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The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has introduced updated payroll deduction formulas and tax tables that officially take effect on July 1, 2026. While these changes are a routine part of Canada’s payroll system, they could result in noticeable differences on some employees’ paycheques, particularly for workers in British Columbia.
Every year, the CRA releases two editions of its T4127 Payroll Deductions Formulas guide. One becomes effective on January 1, while the second takes effect on July 1. These updates ensure payroll deductions accurately reflect new federal and provincial tax laws, revised contribution rates, and any legislative changes introduced after the beginning of the year.
For employers, payroll administrators, and software providers, implementing these updated formulas before processing July payroll is essential. Employees, meanwhile, should understand why their take-home pay may increase or decrease and what factors determine these adjustments.
This guide explains everything workers and employers need to know about the July 1, 2026 CRA payroll deduction update.
Why the CRA Updates Payroll Deduction Formulas Twice Each Year
Canada’s payroll tax system evolves throughout the year as governments introduce new budgets, tax measures, and legislative amendments.
Since many provincial budgets are announced after the January payroll guide is published, the CRA issues a second edition every July. This ensures payroll calculations remain accurate for the remainder of the tax year.
The July edition updates:
Federal income tax formulas
Provincial and territorial tax calculations
Payroll deduction tables
Applicable tax credits
Legislative changes introduced after January
These updates help employers withhold the correct amount of income tax, Canada Pension Plan (CPP) contributions, and Employment Insurance (EI) premiums from employee earnings.
What Is Changing on July 1, 2026?
The most significant payroll adjustment this year affects employees working in British Columbia.
Following the province’s February 2026 budget, British Columbia increased its lowest provincial personal income tax rate from 5.06 percent to 5.60 percent for taxable income up to $50,363.
Since this increase applies retroactively to January 1, 2026, employees paid between January and June had taxes withheld using the previous rate.
To compensate, the CRA has introduced a temporary prorated withholding rate of 6.14 percent from July through December 2026. This allows payroll deductions to balance out over the course of the entire year so employees pay the correct annual amount.
British Columbia also raised its Basic Tax Reduction from $562 to $690, while increasing the percentage used for basic personal tax credits from 5.06 percent to 5.60 percent. These adjustments help reduce the overall tax impact for many lower-income workers.
For employees outside British Columbia, the July update primarily maintains payroll rules already introduced earlier in 2026.
Federal Payroll Rules That Continue Through 2026
Although July introduces relatively few national changes, several important payroll parameters remain in effect throughout the year.
These include:
Federal Basic Personal Amount: $16,452
Lowest Federal Income Tax Rate: 14 percent
Federal Indexation Factor: 2.0 percent
CPP Employee Contribution Rate: 5.95 percent
Maximum Pensionable Earnings (YMPE): $74,600
CPP2 Earnings Ceiling (YAMPE): $85,000
CPP2 Contribution Rate: 4.00 percent
Maximum Employee CPP Contribution: $4,646.45
Employment Insurance Premium Rate: $1.63 per $100 of insurable earnings
Maximum Insurable Earnings: $68,900
Maximum EI Employee Premium: $1,123.07
Canada Employment Amount: $1,501
These figures continue to apply after July 1 unless additional legislation is introduced later in the year.
Why British Columbia Workers May Notice Smaller Paycheques
Employees working in British Columbia are expected to experience the most noticeable payroll changes.
Because the province’s tax increase became effective retroactively, payroll systems must collect additional provincial income tax during the second half of 2026.
Rather than recovering the difference through a single deduction, the CRA spreads the adjustment across every remaining pay period until year-end.
As a result, employees may notice:
Higher provincial income tax deductions
Slightly lower take-home pay
No changes to CPP or EI deductions
For many workers, the reduction in net pay will be relatively modest, depending on salary level and tax credits claimed.
Workers in Other Provinces May See Little or No Change
Employees outside British Columbia generally should not expect major differences solely because of the July payroll update.
However, payroll deductions can still change for individual reasons, including:
Salary increases
Bonuses
Overtime earnings
Commission payments
Updated TD1 tax credit forms
Changes in tax brackets
Retroactive wage adjustments
Because payroll systems calculate taxes based on projected annual income, unusually large payments can temporarily increase tax withholding even if tax rates themselves remain unchanged.
