Skip to main content

Average Income by Age in Canada 2026: How Do You Compare?

Updated

How does your income compare to other Canadians your age? Understanding income benchmarks helps you assess your financial standing, negotiate salaries, and plan for the future. This guide breaks down average and median income by age group, gender, and province using the latest Statistics Canada data. Whether you’re in your peak earning years or just starting your career, see where you stand and what’s typical for your situation.

Average Income by Age Group in Canada (2026)

Age GroupAverage IncomeMedian Income25th Percentile75th Percentile
16-24$22,400$17,500$8,200$28,600
25-34$58,800$51,200$35,400$74,500
35-44$72,100$62,400$42,800$95,200
45-54$76,500$65,800$44,200$101,500
55-64$68,200$56,900$36,100$89,400
65+$45,600$32,800$22,100$54,200
All ages$55,200$42,500$26,400$72,800

Data represents total individual income before taxes (employment + investment + government transfers). Source: Statistics Canada, Canadian Income Survey 2024, projected to 2026.

Median vs Average: Why It Matters

MeasureDefinitionBest Used For
Average (Mean)Total income ÷ number of peopleOverall economic picture
MedianMiddle value (50% earn more, 50% less)“Typical” income comparison

Why median is usually better: A few very high earners pull the average up significantly. For example, if 9 people earn $50,000 and 1 person earns $500,000, the average is $95,000 — but the median is $50,000, which better reflects what most people earn.

Income by Age: Detailed Breakdown

Ages 16-24: Early Career / Part-Time

Income LevelAnnual Income
Bottom 10%$3,200
25th percentile$8,200
Median (50th)$17,500
75th percentile$28,600
Top 10%$42,500

This range reflects students working part-time through to full-time entry-level workers. Many earn below full-time equivalents due to school attendance.

Ages 25-34: Career Building

Income LevelAnnual Income
Bottom 10%$18,200
25th percentile$35,400
Median (50th)$51,200
75th percentile$74,500
Top 10%$105,000

Career establishment phase. Large variance based on education, industry, and career progression. Those with professional degrees (doctors, lawyers, engineers) often reach top decile.

Ages 35-44: Mid-Career Growth

Income LevelAnnual Income
Bottom 10%$22,500
25th percentile$42,800
Median (50th)$62,400
75th percentile$95,200
Top 10%$138,500

Management and senior individual contributor roles. Many are at or approaching peak earning capacity. Dual-income households often see combined peaks here.

Ages 45-54: Peak Earning Years

Income LevelAnnual Income
Bottom 10%$21,800
25th percentile$44,200
Median (50th)$65,800
75th percentile$101,500
Top 10%$152,000

Highest average earnings across age groups. Senior management, business ownership, and executive roles. Investment income begins contributing more significantly.

Ages 55-64: Pre-Retirement Transition

Income LevelAnnual Income
Bottom 10%$16,800
25th percentile$36,100
Median (50th)$56,900
75th percentile$89,400
Top 10%$139,500

Some early retirement, reduced hours, or career wind-down. CPP can begin at 60. Higher variance as some maintain peak earnings while others reduce work.

Ages 65+: Retirement

Income LevelAnnual Income
Bottom 10%$18,500
25th percentile$22,100
Median (50th)$32,800
75th percentile$54,200
Top 10%$92,500

Income primarily from CPP, OAS, pensions, RRSP/RRIF withdrawals, and investment income. Tighter lower range due to GIS support floor. Wide upper range for those with significant retirement savings.

Income by Gender

All Ages Combined

GenderAverage IncomeMedian IncomeGender Gap
Men$64,200$52,100
Women$47,500$38,40083¢ per $1
All$55,200$42,500

Gender Pay Gap by Age

Age GroupWomen’s Earnings per $1 (Men)Gap
16-24$0.919%
25-34$0.8713%
35-44$0.8218%
45-54$0.7822%
55-64$0.7921%
65+$0.8515%

The gap widens during child-rearing years (35-54) and narrows in retirement when CPP/OAS provide more equal income.

Income by Province/Territory

Employment Income (Working Population)

Province/TerritoryAverage Employment IncomeMedian Employment Income
Nunavut$78,500$62,400
Northwest Territories$76,200$64,800
Yukon$68,400$58,200
Alberta$68,200$58,500
Ontario$62,800$52,400
British Columbia$58,600$48,800
Saskatchewan$56,800$49,200
Manitoba$52,400$45,600
Quebec$51,800$44,200
Newfoundland & Labrador$51,200$43,800
Nova Scotia$48,200$42,100
New Brunswick$47,500$41,600
Prince Edward Island$46,800$40,200
Canada$58,400$49,200

Employment income only (excludes investments, government transfers). Full-time workers with employment income.

