPP). Ontario adds a surtax and health premium on top of regular provincial taxes.