Canadian taxes are higher on paper — but Americans pay separately for health insurance ($7,000–$20,000+ per year), which closes the gap dramatically for middle-income earners. At $100,000 income, an Ontario resident pays roughly $22,700 in income tax with healthcare included, while an American in a comparable state pays $15,000–20,000 in tax plus $8,000–15,000 in health insurance premiums and out-of-pocket costs. The real winners in the US are high earners in zero-income-tax states like Texas and Florida, where the combination of lower federal rates and no state tax creates a meaningful advantage that healthcare costs can’t fully offset.
At $100K income, Canadians and Americans in most states pay similar amounts when healthcare is included. Americans in no-income-tax states (Texas, Florida) come out ahead; Americans in high-tax states (California, New York) pay more than Canadians.
Sales Tax Comparison
Canada: GST/HST/PST Rates
Province
Total Sales Tax
Alberta
5% (GST only)
BC
12% (5% GST + 7% PST)
Ontario
13% (HST)
Quebec
14.975% (5% GST + 9.975% QST)
Nova Scotia
15% (HST)
Manitoba
12% (5% GST + 7% PST)
Saskatchewan
11% (5% GST + 6% PST)
USA: State Sales Tax Rates
State
State + Avg Local Tax
Oregon
0%
Montana
0%
Delaware
0%
Texas
6.25% + local = ~8.2%
California
7.25% + local = ~8.7%
New York
4% + local = ~8.5%
Florida
6% + local = ~7.0%
Washington
6.5% + local = ~10.2%
Canada’s sales taxes are generally 3-8% higher than most US states.
Capital Gains Tax
Factor
Canada
USA
Inclusion rate
50% (first $250K), 66.7% (above)
0%, 15%, or 20% (long-term)
Short-term gains
Same as above
Taxed as ordinary income
Primary residence
100% exempt (no limit)
Exempt up to $250K ($500K couple)
TFSA/401(k)
TFSA: tax-free. RRSP: deferred
401(k)/IRA: deferred. Roth: tax-free
Capital Gains Tax Example ($100K Gain)
Scenario
Canada (Ontario, $100K income)
USA (Comparable)
$100K stock gain
$50K × ~43% = ~$21,500
$100K × 15% = $15,000
Primary residence sale ($500K gain)
$0
$0 (under $250K/$500K exemption)
Primary residence ($700K gain)
$0
$200K × 15% = $30,000 (couple)
Canada taxes capital gains more heavily for investments, but the principal residence exemption is more generous (no cap).
This distinction matters enormously for homeowners. A Canadian couple selling their home for a $700,000 profit pays zero tax — regardless of the gain size. An American couple in the same situation would owe long-term capital gains tax on the $200,000 exceeding their $500,000 exemption. For investment gains, the opposite is true: the US taxes long-term gains at a flat 15–20%, while Canada includes 50–66.7% of gains at your marginal rate, often resulting in a higher effective tax bill on stock market profits.
Property Tax
Country
Typical Rate
On $500K Home
Canada (Ontario avg)
0.8-1.2%
$4,000-$6,000
Canada (Vancouver)
0.25-0.35%
$1,250-$1,750
USA (Texas)
1.5-2.5%
$7,500-$12,500
USA (New Jersey)
2.0-2.5%
$10,000-$12,500
USA (California - Prop 13)
~1.1% (of purchase price)
$5,500
USA (Florida)
0.8-1.2%
$4,000-$6,000
Canadian property taxes are generally lower than most US states, except in some suburban Ontario municipalities.
Retirement Savings Comparison
Feature
Canada (RRSP/TFSA)
USA (401k/IRA/Roth)
RRSP/401(k) limit
~$32,490
$23,000 (+$7,500 catch-up)
TFSA/Roth IRA limit
$7,000
$7,000
Employer match
Varies
Common (3-6% match)
FHSA (home savings)
$8,000/year
No equivalent
CPP/Social Security
$3,867/year (employee)
$10,453/year (employee, 2026)
OAS (no US equivalent)
Universal at 65
No equivalent
Government Benefits Comparison
Benefit
Canada
USA
Healthcare
Universal (free at point of care)
Employer-provided or self-purchased
Child benefits (CCB)
$7,787/child under 6
$2,000/child tax credit
Parental leave
12-18 months (55-33% income)
0 federal (FMLA = unpaid)
Employment Insurance
Up to 55% of earnings
State-run (varies, ~$300-$800/week)
University
$5,000-$8,000/year
$10,000-$60,000/year
Retirement (CPP + OAS)
~$2,000-$2,400/month max
Social Security: ~$3,822/month max
Who Comes Out Ahead?
Income Level
Winner
Why
Under $50K
Canada
Universal healthcare, CCB, lower medical costs
$50K-$100K
Roughly equal
Higher Canadian taxes offset by healthcare savings
$100K-$200K
Depends on state
No-tax US states win; high-tax states = similar
$200K+
USA (most states)
Lower marginal rates, capital gains rates
Families with kids
Canada
CCB ($7,787/child) + healthcare + parental leave
Retirees
Depends
Canada: universal healthcare. USA: lower taxes, higher SS max
Self-employed
Depends
Canada: healthcare covered. USA: lower tax but health costs
Summary Table
Tax/Cost
Canada
USA
Income tax
Higher
Lower (especially no-tax states)
Sales tax
Higher (5-15%)
Lower (0-10%)
Capital gains
Higher on investments
Lower (preferential rates)
Property tax
Generally lower
Generally higher
Healthcare cost
Included in taxes
$7,000-$20,000+/year additional
Payroll taxes
Lower (CPP + EI)
Higher (Social Security + Medicare)
University costs
Much lower
Much higher
Child benefits
Much higher (CCB)
Lower (child tax credit)
Parental leave
12-18 months paid
0 (unpaid FMLA only)
The Bottom Line
For families earning under $100,000, Canada’s universal healthcare, CCB ($7,787/child), 12–18 months of paid parental leave, and affordable university tuition make it cheaper to live than most of the US when all costs are included. Above $200,000, the US pulls ahead in most states thanks to lower marginal rates and preferential capital gains treatment. The wildcard is healthcare — a single major medical event in the US can cost tens of thousands even with insurance, a financial risk that simply doesn’t exist in Canada. If you’re comparing the two countries, look at total cost of living including healthcare, childcare, education, and property tax — not just the income tax line.