Total Income (All Sources)

ProvinceAverage Total IncomeMedian Total Income
Alberta$62,400$51,200
Ontario$58,100$46,800
British Columbia$54,800$43,600
Saskatchewan$53,200$44,800
Manitoba$49,600$41,200
Quebec$47,800$40,400
Nova Scotia$46,500$39,200
New Brunswick$45,200$38,400
Newfoundland$47,100$38,800
PEI$44,600$38,100
Canada$55,200$42,500

Income by Education Level

Education LevelAverage IncomeMedian Incomevs. High School
No high school diploma$32,400$26,800-28%
High school diploma$45,200$38,600Baseline
College diploma/certificate$52,800$46,200+20%
Bachelor’s degree$72,500$62,400+62%
Master’s degree$88,400$78,200+103%
Doctorate (PhD)$98,500$88,600+130%
Medicine/Law/Dentistry$142,500$125,000+224%

The “education premium” is substantial and compounds over a career.

Income by Industry

Highest-Paying Industries (Average)

IndustryAverage Income
Mining, quarrying, oil/gas$112,500
Utilities$92,400
Finance and insurance$88,200
Professional/scientific/technical$82,400
Management of companies$78,600
Public administration$76,800
Information and technology$75,200
Construction$68,400

Lower-Paying Industries (Average)

IndustryAverage Income
Accommodation and food$26,800
Retail trade$36,200
Agriculture$38,500
Arts and entertainment$39,200
Other services$42,100
Administrative/support$44,600

How to Interpret These Numbers

Where Do You Stand?

Your PercentileWhat It Means
Below 25th percentileLower income for your age
25th-50th percentileBelow median but not unusual
50th percentile (median)Exactly typical — half earn more, half less
50th-75th percentileAbove median, doing well
75th-90th percentileHigh earner for your age
Above 90th percentileTop 10% for your age

Factors That Affect Your Position

FactorImpact on Income
LocationToronto/Vancouver +15-20% vs. national
IndustryOil/gas, finance, tech pay highest
EducationEach degree level adds 20-40%
ExperienceGenerally peaks at 45-54
GenderPersistent 17% gap on average
Immigration statusRecent immigrants earn less initially

Total vs Employment Income

Income TypeWhat’s Included
Employment incomeWages, salaries, bonuses, commissions
Total incomeEmployment + investments + CPP/OAS + EI + other government benefits

Most working-age Canadians derive 90%+ of income from employment. Retirees may have 0% employment income but significant total income from pensions and investments.

Household Income vs Individual Income

ComparisonIndividual MedianHousehold Median
Canada 2026$42,500$87,400

Household income combines all earners in a dwelling. With 1.9 earners per household on average, household income is roughly double individual income.

Economic Family Income by Type

Family TypeMedian Total Income
Couple, no children$102,400
Couple with children$118,600
Lone-parent, female$52,800
Lone-parent, male$68,200
Single person under 65$38,400
Single person 65+$29,200

Income Trajectory Over Career

Career StageTypical Pattern
20sEntry level, rapid % growth (but low base)
30sSteep growth, promotions, specialization
Early 40sContinued growth, senior roles
Late 40s-early 50sPeak earnings
Late 50sPlateau or slight decline
60sTransition to retirement income

Typical Income Growth Rates

Age RangeAnnual Growth Rate
25-305-8% per year
30-403-6% per year
40-502-4% per year
50-600-2% per year

Comparing Yourself Effectively

Apples-to-Apples Comparison

Compare WithNot JustWhy
Same age groupOverall averagePeak earners skew numbers
Same provinceNational dataCost of living varies
Same industryAll industriesPay varies dramatically
Same educationAll education levelsCredentials affect income
Same genderAll gendersGap remains significant

A Healthy Perspective

ConsiderationPoint
Income isn’t everythingFulfillment, work-life balance matter
Cost of living$60K in Halifax stretches further than in Vancouver
Career stageEntry level isn’t peak earning
Life choicesPart-time work, caregiving reduce income intentionally

Income vs Net Worth

Your net worth matters more for long-term financial health than income alone.

MeasureWhat It Shows
IncomeCash flow, current earning power
Net worthAccumulated wealth over time
Savings rate% of income converted to net worth

A moderate income with high savings rate beats a high income with high spending.