Self-Employed Tax Guide Canada (2026)

Self-employed Canadians pay 25–45% in total taxes on net income (depending on province and income level), plus double CPP contributions. The good news: dozens of deductions can significantly reduce what you owe. Here’s your complete tax guide.

Self-Employment Tax Overview

Tax Rate Notes
Federal income tax 15–33% Same brackets as employees
Provincial income tax 4–25.75% Varies by province
CPP contributions 11.9% (on $3,500–$68,500) Both employer + employee share
EI premiums Optional (1.66%) Voluntary for self-employed
GST/HST 5–15% (collected) Required if revenue >$30K

What You Can Deduct

Deduction What Qualifies Limit
Home office % of rent/mortgage interest, utilities, insurance Based on square footage
Vehicle Gas, insurance, maintenance, depreciation Business-use % only
Equipment Computers, phones, tools CCA (depreciation) schedule
Office supplies Paper, ink, software subscriptions Full cost
Phone/internet Monthly bills Business-use %
Professional fees Accounting, legal, consulting Full cost
Insurance Business insurance, E&O Full cost
Advertising Website, online ads, business cards Full cost
Travel Flights, hotels, meals (50%) Business purpose only
Health/dental premiums If not covered elsewhere Full cost for self/family
RRSP contributions Based on earned income 18% of net income, max $31,560

How to Calculate Home Office Deduction

Expense Annual Cost Office % (15%) Deduction
Rent $24,000 15% $3,600
Utilities $3,600 15% $540
Internet $1,200 50% $600
Home insurance $1,800 15% $270
Total $5,010

Quarterly Instalments

If you owe more than $3,000 in tax (federal, or $1,800 Quebec), CRA requires quarterly instalment payments:

Due Date Quarter
March 15 Q1
June 15 Q2
September 15 Q3
December 15 Q4

Tax return filing deadline: June 15 (but taxes owed are due April 30).

GST/HST Guide

Revenue Requirement
Under $30,000 GST/HST registration optional
Over $30,000 Must register and collect GST/HST

Input Tax Credits (ITCs): You can claim back GST/HST paid on business expenses, reducing what you remit to CRA.

Bottom Line

Self-employment taxes in Canada are straightforward once you understand the three layers: income tax, CPP (doubled), and GST/HST. The key to paying less is maximizing deductions — particularly home office, vehicle, and equipment. Keep meticulous records, save 25–30% of every payment for taxes, and consider incorporating once net income exceeds $75,000.

See our how to start a business in Canada or small business grants guide for more.

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