Yukon Tax Calculator 2026
Calculate your take-home pay in Yukon. Federal tax, provincial tax, CPP + EI — updated for tax year 2026.
Your details
C$
C$
Take-homeC$57,021per year
Monthly take-homeC$4,752
Bi-weeklyC$2,193
Effective tax rate17.0%
Marginal rate30.0%
Annual breakdown
- Gross incomeC$75,000
- Federal tax(11.9%)-C$8,913
- Yukon provincial tax(5.1%)-C$3,807
- CPP(5.6%)-C$4,182
- EI (Employment Insurance)(1.4%)-C$1,077
- Take-home pay(76.0%)C$57,021
Uses 2025 federal and provincial brackets indexed to 2026. Read full disclaimer.
Yukon provincial tax brackets
| Income range | Rate |
|---|---|
| C$0 – C$57,375 | 6.40% |
| C$57,375 – C$114,750 | 9% |
| C$114,750 – C$177,882 | 10.90% |
| C$177,882 – C$500,000 | 12.93% |
| C$500,000 – ∞ | 15% |
What you pay on every Yukon paycheck
- Federal income tax — 15% to 33% depending on bracket
- Yukon provincial tax — 6.40% to 15.00%
- CPP — 5.95% on earnings between $3,500 and $71,300, plus CPP2 4% to $81,200
- EI — 1.64% on earnings up to $65,700
Yukon Basic Personal Amount
Yukon grants a Basic Personal Amount of C$16,129. Combined with the federal BPA of C$16,129, that's over C$32,258 of income effectively tax-free.
Yukon tax FAQ
What's the top tax rate in Yukon?
Yukon's top provincial rate is 15.00%. Combined with the top federal rate (33%), your marginal rate on income above $253,414 is approximately 48.00%.
How much is CPP in Yukon?
CPP in Yukon is the same as the rest of Canada (except Quebec): 5.95% on earnings between $3,500 (basic exemption) and $71,300 (YMPE), plus 4% CPP2 on earnings between YMPE and $81,200 (YAMPE).
What's the Basic Personal Amount in Yukon?
Yukon's provincial Basic Personal Amount for 2025 is $16,129. Federal BPA is $16,129 on top of that. Both reduce your taxable income for their respective jurisdictions.
Does this calculator include provincial tax credits?
The calculator applies the Basic Personal Amount (both federal and provincial). Additional tax credits — like the Canada Workers Benefit, GST/HST credit, or province-specific credits (e.g. Ontario Trillium Benefit) — are not deducted because they depend on your overall tax situation. Use CRA's My Account for exact personal estimates.