Skip to content

Yukon Combined Income Tax Calculator

Yukon levies provincial income tax on top of federal income tax. The 2026 combined top marginal rate is 48.00%, applied at the top federal bracket. Yukon mirrors the federal bracket thresholds (with one additional bracket above $500,000) and matches the federal Basic Personal Amount at $16,452. The combined top marginal rate is 48.0%. The calculator […]

Loading calculator…

Yukon levies provincial income tax on top of federal income tax. The 2026 combined top marginal rate is 48.00%, applied at the top federal bracket. Yukon mirrors the federal bracket thresholds (with one additional bracket above $500,000) and matches the federal Basic Personal Amount at $16,452. The combined top marginal rate is 48.0%. The calculator above applies both layers of tax for 2026 and shows the combined total, marginal rate, average rate, and after-tax income.

How much income tax does a Yukon resident pay on $65,000?

At $65,000 of taxable income in 2026, a Yukon resident owes approximately $7,218 in net federal income tax and $4,257 in net provincial tax, for a combined total of approximately $11,475. The after-tax income is approximately $53,525. The combined marginal rate at $65,000 is approximately 29.50%.

How Yukon income tax is calculated

Federal component

The federal calculation is identical across all provinces and territories. Five brackets apply for 2026: 14% on the first $58,523, 20.5% on $58,524 to $117,045, 26% on $117,046 to $181,440, 29% on $181,441 to $258,482, and 33% on income above $258,482. The federal Basic Personal Amount is $16,452, generating a non-refundable credit of approximately $2,303 at the 14% rate. The BPA phases down to $14,829 for incomes above $258,482.

Yukon provincial brackets

Yukon applies 6.4% on the first $58,523; 9.0% on income from $58,524 to $117,045; 10.9% on income from $117,046 to $181,440; 12.8% on income from $181,441 to $500,000; and 15.0% on income above $500,000. The Basic Personal Amount is $16,452, generating a non-refundable credit of approximately $1,053 at the 6.4% lowest-bracket rate. Both layers of tax apply to the same taxable income, and credits are computed independently.

Combined marginal rate

The combined marginal rate at any income equals the federal marginal rate at that income plus the YT marginal rate at that income. At the top of the schedule, the 33% federal rate combined with the 15.0% YT rate produces the 48.00% top combined marginal rate. The combined marginal rate determines the tax cost of an additional dollar of income, RRSP contribution, or RRIF withdrawal.

Verified against source

Bracket thresholds and rates: Yukon Department of Finance. Federal brackets and Basic Personal Amounts: Canada Revenue Agency — Canadian income tax rates for individuals. Payroll formula reference: CRA T4127 Payroll Deductions Formulas, 122nd Edition (January 2026).

Yukon tax brackets at a glance

Taxable income Provincial rate
$0 – $58,523 6.4%
$58,524 – $117,045 9.0%
$117,046 – $181,440 10.9%
$181,441 – $500,000 12.8%
$500,001 + 15.0%

Worked example: a $100,000 earner in Yukon

At $100,000 of taxable income, federal tax is calculated by applying the 14% rate to the first $58,523 ($8,193) and the 20.5% rate to the remaining $41,477 ($8,503), for gross federal tax of approximately $16,696. The federal BPA credit reduces this by 14% of $16,452, or approximately $2,303, leaving net federal tax of approximately $14,393.

Provincial tax is calculated by applying the YT bracket schedule to the same $100,000 of taxable income and subtracting the YT BPA credit of approximately $1,053. The combined federal-plus-provincial total at $100,000 is the figure shown in the “Combined tax” row of the calculator.

Edge cases and rules not captured

Yukon Carbon Price Rebate

Yukon delivers federal carbon pricing rebates through quarterly Canada Carbon Rebate payments. Yukon residents also receive the Yukon Government Carbon Price Rebate Individual top-up. These payments are not part of income tax and are not captured in the base calculation.

RRSP and RRIF withdrawals

RRSP and RRIF withdrawals are taxable income in the year received and are taxed at the resident’s combined marginal rate. A Yukon resident drawing a $40,000 RRIF withdrawal at $50,000 of other income faces taxable income of $90,000 and a combined marginal rate set by the bracket schedule. The withdrawal increases tax payable by the marginal rate multiplied by $40,000.

Capital gains and dividends

Capital gains are 50% taxable up to $250,000 of net capital gains per year (2026 inclusion threshold). Eligible Canadian dividends receive a federal dividend tax credit and a YT dividend tax credit; non-eligible dividends receive smaller credits. The calculator above reflects ordinary income (employment, pension, RRSP/RRIF) and does not adjust for the dividend gross-up or the capital gains inclusion rate.

Quebec residents are calculated separately

Quebec residents file a separate provincial return with Revenu Québec and are subject to a 16.5% federal tax abatement that reduces federal tax payable. Yukon residents file a single combined federal-and-YT return with the CRA, and the abatement does not apply.

Federal and Yukon tax interaction

Federal income tax applies to all Canadian residents regardless of province or territory of residence. The federal brackets and rates are the same for all Canadians: 15% on the first $57,375, 20.5% on $57,376 to $114,750, 26% on $114,751 to $177,882, 29% on $177,883 to $253,414, and 33% above $253,414 (2025 rates). Yukon tax is calculated separately and added to the federal amount to arrive at the combined tax. The combined marginal rate at any income level is the sum of the federal marginal rate and the applicable Yukon bracket rate. The federal Basic Personal Amount (BPA) is $16,129 for 2025, generating a 15% federal credit of $2,419. Yukon’s own basic personal amount generates a separate provincial credit at the lowest Yukon rate.

