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Canadian Dividend Tax Credit Explained (2026 Guide)

Updated

The dividend tax credit is one of the most misunderstood aspects of Canadian taxation. This guide explains how eligible and non-eligible dividends are taxed, how the gross-up works, and what you’ll actually pay by province.

How the dividend tax credit works

When you receive dividends from a Canadian corporation, you don’t simply pay tax on the amount you received. Instead, Canada uses a gross-up and credit system designed to account for the fact that the corporation already paid tax on its profits before distributing them to you.

The process:

  1. Gross-up — You add a percentage to the dividend you received to determine your “taxable dividend”
  2. Calculate tax — You calculate tax on the grossed-up amount at your marginal rate
  3. Apply credit — You deduct the federal and provincial dividend tax credits to reduce your tax payable

The net effect is that Canadian dividends are taxed at lower effective rates than regular income, especially eligible dividends from large corporations.

Eligible vs non-eligible dividends

FeatureEligible DividendsNon-Eligible Dividends
SourceLarge Canadian corporations (CCPCs earning active income over $500,000, public corporations)Canadian-controlled private corporations (CCPCs) taxed at the small business rate
Gross-up rate38%15%
Federal DTC rate15.0198% of grossed-up dividend9.0301% of grossed-up dividend
Effective federal credit~20.7% of actual dividend~10.4% of actual dividend
Typical sourcesBank stocks, most TSX-listed dividend stocks, large company dividendsSmall business dividends, some CCPC dividends

How to tell the difference: Your T5 slip will report eligible dividends in Box 24 and non-eligible dividends in Box 10. Box 25 and Box 11 show the respective taxable (grossed-up) amounts.

Dividend gross-up calculation example

Let’s say you receive $1,000 in eligible dividends from a Canadian bank stock:

StepEligible Dividend
Actual dividend received$1,000
Gross-up (38%)+$380
Taxable dividend$1,380
Federal tax at 29% bracket$400.20
Federal DTC (15.0198% of $1,380)−$207.27
Net federal tax$192.93

You’d also receive provincial dividend tax credits, which vary by province.

Dividend tax rates by province (2026)

This table shows the approximate combined federal + provincial marginal tax rate on eligible and non-eligible dividends at the top income bracket.

ProvinceTop Rate on Eligible DividendsTop Rate on Non-Eligible Dividends
Alberta34.31%42.31%
British Columbia36.54%48.89%
Manitoba37.78%46.67%
New Brunswick32.40%46.83%
Newfoundland & Labrador46.20%48.96%
Northwest Territories28.33%36.82%
Nova Scotia41.58%48.28%
Nunavut33.08%37.79%
Ontario39.34%47.74%
Prince Edward Island34.22%47.02%
Quebec40.11%48.70%
Saskatchewan29.64%41.72%
Yukon28.92%44.04%

Key insight: Eligible dividends are taxed ~10-15% lower than non-eligible dividends at top brackets. Saskatchewan, Yukon, and Northwest Territories have the lowest rates on eligible dividends.

Dividend tax rates at different income levels

The tax rate on dividends varies dramatically based on your income. At low incomes, eligible dividends can be received with zero or even negative effective tax due to the dividend tax credit exceeding your tax liability.

Ontario dividend tax rates (2026)

Taxable IncomeMarginal Rate on Eligible DividendsMarginal Rate on Non-Eligible Dividends
Up to $52,886−6.86%9.24%
$52,886 - $57,3750.00%16.12%
$57,375 - $105,7756.39%24.77%
$105,775 - $114,75012.24%31.23%
$114,750 - $150,00019.29%38.63%
$150,000 - $177,88225.38%42.93%
$177,882 - $220,00029.52%46.05%
$220,000 - $253,41431.97%47.40%
Over $253,41439.34%47.74%

The negative tax rate explained: At low income levels, the dividend tax credit exceeds the tax generated by the grossed-up dividend. This means in Ontario, someone with only $50,000 of eligible dividend income would pay less tax than someone with $50,000 of employment income — substantially less.

Dividends vs salary: which is better?

For business owners who can choose to take compensation as salary or dividends, the decision involves trade-offs:

FactorSalaryDividends
Creates RRSP room✅ Yes❌ No
CPP contributions✅ Yes (builds CPP benefit)❌ No
EI premiumsDepends on ownership❌ No
Requires T4 payroll✅ Yes❌ No
IntegrationReasonably integratedReasonably integrated
TFSA/FHSA roomNo impactNo impact

Integration: Canada’s tax system aims for “integration” — meaning the total tax paid (corporate + personal) should be roughly the same whether income is paid as salary (deductible to corporation) or dividend (non-deductible). In practice, small differences exist by province.

Use our Dividend vs Salary Calculator to compare for your specific situation.

Holding Canadian dividend stocks: TFSA vs RRSP vs non-registered

Where you hold dividend-paying stocks affects your after-tax returns:

Account TypeTax TreatmentBest For
TFSATax-freeAll dividends, no Canadian DTC needed
RRSPTax-deferred, no DTC on withdrawalUS dividend stocks (no withholding), less optimal for Canadian dividends
Non-registeredTaxable, but benefits from DTCCanadian dividend stocks if TFSA/RRSP full

Key insight: Canadian dividends lose the dividend tax credit inside an RRSP. When you withdraw from an RRSP, everything is taxed as ordinary income. This makes TFSA or non-registered accounts relatively better for Canadian dividend stocks compared to RRSP.

US dividends vs Canadian dividends

US dividends paid to Canadian residents do not qualify for the Canadian dividend tax credit. Instead:

  • US dividends are taxed as regular foreign income
  • 15% US withholding tax is deducted at source
  • You may claim a foreign tax credit to offset the withholding

In a RRSP, US dividends are not subject to the 15% withholding tax due to the Canada-US tax treaty. This makes RRSPs the most efficient place to hold US dividend-paying stocks.

Dividend tax credit claiming on your tax return

The dividend tax credit is automatically calculated when you report your T5 dividend income. You don’t need to claim it separately.

T5 slip boxes for your tax return:

  • Box 24: Actual amount of eligible dividends
  • Box 25: Taxable amount of eligible dividends (grossed-up)
  • Box 26: Federal dividend tax credit on eligible dividends
  • Box 10: Actual amount of other than eligible dividends
  • Box 11: Taxable amount (grossed-up)
  • Box 12: Federal dividend tax credit on non-eligible dividends

Report the taxable amounts (Box 25 and Box 11) on Line 12000 of your T1 return. The dividend tax credits are claimed on Schedule 1.