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Quebec income tax calculator 2026

Quebec's four-bracket system continues for 2026 with the BPA rising substantially to $18,571, an increase of nearly $1,400 from 2025. The dual-return filing requirement and the federal abatement remain unchanged.

Canadian income tax calculator 2026

Federal and provincial tax, CPP, and EI. Live calculation as you type. No page refresh, no sign-up.

Your provincial tax rate depends on this.

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Reduces your taxable income dollar-for-dollar.

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Union dues, child care, home office, etc.

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Quebec

  • Basic personal amount: $18,571.
  • Quebec administers its own tax system. Residents file a separate return with Revenu Québec in addition to the CRA.
  • Four brackets from 14% to 25.75%, giving Quebec the highest top combined marginal rate in Canada at ~58.75%.
Revenu Québec: Income Tax Return
Take-home pay
$52,477
Total tax
$22,523
Average rate
30.0%
Marginal rate
36.1%

Breakdown


Federal tax
$7,739

Net of the 16.5% Quebec federal abatement.

Provincial tax
$8,987
QPP contributions (incl. $16 QPP2)
$4,566
QPIP premiums
$371
EI premiums
$861
Total deductions
$22,523

Take-home per period

Monthly
$4,373
Bi-weekly
$2,018
Weekly
$1,009

Where your money goes

  • Take-home70.0%
  • Federal12.4%
  • Provincial12.0%
  • CPP6.1%
  • EI1.1%

Rates last updated: June 10, 2026

Estimates based on 2026 CRA-published rates. Your actual tax may differ based on additional deductions and credits. Not tax advice. Consult a professional before making financial decisions.

2026 Quebec provincial tax brackets

These rates apply to your provincial taxable income. Federal tax is calculated separately using federal brackets.

Income rangeTax rate
First $53,25514.00%
Over $53,255 to $106,49519%
Over $106,495 to $129,59024%
Over $129,59025.75%

How Quebec income tax works in 2026

For 2026, Quebec's four provincial brackets are: 14% on the first $53,255, 19% from $53,255 to $106,495, 24% from $106,495 to $129,590, and 25.75% above $129,590. These thresholds are indexed from 2025.

The BPA rises to $18,571 for 2026, generating a non-refundable credit at the 14% rate, worth approximately $2,600, about $194 more than 2025. Because Quebec's bottom rate is 14% (compared to 5–10% in many other provinces), the absolute value of the BPA credit in Quebec is among the highest in the country, even though the BPA amount is moderate by national standards.

Note on federal tax: Quebec residents are entitled to a federal abatement of approximately 16.5% on basic federal income tax, reflecting the province's independent tax administration. This calculator applies the abatement, so the federal tax shown is already net of the 16.5% reduction and matches your actual CRA assessment. The two-return filing process (T1 with CRA, TP-1 with Revenu Québec) handles this automatically.

Note on federal tax for Quebec residents

This calculator applies the 16.5% Quebec federal abatement. The federal tax shown is net of the abatement, which Quebec residents receive because the province administers its own tax system, so it matches your actual federal tax owing.

What changed for 2026 in Quebec

The BPA increases significantly to $18,571 for 2026, up from $17,183. The first bracket ceiling rises from $51,780 to $53,255. No changes to the rates or the Quebec abatement mechanism.

What makes Quebec's tax system distinctive

Quebec's dual-return structure, QPP, and QPIP continue unchanged for 2026. The province remains the only jurisdiction in Canada with a fully independent provincial tax administration.

Quebec's top combined marginal rate is approximately 53.3%, which is among the highest in Canada. This figure already reflects the 16.5% federal abatement: the top 33% federal rate becomes about 27.55% after the abatement, plus Quebec's top 25.75% rate. Without the abatement the headline 33% + 25.75% would suggest 58.75%, but the abatement is why the real top rate is about 53.3%. This makes it particularly valuable to model RRSP deductions for high earners in Quebec.

Quebec tax credits and deductions

The Solidarity Tax Credit (Crédit d'impôt pour solidarité) continues in 2026 as Quebec's main income-tested refundable benefit. It combines housing, sales tax, and northern supplement components into a single monthly payment administered by Revenu Québec.

RRSP contributions (referred to as REER in French) reduce both federal and Quebec net income, making them especially effective for Quebec residents at higher marginal rates. Non-refundable credits on the Quebec TP-1 for medical expenses, disability, and union dues may differ in amount or structure from the federal equivalents. The Fonds de solidarité FTQ and Fondaction investment vehicles carry an additional 15% Quebec tax credit, available to residents who contribute through payroll deductions.

