Ontario Marginal Tax Rate Calculator 2026

Find out exactly how much tax you'll pay on your next dollar of income — federal + Ontario brackets, CPP, EI, and surtax combined.

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Ontario Marginal Tax Rate

2026 CRA rates · Federal + Ontario · Surtax included · Estimates only — not tax advice

Your employment or self-employment income before the additional amount.

Bonus, freelance income, raise, RRSP withdrawal — any added earnings.

Marginal Rate
Net Kept
Effective Rate
Total Tax (New)
Additional Income Split
You keep
Tax
Component Bracket Rate Tax on Additional Income
Federal income tax
Ontario income tax
Ontario surtax (if applicable)
CPP contributions Up to 5.95% + 4.00% CPP2
EI premiums 1.63%
Ontario Health Premium Tiered
Total deducted from additional income

What This Calculator Does

The Ontario Marginal Tax Rate Calculator tells you the combined rate you'll pay on an additional dollar (or chunk) of income in 2026 — not just your average rate across all earnings. This is the number that matters when deciding whether to take on extra work, make an RRSP contribution, accept a bonus, or withdraw from a registered account.

It combines:

  • Federal income tax — using the 2026 brackets from CRA T4032-ON (15% to 33%)
  • Ontario income tax — using the 2026 provincial brackets (5.05% to 13.16%)
  • Ontario surtax — an additional 20% or 56% layered on top of provincial tax once it exceeds $5,818 or $7,446
  • CPP contributions — both CPP1 (5.95% up to $74,600 YMPE) and CPP2 (4.00% between $74,600 and $85,000)
  • EI premiums — 1.63% up to $68,900 maximum insurable earnings
  • Ontario Health Premium (OHP) — a tiered levy on taxable income

Once it knows your total tax at the new income level versus the original, it computes what percentage of the additional amount goes to government — that's your marginal rate. It also shows your net kept (dollars in pocket) and your overall effective rate across total income for context.

How Marginal Tax Works in Ontario

Canada uses a progressive tax system: each slice of your income is taxed at a different rate. The rate that applies to the last dollar you earn is called the marginal rate. Your marginal rate is higher than your effective (average) rate — and understanding this distinction changes how you think about every extra dollar you earn.

Federal Brackets (2026)

  • 15% on the first $58,523
  • 20.5% on $58,523 to $117,045
  • 26% on $117,045 to $181,440
  • 29% on $181,440 to $258,482
  • 33% on income above $258,482

The federal Basic Personal Amount credit of $16,452 × 14% = $2,303 reduces the federal tax otherwise payable.

Ontario Brackets (2026)

  • 5.05% on the first $53,891
  • 9.15% on $53,891 to $107,785
  • 11.16% on $107,785 to $150,000
  • 12.16% on $150,000 to $220,000
  • 13.16% on income above $220,000

Ontario also applies its Basic Personal Amount credit: $12,989 × 5.05% = approximately $656 off your Ontario tax.

Ontario Surtax — the Hidden Rate Boost

Once your Ontario basic tax (before the surtax) exceeds $5,818, an additional 20% is added. Once it exceeds $7,446, another 36% stacks on top. This makes the effective Ontario marginal rate substantially higher than the headline bracket for mid-to-upper income earners. For example, at $100,000 in combined income an Ontarian in the 9.15% Ontario bracket who has crossed the first surtax threshold pays 9.15% × 1.20 = 10.98% in Ontario tax on each additional dollar.

CPP and EI — Marginal Payroll Contributions

If your income is still below the CPP Year's Maximum Pensionable Earnings ($74,600) or Maximum Insurable Earnings for EI ($68,900), each additional dollar of employment income also triggers CPP and EI deductions. CPP1 costs you 5.95 cents on every dollar, CPP2 costs 4.00 cents on earnings from $74,600 to $85,000. EI costs 1.63 cents per dollar up to the ceiling. These are hard to ignore at lower incomes — at $50,000, CPP and EI alone add roughly 7.58 percentage points to your marginal rate.

Example Calculations — Real Ontario Numbers (2026)

The following examples show what happens to $10,000 of additional employment income at three common income levels. All figures use 2026 rates as published by CRA and ESDC.

Example 1: $55,000 → $65,000 (cross the federal bracket)

At $55,000 of current income, the next $10,000 straddles the $58,523 federal threshold:

  • Federal tax on the first $3,523 (at 15%): $528.45
  • Federal tax on the remaining $6,477 (at 20.5%): $1,327.79
  • Ontario tax on $10,000 at 9.15% (bracket applies throughout): $915.00
  • CPP1 on $10,000 at 5.95%: $595.00
  • EI on $10,000 at 1.63%: $163.00
  • OHP: minimal additional at this income range

Approximate combined marginal rate: ~35–37%. You keep roughly $6,300–$6,500 of the $10,000.

Example 2: $80,000 → $90,000 (mid-range, CPP2 zone)

At $80,000 current income, you are past CPP1's YMPE ($74,600) and earning CPP2-eligible income. For the $10,000 added:

  • Federal tax at 20.5%: $2,050.00
  • Ontario tax at 9.15% (with surtax): approximately $1,098 (surtax applies)
  • CPP2 on $5,000 (up to $85,000 YAMPE ceiling): $200.00
  • EI: capped out past $68,900, so $0

Approximate combined marginal rate: ~33–34%. You keep roughly $6,600–$6,700.

Example 3: $200,000 → $210,000 (top brackets, Ontario surtax fully active)

At $200,000, you are in the 29% federal bracket and the 13.16% Ontario bracket. The Ontario surtax is fully engaged (both 20% and 36% layers).

  • Federal tax at 29%: $2,900.00
  • Ontario basic tax at 12.16%: $1,216.00
  • Ontario surtax (56% of Ontario basic): approximately $681
  • CPP: capped out, $0
  • EI: capped out, $0
  • OHP: at max tier, $0 incremental

Approximate combined marginal rate: ~47–49%. You keep roughly $5,100–$5,300.

Income Range Federal Bracket Ontario Bracket Approx. Marginal Rate Net Kept of $10K
$55K → $65K 15% / 20.5% 9.15% ~35–37% ~$6,300
$80K → $90K 20.5% 9.15% + surtax ~33–34% ~$6,650
$200K → $210K 29% 12.16% + full surtax ~47–49% ~$5,200

Note: "Approximate" figures reflect the incremental tax method used by this calculator. Minor differences from year-end T1 filing may occur due to rounding and mid-bracket transitions. For tax-planning decisions, verify with a CPA or tax advisor.

Full methodology: Marginal Tax Calculator – Calc-HQ.ca