Using the calculator for RRSP decisions in Yukon

The most practical use of the combined income tax calculator for Yukon residents is to estimate the immediate tax saving from an RRSP contribution. Enter the current taxable income, note the marginal rate, then subtract the planned RRSP contribution amount and note the revised tax. The difference is the expected refund from the RRSP contribution. For example, if the marginal rate is 28% at $70,000 of income, a $5,000 RRSP contribution generates a combined tax saving of approximately $1,400 ($700 federal + $700 provincial, depending on the Yukon rate at that bracket). This calculation is the correct way to assess an RRSP contribution — not the average rate.

Residency and Yukon taxation

Province of residence for tax purposes is determined by where the individual is ordinarily resident on December 31 of the tax year. A person who moved from Yukon to another province on December 15 is still taxed as a Yukon resident for the full year (except for the provincial portion, which follows the province of residence on December 31). Individuals who move during the year must ensure they update their address with CRA by December 31 to be taxed under the correct provincial rates. This is particularly relevant for Yukon residents in employment that involves frequent inter-provincial moves.

Methodology

Federal income tax is computed by applying the 2026 five-bracket federal schedule and subtracting the BPA credit ($16,452 at 14%, with phase-down from $181,440 to $258,482). Yukon provincial tax is computed by applying the YT brackets to the same taxable income and subtracting the YT BPA credit ($16,452 multiplied by 6.4%). Refundable provincial credits and tax reductions are not modelled. The result reflects the base income tax on ordinary income at the stated taxable income level.

Frequently asked questions

What is Yukon's top combined income tax rate in 2026?
Yukon's top combined federal-provincial rate is 48.00% in 2026: the federal 33% top rate plus the Yukon 15.0% top provincial rate. The top combined rate applies to taxable income above $258,482 (the federal top bracket threshold). Below that threshold, the combined marginal rate steps down through the federal and provincial bracket schedules.
What is the Yukon Basic Personal Amount for 2026?
The Yukon Basic Personal Amount is $16,452 for 2026. The non-refundable credit reduces provincial tax by $16,452 multiplied by 6.4%, producing a credit of approximately $1,053. The federal BPA is separate at $16,452 and produces a federal credit of approximately $2,303 at the 14% rate.
How many income tax brackets does Yukon have?
Yukon has 5 provincial income tax brackets for 2026, ranging from 6.4% to 15.0%. The federal five brackets combine with the provincial brackets, so the combined marginal rate steps up through both schedules. The combined top rate of 48.00% applies above $258,482 of taxable income.
How much tax does a Yukon resident pay on $65,000?
At $65,000 of taxable income in 2026, a Yukon resident pays approximately $7,218 in net federal tax and $4,257 in net provincial tax, for a combined total of approximately $11,475. After-tax income is approximately $53,525. The combined marginal rate at $65,000 is approximately 29.50%.
At what income does Yukon's top provincial bracket begin?
The 15.0% top Yukon provincial rate applies to taxable income above $$500,000. Below the federal top bracket of $258,482, the federal marginal rate is 29% rather than 33%, so the combined marginal rate at the bottom of the Yukon top bracket is below the 48.00% combined top rate.
Are RRSP and RRIF withdrawals taxed at the Yukon combined rate?
Yes. RRSP and RRIF withdrawals are taxable income in the year received and are taxed at the resident's combined marginal rate. A Yukon resident with $50,000 of other income who withdraws $40,000 from an RRIF faces $90,000 of total taxable income. The $40,000 withdrawal is taxed at the combined marginal rate at that bracket. Dollar amounts vary with the bracket schedule above.
How does the Yukon provincial tax compare to neighbouring jurisdictions?
Yukon's combined top rate of 48.00% sits within the Canadian range of 44.5% (Nunavut) to 54.8% (Newfoundland and Labrador). At mid-range incomes, the comparison depends on each province's BPA and lower-bracket structure rather than the top rate. Use the calculator with the same income figure on each provincial calculator to compare directly.
Does the calculator include YT refundable credits like low-income reductions?
No. The calculator computes base federal and Yukon provincial income tax using the bracket schedules and the federal and provincial Basic Personal Amount credits only. Refundable provincial credits (low-income reductions, cost-of-living rebates, carbon rebates) reduce or offset tax owed but are not modelled in the base calculation. Reported figures show the underlying bracket-and-BPA tax.
How is the federal Basic Personal Amount phased down?
The federal BPA is $16,452 for 2026 at incomes up to $181,440 of net income. From $181,440 to $258,482, the BPA is reduced linearly to $14,829. Above $258,482, the reduced $14,829 BPA applies. The phase-down increases net federal tax by approximately $227 across the phase-down range. Yukon provincial BPA does not phase down.
What about Quebec residents earning income from Yukon?
Quebec residents file a separate provincial return with Revenu Québec and are subject to a 16.5% federal tax abatement reducing federal tax payable. Yukon provincial tax does not apply to Quebec residents on Yukon-source income unless the income is earned through a permanent establishment in Yukon. Use the Quebec calculator for Quebec residents.