Skip to main content

Am I Paying Too Much Tax in Canada?

Updated

Many Canadians are not paying more tax than the law requires, but they are still paying more than necessary because of missed credits, poor account choices, or incorrect payroll withholding. If your question is whether you are paying too much tax, the right comparison is not whether taxes feel high. It is whether you are leaving legal tax-saving opportunities unused.

Quick signs you may be paying too much tax

SignWhy It Matters
Large annual refund every yearOften means over-withholding
No RRSP or FHSA use despite high incomeMissed deductions
Self-employed but poor expense trackingMissed business deductions
High investment income in taxable accountPossibly tax-inefficient
You never review credits or reassessmentsEasy to miss claims

Over-withholding vs actually overpaying

These are not the same thing.

SituationMeaning
Large refundToo much withheld during the year
Large balance owingToo little withheld or extra income not covered
Higher final bill than necessaryMissed deductions/credits or poor planning

If you always get a big refund, you are not necessarily filing wrong. But you may be giving CRA an interest-free loan.

Common reasons Canadians pay more than necessary

CauseExample
Missed deductionsRRSP, FHSA, union dues, moving expenses
Missed creditsMedical, disability, tuition, donations
Wrong TD1 informationToo much payroll withholding
Poor tax planningRealizing all capital gains in one year
Asset location mistakesInterest income in taxable account instead of registered account

Are you in a higher-tax province than expected?

Province matters a lot.

ProvinceGeneral Tax Burden
AlbertaLower than most provinces
OntarioModerate to high, plus health premium
QuebecOften highest overall

If you recently moved or your payroll province is wrong, you may see surprising withholding.

Situations where people often overpay

You may be paying too much tax if you:

  • have high income but do not use RRSP deductions
  • qualify for FHSA deductions and ignore them
  • are self-employed and miss legitimate business write-offs
  • do not optimize pension income splitting or spousal strategies
  • realize investment income in taxable accounts when TFSA or RRSP room is available

A large refund is not always good news

Many people celebrate a refund, but from a cash-flow perspective it may be inefficient.

Refund SizePossible Interpretation
Small refund or small balance owingUsually efficient
$2,000 to $5,000+ refund every yearPossible over-withholding
Huge refund driven by RRSP deductionPlanning may still be intentional

RRSP refunds can be part of a good strategy if you reinvest them. Refunds caused by payroll over-withholding are less useful.

  1. Maximize deductions with RRSP or FHSA when appropriate.
  2. Claim every credit you are eligible for.
  3. Use TFSA for tax-free growth.
  4. Manage capital gains timing.
  5. Use spousal strategies where allowed.
  6. Track self-employment expenses carefully.

Bottom line

You may be paying too much tax if your withholding is consistently too high, your registered accounts are underused, or you keep missing deductions and credits. The goal is not zero tax. It is paying the correct amount, no more and no less, while using the tax rules available to you.

How to fix over-withholding: Form T1213

If your employer consistently over-withholds income tax from your paycheque, you do not have to wait until April for a refund. You can request reduced withholding from CRA using Form T1213 (Request to Reduce Tax Deductions at Source).

When T1213 makes sense:

  • You have significant RRSP contributions each year that generate a predictable deduction
  • You have large regular deductions (childcare, union dues, FHSA, rental losses)
  • You consistently get a refund of more than $1,000 due to predictable annual deductions

How to use T1213:

  1. Download Form T1213 from canada.ca
  2. List the specific deductions/credits you expect to claim and their estimated amounts
  3. Mail the form to your local CRA tax centre (not your employer)
  4. CRA reviews and issues a letter of authority within 4–6 weeks
  5. Give the letter to your employer’s payroll department — they reduce withholding for the rest of the year

The reduced withholding applies to the current tax year only — you must reapply each January for the following year.

Credits Canadians commonly miss

Credit/DeductionLineWho misses it
Medical expenses (yours + family)33099 / 33199Anyone with dental, prescriptions, therapy
Disability Tax Credit31600Those with chronic conditions
Caregiver amount30400/30450/30500Those supporting a dependant with impairment
Moving expenses (new job or school)21900Students and workers who relocated
Northern residents deduction25500Residents of prescribed northern zones
Union/professional dues21200Employees in unions or regulated professions
Employment expenses (T2200)22900Employees who pay for tools, uniform, travel
Clergy residence deduction23100Eligible religious leaders
Investment counsel feesT3/T5 slip noteNon-registered account management fees
Charitable donation carry-forward34900Donations not claimed in prior years (5-year carry)
🏦

We use Wealthsimple for everyday banking. Get a $25 bonus when you open a free chequing account.

No monthly fees · 4% interest on deposits · Free e-Transfers · Takes 3 minutes

Get Your $25 Bonus →