FAQ's

  • Do Quebec residents really file two separate tax returns?
    Yes. Quebec residents file a federal return with the Canada Revenue Agency (T1) and a separate provincial return with Revenu Québec (TP-1 form) every year. The two returns use different forms, different software interfaces, and different phone lines for questions. Both are due April 30 for most filers. Many Quebec-based tax software products handle both returns in a single workflow, but they produce two distinct submissions and two separate assessments. Employers in Quebec also remit source deductions to both CRA and Revenu Québec under separate rules.
  • How does this calculator handle the Quebec federal abatement?
    Because Quebec administers its own provincial tax system, the federal government applies a 16.5% abatement that reduces federal income tax owed by Quebec residents, effectively crediting back a portion of federal tax to help fund Quebec's independent administration. This calculator applies the abatement, so the federal tax it shows for Quebec residents is already net of the 16.5% reduction and matches your actual federal tax owing. For an accurate combined picture across both returns, use Revenu Québec-certified tax software.
  • What's the difference between my marginal and average tax rate?
    Your marginal rate is the rate that applies to the next dollar you earn; it's set by whichever federal and provincial bracket the top slice of your income falls into. Your average rate is simply total income tax divided by gross income, expressed as a percentage. Canada uses a graduated bracket system, so only the income above each threshold is taxed at the higher rate, not your entire income. For most people, the marginal rate is noticeably higher than the average rate.
  • How is taxable income calculated?
    Taxable income starts with your total income from all sources: employment, self-employment, investments, and other amounts reported on your T4 and other CRA slips. From that you subtract permitted deductions: RRSP contributions, union and professional dues, pension adjustments, child care expenses, and a few others the CRA allows above the line. The result is your net income, which is what federal and provincial tax rates are applied to before non-refundable credits like the basic personal amount further reduce the bill.
  • What is the basic personal amount (BPA)?
    The basic personal amount is a non-refundable tax credit available to every Canadian taxpayer, effectively sheltering a baseline slice of income from tax. For 2026, the federal BPA is $16,452, though it gradually phases down for incomes above roughly $181,440. Each province sets its own BPA on top of the federal one, ranging from about $10,818 in Newfoundland and Labrador to $22,323 in Alberta. Because it works as a credit rather than a deduction, it reduces the tax you owe directly rather than simply lowering the income that gets taxed.
  • How do CPP and CPP2 contributions work in 2026?
    The Canada Pension Plan (CPP) requires employees to contribute 5.95% on earnings between $3,500 (the basic exemption) and $74,600 (the Year's Maximum Pensionable Earnings) for 2026. CPP2 is a second tier introduced in 2024: a separate 4% contribution applies to earnings between that first ceiling and a second ceiling of $85,000. Employers match both tiers; self-employed individuals pay the full employee-plus-employer share for each. Quebec residents contribute to the Quebec Pension Plan (QPP) instead, which follows similar but distinct rules.
  • When am I required to pay EI premiums?
    Most employees pay Employment Insurance (EI) premiums on insurable earnings up to the annual ceiling ($65,700 in 2026) at a rate of 1.64% for the employee share. Quebec residents pay a lower rate of 1.31% because they contribute separately to the Quebec Parental Insurance Plan (QPIP). Self-employed individuals are generally exempt from EI unless they've voluntarily opted into the program. Once your earnings reach the annual ceiling, no further premiums are deducted for the rest of that calendar year.
  • How do RRSP contributions reduce my tax?
    Contributing to a Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) reduces your net income dollar-for-dollar, directly lowering both federal and provincial income tax for that year. The tax saving depends on your marginal rate: at a 43% combined marginal rate, a $5,000 contribution saves about $2,150 in tax. Contribution room equals 18% of your prior year's earned income up to an annual maximum, plus any unused room carried forward. Growth inside an RRSP is tax-deferred; you pay income tax only when funds are withdrawn, typically in retirement when your marginal rate may be lower.
  • Will the calculator's result match my actual CRA tax bill?
    This calculator estimates federal and provincial income tax, CPP contributions, and EI premiums using CRA-published 2026 rates. It produces a reliable ballpark for the most common employment income scenario. It does not account for Ontario's provincial surtax, additional non-refundable credits beyond the basic personal amount (medical expenses, charitable donations, the disability tax credit, tuition), dividend tax credits, the capital gains inclusion rate, or the alternative minimum tax. If any of those apply to you, your actual Notice of Assessment may differ materially. Use this tool for planning and year-over-year comparisons, not as a substitute for reviewing your completed T1 return or consulting a tax professional.

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Estimates based on 2026 CRA-published rates. Your actual tax may differ based on additional deductions and credits. Not tax advice. Consult a professional before making financial decisions.