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Best Province for Taxes in Canada 2026 | Tax Comparison

Updated

Alberta is the clear winner for high earners — no provincial sales tax, a flat 10% provincial rate on the first $148,269, and a top combined rate of 48% that saves someone earning $200,000 over $9,000 per year compared to Ontario. But the “best” province depends heavily on your income level and family situation. Quebec’s $9/day childcare saves families $10,000+ annually, easily offsetting its higher tax rates. BC’s climate credits and lack of health premiums help moderate earners. Before you move for tax savings, factor in housing costs, career opportunities, and the full picture beyond your T1 return. If Alberta is on your shortlist, compare the actual brackets in the Alberta income tax rates guide.

Provincial Tax Comparison Overview

Top Marginal Tax Rates 2026

ProvinceTop Combined Rate
Nova Scotia54.00%
Ontario53.53%
BC53.50%
Manitoba50.40%
Quebec53.31%
New Brunswick52.50%
PEI51.37%
Saskatchewan47.50%
Newfoundland54.80%
Alberta48.00%

Lowest Rate by Income Level

IncomeLowest Tax Province
$50,000Saskatchewan
$100,000Alberta
$150,000Alberta
$250,000+Alberta

Tax at Different Income Levels

Tax Payable Comparison

IncomeAlbertaOntarioBCQuebec
$50,000$9,200$7,900$7,500$10,200
$75,000$16,200$14,900$14,500$18,100
$100,000$23,900$24,900$24,000$27,400
$150,000$41,400$45,400$43,000$47,800
$200,000$60,700$70,100$66,200$73,500
$300,000$100,700$122,400$115,600$126,500

Approximate, before credits.

Sales Tax Impact

Provincial Sales Tax Rates

ProvincePSTTotal with GST
Alberta0%5%
Saskatchewan6%11%
Manitoba7%12%
BC7%12%
Ontario8%13%
Quebec9.975%14.975%
Nova Scotia10%15%
New Brunswick10%15%
PEI10%15%
Newfoundland10%15%

Annual PST Cost Example

Annual SpendingAlbertaOntarioQuebec
$30,000$0$2,400$2,993
$50,000$0$4,000$4,988
$75,000$0$6,000$7,481

Complete Tax Picture

Best for High Earners ($200K+)

RankProvinceWhy
1AlbertaLowest top rate + no PST
2SaskatchewanLow top rate
3BCMiddle ground

Best for Middle Income ($75-100K)

RankProvinceWhy
1AlbertaFlat 10% + no PST
2BCReasonable rates
3OntarioMany credits available

Best for Lower Income ($40-60K)

RankProvinceWhy
1QuebecCredits + social programs
2BCClimate credit + low rates
3OntarioTrillium benefit

Beyond Income Tax

Other Tax Considerations

CostVaries By Province
Property taxMunicipal rates differ
Vehicle insuranceDrastically different
Gas taxProvincial variations
Carbon taxDifferent rebates
Sin taxesAlcohol, tobacco

Property Tax Examples

CityRate per $100K Assessment
Vancouver~$2,500
Calgary~$6,500
Toronto~$6,000
Montreal~$8,500

Car Insurance

ProvinceAverage Annual
Ontario~$1,600
BC (ICBC)~$1,900
Alberta~$1,400
Quebec~$700

Social Programs and Benefits

Quebec Advantages

ProgramBenefit
$9/day childcareSaves $10,000+/year
Lower tuition~$3,000/year less
Parental leaveMore generous
Drug insurancePublic option

Ontario Credits

CreditValue
Trillium BenefitUp to $1,500
Child BenefitIncome-tested
Senior grantsProperty tax help

BC Benefits

BenefitValue
Climate Action Credit$500+/year
Family BenefitPer child
Homeowner Grant~$570

Best Province by Situation

Young Professional ($80K, Single)

BestProvinceWhy
1AlbertaLowest overall tax
2BCGood balance
3OntarioIf career opportunity

Family with Kids ($120K, 2 children)

BestProvinceWhy
1QuebecChildcare savings huge
2AlbertaStill saves on tax
3BCFamily benefits

Retiree ($60K pension)

BestProvinceWhy
1BCClimate, low tax
2AlbertaNo PST on spending
3OntarioHealthcare access

High Earner ($300K+)

BestProvinceWhy
1AlbertaSave $25K+ in tax
2SaskatchewanSecond lowest
3Anywhere elseMuch higher tax

Cost of Living Considerations

Housing Costs Matter

CityAverage Home Price
Toronto~$1,100,000
Vancouver~$1,200,000
Calgary~$550,000
Edmonton~$400,000
Montreal~$550,000

Effective Savings

Moving From Toronto to Calgary
Tax savings ($150K income)~$4,000
PST savings~$4,000
Housing savings~$1,500/month
Total annual~$26,000+

Making the Decision

Consider All Factors

FactorWeight It
Career opportunitiesImportant
Housing costsMajor impact
Family needsChildcare, schools
LifestyleClimate, culture
Tax savingsPart of picture

When Alberta Makes Sense

SituationBenefit
High income (>$150K)Significant savings
Low spending needsLess PST impact
Remote workLocation flexible
No kids/grown kidsChildcare not factor

When Alberta Doesn’t Win

SituationBetter Option
Young childrenQuebec (childcare)
Lower incomeCredits elsewhere
Job-specific locationStay where work is

Tax Planning Strategies

The Bottom Line

Alberta wins on raw tax numbers at every income level above $75,000, and the savings accelerate with income — a $300,000 earner keeps over $20,000 more per year compared to Ontario. But taxes are only one piece of the cost-of-living equation. Toronto-to-Calgary movers save on income tax, PST, and housing, potentially adding up to $26,000+ annually. Quebec families with young children may actually come out ahead despite higher rates, thanks to subsidized childcare worth $10,000–15,000 per child. Use our salary calculator to model your specific situation before making any decisions.

If Moving Provinces

TipDetails
Move before Dec 31Get full year benefit
Time incomeDefer to lower-tax year
Sell assetsBefore or after move

Maximize Credits

No Matter WhereDo This
File tax returnGet all credits
Claim everythingDon’t leave money
RRSP contributionsProvince-agnostic

Summary Rankings

Overall Best for Taxes

RankProvinceBest For
1AlbertaMost situations
2SaskatchewanSecond lowest rates
3BCBalance of tax/life
4OntarioCareer opportunities
5QuebecFamilies with kids

Overall Highest Taxes

RankProvinceNote
1Nova ScotiaHighest top rate
2NewfoundlandHigh rates throughout
3PEISmall province, higher rates