Yukon Paycheck Calculator — 5-Bracket YT Tax + Federal + CPP/EI

By the Taxestool Editorial Team Last reviewed Editorial standards

Yukon take-home pay is your gross salary minus federal tax (15–33%), Yukon territorial tax (5 brackets: 6.4% to 15%, matched to the federal bracket thresholds), CPP, and EI. Only the 5% GST applies — no PST or HST. This calculator computes every layer for 2026.

$
RRSP & union dues (annual)
$
$

Tax year 2026. Yukon.

Take-home per paycheck

$0

Annual take-home

$0

Effective tax

0%

Marginal rate

0%

Where each $1 of your pay goes

    Where is your money going?

    Line Annual Per period
    Gross pay $0 $0
    RRSP contribution −$0 −$0
    Federal tax −$0 −$0
    Provincial tax −$0 −$0
    Ontario Health Premium −$0 −$0
    CPP contribution −$0 −$0
    EI premium −$0 −$0
    QPIP premium −$0 −$0
    Take-home pay $0 $0

    Yukon paycheck quick facts

    Yukon territorial tax6.4% – 15% (5 brackets, matched to federal)
    Yukon BPA (2026 est.)~$16,550 (matches federal BPA)
    Combined marginal rate (top bracket)~48%
    Sales tax5% federal GST only (no PST or HST)
    Northern Residents DeductionAvailable — federal deduction for 6+ month residents
    Federal tax15% – 33% (5 brackets)
    CPP5.95% on $3,500–$73,500 + 4% CPP2 on $73,500–$83,700
    EI1.66% on first $65,000

    Canadian federal income tax (2026)

    Canada's federal tax is progressive, with five brackets ranging from 15% on the first dollars to 33% on income above $260,200. The Basic Personal Amount (BPA) of about $16,550 acts as a tax credit at the lowest bracket rate — meaning the first ~$16,550 of income is effectively federal-tax-free for most workers.

    Federal taxable incomeRate
    $0 – $58,90015%
    $58,900 – $117,80020.5%
    $117,800 – $182,70026%
    $182,700 – $260,20029%
    Above $260,20033%

    Unlike the US, Canada has no joint filing — each spouse files their own return and pays tax on their own income. Spousal credits can be transferred when one spouse has low income.

    CPP, QPP, EI, and QPIP

    Canadian payroll has four mandatory deductions:

    • CPP (Canada Pension Plan) — 5.95% of pensionable earnings (gross minus a $3,500 basic exemption, capped at the YMPE of $73,500). Plus a 4% CPP2 tier on earnings between YMPE and YAMPE ($83,700). Quebec residents pay QPP instead (6.4% — slightly higher).
    • EI (Employment Insurance) — 1.66% of insurable earnings (capped at $65,000 MIE) for workers outside Quebec. Quebec's EI rate is lower (1.31%) because Quebec runs its own parental insurance program.
    • QPIP (Quebec Parental Insurance Plan) — Quebec residents only. 0.494% on the first $96,500 of earnings.

    Your employer matches CPP/QPP and EI/QPIP contributions on a separate line of the payroll register (those don't reduce your paycheck).

    How to use this calculator

    1. Pick your province or territory.
    2. Choose salary (annual) or hourly (wage + hours per pay period).
    3. Select your pay frequency — bi-weekly is most common in Canada (26 paychecks/year).
    4. Expand RRSP & union dues to enter pre-tax contributions that reduce your taxable income.

    The result updates instantly. The "Take-home per paycheck" is what should land in your bank account; the breakdown table shows exactly where the rest goes.

    How to increase your take-home pay

    • Max your RRSP contribution. Every dollar you contribute skips both federal and provincial tax at your marginal rate — typically 20–40% combined depending on your bracket and province.
    • Use a TFSA for after-tax savings that grow tax-free. Better than a non-registered account for investment income.
    • Claim union and professional dues. Deductible against federal and provincial taxable income.
    • Move to a low-tax province if you have flexibility. Alberta has the lowest provincial tax (10–15%); Quebec has the highest combined marginal rate (53.31% at the top bracket).

    Sources

    Calculator is provided for estimation only and does not constitute tax advice. Consult a tax professional or the CRA for filing.

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    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are Yukon's tax brackets for 2026?
    Yukon's territorial tax brackets are deliberately matched to the federal bracket thresholds for 2026: 6.4% up to ~$58,900, 9% to ~$117,800, 10.9% to ~$182,700, 12.8% to ~$500,000, and 15% above. The Basic Personal Amount matches federal at ~$16,550.
    Why does Yukon mirror the federal bracket structure?
    Yukon was the first territory (in 2002) to simplify its tax code by matching federal bracket thresholds. This makes Yukon tax calculations slightly easier — you can read the same bracket cutoff for both federal and territorial tax. The rates differ, of course, but the income ranges align.
    What's the top combined marginal tax rate in Yukon?
    Roughly 48% on income above $500,000 — federal 33% + Yukon 15%. Yukon's top rate kicks in much later than most provinces (at $500k instead of $260k), so middle-to-upper-middle-income residents benefit.
    Does Yukon have a sales tax?
    No territorial sales tax. Only the federal 5% GST applies. Like Alberta and the other two territories, Yukon is GST-only — no PST, no HST.
    What's the Northern Residents Deduction?
    Federal tax deduction for residents of Yukon (and other northern zones) who live in the area for at least six consecutive months. It has two parts: a residency deduction (~$11/day) and a travel deduction for vacation costs (when claimed by an employer-paid trip). Can reduce federal taxable income meaningfully.
    How does Whitehorse compare to other Yukon communities for take-home pay?
    Identical at the paycheck level — Yukon territorial tax doesn't vary by city. Whitehorse and other Yukon communities all charge no municipal income tax. Whitehorse has the highest housing costs in the territory; remote communities have higher food and fuel costs.
    How can I maximize my Yukon take-home pay?
    Max your RRSP contribution — saves both federal and Yukon tax at your marginal rate. Use a TFSA for tax-free growth. Claim the Northern Residents Deduction if you live in Yukon for 6+ consecutive months — it's significant ($11/day residency component alone is worth ~$4,000/year).

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