Salary Needed to Take Home $80,000 in Canada (2026)
Find the gross salary (CAD) you need to take home $80,000/year after federal tax, provincial tax, CPP, and EI. Use the calculator below for your province.
Why the gross needed to take home $80,000 varies by province
Federal income tax, CPP, and EI apply in every province. Provincial tax rates differ — higher in Quebec and Nova Scotia, lower in Alberta and Nunavut. To take home $80,000 in a high-tax province requires more gross than in a low-tax province. The province examples in the sidebar show exact figures for four provinces (single filer, no children).
Federal tax, provincial tax, CPP, and EI when going net to gross
This calculator finds the gross (CAD) such that after federal tax, provincial tax, CPP, and EI you receive exactly $80,000. For other amounts, see the sidebar. For gross-to-net, use our Canada Tax Calculator.
The gross salary above comes from the take-home target, province, filing status, and children you enter—not a third-party feed. We work backward: starting from your desired net pay in CAD, we search for the gross income that produces that take-home after federal tax, provincial or territorial tax, CPP or QPP, EI, and Ontario Health Premium when applicable. Below are the formulas, the order we follow, and worked examples you can check by hand.
Formulas
| Line | Formula |
|---|---|
| Target | Desired annual take-home (net pay after all taxes and premiums) |
| Take-home at a given gross | Gross − federal tax − provincial tax − CPP/QPP − EI − Ontario Health Premium (if ON) |
| Federal income tax | Progressive federal brackets minus Basic Personal Amount credit (and Quebec federal abatement if QC) |
| Provincial / territorial tax | Provincial brackets minus provincial BPA credit (plus Ontario surtax when applicable) |
| CPP / QPP | 5.95% (CPP) or 6.40% (QPP) on pensionable earnings $3,500–$74,600, plus 4% CPP2/QPP2 on $74,600–$85,000 |
| EI | 1.63% on insurable earnings up to $68,900 (2026 max) |
| Gross needed (solution) | Lowest gross where take-home is within $1 of your target |
| Total deductions | Gross needed − desired take-home |
| Effective tax rate | Total deductions ÷ gross needed |
Order of operations
Start with your desired take-home
Enter the annual net pay you want in CAD
This is after all income tax and payroll premiums—the amount you want deposited, not your T4 gross box.
Set the search range
Low = at least your target net; high = enough gross for typical combined rates
Gross must exceed net because federal tax, provincial tax, CPP/QPP, and EI all reduce pay. We expand the upper bound until a trial gross reaches your target.
Calculate take-home at each trial gross
Apply federal brackets, provincial brackets, BPA credits, CPP/QPP, EI, and OHP
Each trial uses the same Canada paycheck engine as our main Canada tax calculator for your selected province and tax year.
Binary search for the matching gross
Repeat until |take-home − target| ≤ $1 (up to 100 iterations)
If take-home is too low, raise trial gross; if too high, lower it. The search converges quickly because deductions increase with income.
Return gross and deduction breakdown
Gross needed, actual net, total deductions, effective rate
Results are rounded to the nearest dollar. Actual net may be within $1 of your target.
Worked example
$80,000 desired take-home, Single, Ontario, 2026
Target $80,000 take-home → gross needed $111,880 (actual net $80,000, within $1)
$25,360.41 income tax (federal + provincial + OHP) + $4,646.45 CPP/QPP + $1,123.07 EI = $31,880 total deductions (28.5% effective)
$111,880 − $31,880 = $80,000 take-home
| Line item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Desired annual take-home | $80,000 |
| Gross salary needed | $111,880 |
| Income tax (federal + provincial + OHP) | $25,360.41 |
| CPP / QPP (incl. CPP2 when applicable) | $4,646.45 |
| EI premiums | $1,123.07 |
| Total deductions | $31,880 |
| Actual take-home (verify) | $80,000 |
| Effective deduction rate | 28.5% |
| Monthly gross equivalent | $9,323.33 |
| Biweekly gross equivalent | $4,303.08 |
Same $80,000 target in Alberta needs $110,239 gross vs $111,880 in Ontario — $1,641 more salary due to provincial tax differences.
In ON, $80,000 target: single filers need $111,880 gross; married filing jointly need $111,880 gross ($0 difference when applicable).
2026 rates and limits we use
| Parameter | What we use |
|---|---|
| Federal Basic Personal Amount (max) | $16,452 |
| Federal lowest bracket rate | 14% |
| CPP — employee (outside Quebec) | 5.95% on pensionable earnings $3,500–$74,600 (max ~$4,230) |
| QPP — employee (Quebec) | 6.40% on pensionable earnings $3,500–$74,600 |
| CPP2 / QPP2 | 4% on earnings $74,600–$85,000 |
| EI — employee | 1.63% on insurable earnings up to $68,900 (max ~$1,123) |
| Quebec federal abatement | 16.5% reduction of basic federal tax |
| Ontario Health Premium (max) | $900 at higher incomes; $750 at $75,000 taxable |
| Search tolerance | Within $1 of target take-home |
What we do not model on this page
We solve for annual gross using standard employment income only—not RRSP contributions, union dues, other tax credits beyond children entered, self-employment, bonus withholding quirks, or per-paycheque rounding. Quebec QPIP and separate Revenu Québec filing nuances are simplified. Results are pre-deduction salary needed; your employer may withhold slightly differently each pay period.