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2026 Ontario Hourly to Salary Calculator | Convert Hourly Wage to Annual Salary

Updated

This Ontario-specific calculator helps convert an hourly wage to an annual salary or find the equivalent hourly rate from a salary. Ontario has unique tax considerations including the Ontario Health Premium and provincial surtax that affect your take-home pay.

Ontario Minimum Wage 2026

Ontario’s minimum wage rates for 2026:

Worker CategoryHourly RateAnnual Salary (40 hrs/wk)
General minimum wage$17.60$36,608
Student workers (under 18)$16.55$34,424
Liquor servers$17.60$36,608
Homeworkers$19.35$40,248
Hunting/fishing guides (5+ hrs)$88.00/dayVaries

Ontario’s minimum wage is tied to annual inflation adjustments. The $17.60 rate puts a full-time worker in the 44th income percentile in Ontario.

Hourly to Salary Conversion in Ontario

To convert your Ontario hourly wage to annual salary:

Formula: Hourly Rate × Hours per Week × (52 - Unpaid Vacation Weeks) = Annual Salary

Example: An Ontario worker earning $30/hour working 40 hours per week with 2 weeks unpaid vacation:

  • $30 × 40 = $1,200 per week
  • $1,200 × 50 weeks = $60,000 annual salary
Pay Amount
Pay Type
Hours Per Week
Weeks of Vacation
Annual Salary
Hourly
Weekly
Bi-Weekly
Monthly
Annual

Ontario Hourly Wage to Annual Salary Table

This table shows common hourly wages converted to annual salaries with estimated Ontario after-tax amounts:

Hourly WageAnnual SalaryMonthlyAfter-Tax (Est.)
$17.60 (min wage)$36,608$3,051$31,200
$20.00$41,600$3,467$35,100
$25.00$52,000$4,333$42,200
$30.00$62,400$5,200$49,100
$35.00$72,800$6,067$55,400
$40.00$83,200$6,933$61,700
$45.00$93,600$7,800$67,800
$50.00$104,000$8,667$73,600
$60.00$124,800$10,400$85,200
$75.00$156,000$13,000$102,000

After-tax estimates based on single filer with basic personal amounts. Use our Ontario income tax calculator for precise calculations.

Ontario Tax Brackets 2026

Ontario has five provincial tax brackets plus a surtax on higher incomes:

Taxable IncomeOntario RateCombined Federal + Ontario
Up to $52,8865.05%20.05%
$52,886 – $105,7759.15%24.15% – 29.65%
$105,775 – $150,00011.16%31.48% – 33.89%
$150,000 – $220,00012.16%37.91%
Over $220,00013.16%53.53%

Ontario Surtax: An additional 20% on provincial tax over $5,315 and 36% over $6,802, which pushes the effective top combined rate to 53.53%.

Ontario Health Premium

Unlike other provinces, Ontario charges a health premium based on income:

Taxable IncomeOntario Health Premium
$20,000 or less$0
$20,001 – $25,000$0 – $300 (graduated)
$25,001 – $36,000$300
$36,001 – $38,500$300 – $450 (graduated)
$38,501 – $48,000$450
$48,001 – $72,000$450 – $600 (graduated)
$72,001 – $200,000$600 – $750 (graduated)
$200,001+$900

This premium adds to your overall tax burden and is an important consideration when comparing Ontario salaries to other provinces.

Ontario Overtime Rules

Ontario’s Employment Standards Act governs overtime pay:

RuleDetails
Overtime thresholdMore than 44 hours/week
Overtime rate1.5× regular hourly rate
Daily overtimeNone (unless in employment contract)
Maximum hours48 hours/week (without written agreement)

Example: An Ontario worker earning $25/hour who works 50 hours in a week:

  • Regular pay: 44 hours × $25 = $1,100
  • Overtime pay: 6 hours × $37.50 = $225
  • Total weekly pay: $1,325

Note: Some industries and job classifications are exempt from overtime, including managers, IT professionals, and certain other categories.

Ontario Salary Comparison by City

Average salaries vary significantly across Ontario:

CityAvg Household IncomeMedian Individual Income
Toronto$163,100$48,000
Ottawa$158,200$52,000
Hamilton$142,600$43,000
London$126,500$40,000
Kitchener-Waterloo$140,000$45,000

A $25/hour wage ($52,000/year) puts you slightly above median in most Ontario cities except Ottawa.

Cost of Living Considerations in Ontario

Your hourly wage’s purchasing power varies by location:

CityAvg Rent (1BR)Avg Home PriceHourly Wage Needed
Toronto$2,500$1,009,000$48+
Ottawa$1,900$630,000$36+
Hamilton$1,700$807,000$32+
London$1,500$584,000$29+

Hourly wage needed assumes 30% of gross income to housing, full-time work.

In Toronto, you typically need $48+/hour ($100,000+ annually) to comfortably afford rent and living expenses. In smaller Ontario cities, $25-30/hour provides a more comfortable lifestyle.

How Ontario Compares to Other Provinces

ProvinceMin WageAvg IncomeTop Tax RateHealth Premium
Ontario$17.60$58,70053.53%Up to $900
Alberta$15.00$64,20048.00%$0
British Columbia$17.40$55,80053.50%Via MSP ($0)
Quebec$15.75$52,70058.75%Health contribution

Ontario has the second-highest average income but also one of the highest combined tax rates. An Ontario worker earning $100,000 takes home approximately $3,000-$5,000 less than the same earner in Alberta.

Industries With Highest Hourly Wages in Ontario

IndustryAvg Hourly WageAnnual Equivalent
Finance (Toronto)$45-65$93,600 – $135,200
Technology$40-60$83,200 – $124,800
Healthcare professionals$35-55$72,800 – $114,400
Skilled trades$30-45$62,400 – $93,600
Government (Ottawa)$30-50$62,400 – $104,000
Manufacturing$22-35$45,760 – $72,800
Retail/Hospitality$17-25$35,360 – $52,000

Ontario’s diverse economy offers opportunities across many sectors. The Toronto-Waterloo tech corridor and Ottawa’s federal government provide particularly strong wage growth.

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