Short Answer
Alberta has materially lower taxes than Ontario at nearly every income level above $50,000. The primary sources of advantage: no provincial sales tax (saves 8% of spending), lower provincial income tax brackets, and no Ontario surtax. At $150,000 income, the annual combined saving exceeds $10,000.
Provincial Income Tax Rates (2025)
Alberta Provincial Brackets
| Taxable income | Provincial rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $148,269 | 10% |
| $148,270 – $177,922 | 12% |
| $177,923 – $237,230 | 13% |
| $237,231 – $355,845 | 14% |
| Over $355,845 | 15% |
Ontario Provincial Brackets
| Taxable income | Provincial rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $51,446 | 5.05% |
| $51,447 – $102,894 | 9.15% |
| $102,895 – $150,000 | 11.16% |
| $150,001 – $220,000 | 12.16% |
| Over $220,000 | 13.16% |
| + Ontario Surtax | +20% on Ontario tax > $5,315; +36% on Ontario tax > $6,802 |
The Ontario surtax is what makes Ontario particularly expensive at higher incomes — it layers an additional 20–56% on top of provincial tax owed.
Head-to-Head Tax Comparison by Income
| Taxable income | Federal tax | Ontario provincial | Alberta provincial | Ontario total | Alberta total | Ontario premium |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | ~$7,500 | ~$2,050 | ~$2,750 | ~$9,550 | ~$10,250 | Alberta higher here |
| $75,000 | ~$13,775 | ~$4,875 | ~$4,500 | ~$18,650 | ~$18,275 | Ontario barely higher |
| $100,000 | ~$20,900 | ~$9,900 | ~$5,000 | ~$30,800 | ~$25,900 | $4,900 more |
| $150,000 | ~$34,900 | ~$18,400 | ~$10,000 | ~$53,300 | ~$44,900 | $8,400 more |
| $200,000 | ~$52,600 | ~$28,700 | ~$15,250 | ~$81,300 | ~$67,850 | $13,450 more |
Approximate estimates for single individuals with no credits beyond basic personal amount.
Combined Top Marginal Tax Rates (2025)
| Income type | Ontario top rate | Alberta top rate | Alberta saving |
|---|---|---|---|
| Employment/other income | 53.53% | 48.00% | 5.53% |
| Capital gains (≤$250K gains) | 26.77% | 24.00% | 2.77% |
| Capital gains (>$250K gains) | 35.69% | 32.00% | 3.69% |
| Eligible Canadian dividends | 39.34% | 34.31% | 5.03% |
| Non-eligible dividends | 47.74% | 42.31% | 5.43% |
Sales Tax Comparison
| Tax | Ontario | Alberta |
|---|---|---|
| Federal GST | 5% | 5% |
| Provincial sales tax | 8% PST (collected as 13% HST) | 0% |
| Total HST/GST rate | 13% | 5% |
| On $3,000/month of taxable spending | ~$390 | ~$150 |
| Annual sales tax difference | ~$2,880/year |
Other Tax Differences
| Tax type | Ontario | Alberta |
|---|---|---|
| Land transfer tax | 0.5%–2.5% of purchase price | None |
| Toronto (additional) LTT | Up to $4,475 (Toronto-specific) | N/A |
| Estate/probate fees | ~1.5% of estate value over $50,000 | ~$525 flat maximum |
| Health premium | $0–$900/year (income-based) | None |
| Fuel tax (gasoline) | ~14.7¢/L provincial | ~13.0¢/L provincial |
The land transfer tax difference alone on a $700,000 home purchase is approximately $11,000 in Ontario (outside Toronto) vs $0 in Alberta.
Total Annual Tax Burden Estimate (Single, $120,000 Income)
| Tax component | Ontario | Alberta |
|---|---|---|
| Federal income tax | ~$26,400 | ~$26,400 |
| Provincial income tax | ~$14,200 | ~$7,200 |
| CPP contributions | ~$3,867 | ~$3,867 |
| EI premiums | ~$1,049 | ~$1,049 |
| Annual total | ~$45,516 | ~$38,516 |
| + Estimated annual sales tax difference | ~$2,400 | ~$0 |
| Effective all-in difference | ~$9,400/year |
Bottom Line
At incomes above $100,000, Ontario residents pay roughly $7,000–$15,000 more in combined provincial income and sales tax than equivalent Alberta residents. The Ontario surtax amplifies the gap at higher incomes. For location-flexible workers, the tax advantage of Alberta residency is one of the most significant financial optimizations available within Canada — and requires no lifestyle sacrifice beyond living in a different province.
Ontario vs Alberta tax comparison by income level (2026)
| Income | Ontario total tax | Alberta total tax | Alberta advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | ~$10,900 | ~$8,800 | ~$2,100 |
| $75,000 | ~$18,200 | ~$14,900 | ~$3,300 |
| $100,000 | ~$26,700 | ~$21,700 | ~$5,000 |
| $150,000 | ~$47,100 | ~$38,500 | ~$8,600 |
| $200,000 | ~$68,200 | ~$56,900 | ~$11,300 |
Estimates based on 2026 federal and provincial rates; assumes single individual, employment income, no deductions. Includes Ontario surtax. Does not include sales tax savings.
Sales tax savings: Alberta’’s hidden advantage
Ontario charges 13% HST on most purchases. Alberta charges only 5% GST (no provincial sales tax). On a household that spends $60,000/year on HST-taxable goods and services, the Ontario sales tax burden is approximately $4,800 vs $3,000 in Alberta — a $1,800 annual difference on spending alone.
Combined with income tax savings, the total tax advantage of Alberta over Ontario for a single person earning $100,000 is approximately $6,000–$8,000 per year.
Frequently asked questions
Does Ontario charge more income tax than Alberta on every dollar? Yes. Alberta’’s flat 10% provincial rate applies to all income up to $148,269. Ontario’’s graduated rates range from 5.05% to 13.16% — and Ontario has an additional surtax that applies on provincial tax over approximately $5,315, adding another 20–56% on top of the regular provincial amount for higher incomes.
Is the tax advantage worth moving to Alberta? Financially, for most Canadians earning above $80,000, the answer is yes — provided housing and cost-of-living differences are factored in. Alberta housing is cheaper than Toronto/Vancouver but comparable to medium-sized Ontario cities. The primary non-financial factors are climate, proximity to family, and career opportunities in the relevant field.
Related Reading
- Alberta Income Tax Rates 2026 | Tax Brackets Guide
- Best Province for Taxes in Canada 2026 | Tax Comparison
- Canada vs USA Tax Comparison 2026
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