How are different types of income taxed in Canada in 2026? A guide to keeping more of what you earn?

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Key takeaways

  • Capital gains are the most tax-efficient income type in Canada
  • Interest and salary income are taxed at the highest rates
  • Asset location (RRSP, TFSA, non-registered) is critical for tax efficiency
  • Poor planning can trigger OAS clawbacks
  • The most effective strategy is structuring income to minimize taxable exposure

How are different types of income taxed in Canada in 2026?

In 2026, not all income in Canada is taxed equally—and understanding these differences is one of the most powerful ways to improve your long-term wealth outcomes.

At higher income levels in Ontario, different income types are taxed at significantly different rates, the structure of your income matters just as much as the amount you earn.

Fact table: Tax rates by income type (Ontario – high income)

Income type Approx. tax rate
Salary / Interest / Foreign income / RRSP income ~53.53%
Non-eligible dividends ~47.74%
Eligible dividends ~39.34%
Capital gains ~26.77%

The most effective strategy is prioritizing income types that are taxed more efficiently—particularly capital gains and eligible dividends.

Which types of income are the most tax-efficient in Canada?

When ranked from most to least tax-efficient at higher income levels:

  1. Capital gains
  2. Eligible dividends
  3. Non-eligible dividends
  4. Interest, salary, RRSP withdrawals, pension income

This hierarchy forms the foundation of tax-efficient investing.

Earning the same dollar in different ways can result in dramatically different after-tax outcomes.

Where should you hold different investments for tax efficiency?

Asset location is one of the most overlooked—but most impactful—strategies in Canadian financial planning.

Best practices for 2026

  • Interest income (GICs, bonds, savings) → Best held in RRSP or TFSA
  • Foreign dividends (U.S. stocks) → Best held in RRSP
  • Canadian dividends & capital gains → Suitable for non-registered accounts

Important considerations

  • TFSAs are subject to foreign withholding tax on foreign dividends
  • RRSPs allow U.S. dividends to be received without withholding tax
  • Non-registered accounts benefit from preferential tax treatment on Canadian eligible dividends and capital gains

The most effective strategy is aligning each asset type with the most tax-efficient account.

Why is interest income so tax inefficient?

Interest income is one of the least efficient forms of income in Canada because it is taxed at your full marginal rate.

Common sources of interest income

  • GICs
  • Bonds
  • High-interest savings accounts
  • Private mortgages
  • Promissory notes
  • Net rental income

At higher income levels, this can result in taxation of over 50%.

Holding interest-generating assets in non-registered accounts often leads to unnecessary tax erosion.

How can poor tax planning trigger OAS clawbacks in 2026?

Tax inefficiency does not just increase your tax bill—it can reduce your government benefits.

OAS clawback Thresholds (2026 reference)

  • Income above $93,454 → OAS begins to be reduced
  • Income around $151,668 → OAS fully eliminated

If your income includes large amounts of fully taxable sources (like interest or RRIF withdrawals), you may unintentionally exceed these thresholds.

The most effective strategy is structuring income to minimize reported taxable income—often by emphasizing capital gains and tax-efficient distributions.

What are the best investments for non-registered accounts?

For investors drawing retirement income, non-registered accounts should prioritize tax efficiency.

Recommended investments

  • Canadian equities (dividends + capital gains)
  • Capital gains-focused ETFs
  • Corporate class mutual funds
  • Return of capital (ROC) strategies

Investments to avoid in non-registered accounts

  • GICs and bonds
  • High-interest savings
  • Foreign dividend-paying stocks
  • REITs and income trusts with complex taxation

Proper asset selection in taxable accounts can significantly reduce long-term tax liability.

Why does tax-efficient investing require professional planning?

While general rules provide a strong foundation, real-world execution is more complex.

Factors such as:

  • Changes in personal tax brackets
  • Registered account contribution room
  • Investment time horizon
  • Corporate vs personal structures
  • Family income dynamics

all impact the optimal strategy.

This is where the complexity gap exists. The baseline rules—such as tax rates and OAS thresholds—are only the starting point. The most effective outcomes come from integrating these rules into a coordinated, personalized financial plan.

FAQ: Tax-efficient investing in Canada (2026)

What type of income is taxed the least in Canada?
Capital gains are generally the most tax-efficient because only 50% of the gain is taxable. This results in a significantly lower effective tax rate compared to interest or salary income.

Can poor investment structure affect my OAS benefits?
Yes. High levels of fully taxable income can push you above OAS clawback thresholds. Structuring income properly can help preserve these benefits.

Should I hold all investments in a TFSA for tax savings?
No. While TFSAs are tax-free, they are not always optimal for all assets—particularly foreign dividend-paying investments due to withholding tax considerations.

Final thoughts

In Canada, successful wealth building is not just about generating returns—it is about maximizing what you keep after tax.

Investors who focus on tax efficiency, asset location, and income structuring can significantly improve long-term outcomes.

To see how these 2026 rules apply to your specific portfolio, Book an online consultation or visit our AGES Wealth Management office in Markham, Ontario.

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