Understanding How Payroll Deductions Are Calculated
Every Canadian employee has several mandatory deductions withheld from each paycheque.
These typically include:
Federal income tax
Provincial or territorial income tax
Canada Pension Plan (CPP) contributions
Employment Insurance (EI) premiums
Income tax withholding depends on several factors, including annual earnings, pay frequency, province of employment, and the tax credits claimed on federal and provincial TD1 forms.
The federal Basic Personal Amount of $16,452 means the first portion of annual income is generally exempt from federal income tax.
Payroll systems divide this credit proportionally across each pay period, reducing the amount of tax withheld throughout the year.
Canada Pension Plan Contributions Remain Unchanged
The July update does not alter CPP contribution rates.
Employees continue contributing:
5.95 percent on pensionable earnings between $3,500 and $74,600
An additional 4.00 percent CPP2 contribution on earnings between $74,600 and $85,000
Once employees reach the annual maximum contribution limit, CPP deductions stop for the remainder of the calendar year.
This often results in noticeably larger paycheques during the final months of the year for higher-income earners.
Employment Insurance Premiums Stay the Same
Employment Insurance premiums also remain unchanged after July 1.
Employees continue paying:
$1.63 for every $100 of insurable earnings
Maximum annual employee premium of $1,123.07
Maximum insurable earnings of $68,900
Unless employees reach the annual premium limit, EI deductions should continue at the same rate through December.
What Employers Need to Do Before Processing July Payroll
Employers are expected to implement the updated payroll formulas immediately for any payroll with a pay date on or after July 1, 2026.
Payroll administrators should verify that:
Payroll software has received July updates
Tax deduction formulas are current
Provincial payroll tables have been updated
Internal payroll calculations reflect new CRA guidance
Businesses using manual payroll calculations should download the newest payroll deduction tables before processing employee wages.
Failure to update payroll systems could lead to under-withholding or over-withholding taxes, creating problems for both employers and employees during tax filing season.
Payroll Software Providers Are Expected to Roll Out Updates
Most Canadian businesses rely on automated payroll software to calculate deductions.
Major payroll providers typically release updates before the July implementation date, allowing employers to process payroll without interruption.
Even so, payroll administrators should verify that updates have been installed correctly before issuing employee payments.
Which Provinces Are Expected to See Payroll Changes?
The impact varies by province.
British Columbia employees are most likely to experience higher provincial tax deductions due to the retroactive tax rate adjustment.
Employees in Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut generally should not see significant payroll changes related to the July CRA update.
Employees in Quebec continue following payroll rules administered separately by Revenu Québec rather than the CRA’s payroll deduction tables.
How to Check Whether Your Paycheque Has Changed
Employees can quickly determine whether the July update affected their pay by comparing their final June pay stub with their first July pay stub.
Review the following deductions:
Federal income tax
Provincial income tax
CPP contributions
EI premiums
If gross earnings remain unchanged but tax deductions differ, the updated payroll formulas are likely responsible.
Small differences are normal and generally reflect updated withholding calculations rather than payroll errors.
Can Employees Change Their Tax Withholding?
Yes.
Employees who believe too much or too little tax is being deducted may submit a new TD1 Personal Tax Credits Return to their employer.
This allows payroll departments to adjust withholding based on updated personal tax credit information.
Employees may also request additional tax withholding if they expect to owe taxes when filing their annual return.
Self-Employed Canadians Are Not Directly Affected
Individuals who are self-employed generally do not receive employer-issued paycheques, so the July payroll deduction update does not directly affect them.
However, self-employed taxpayers making quarterly tax instalments should ensure those payments reflect current 2026 federal and provincial tax rates to avoid unexpected balances owing at tax time.
Why Reviewing Your Pay Stub Matters
Many employees rarely examine their payroll deductions unless something appears unusual.
Reviewing each pay stub allows workers to identify:
Unexpected tax changes
Payroll errors
Incorrect CPP deductions
Incorrect EI premiums
Changes caused by updated tax credits
Monitoring payroll deductions throughout the year can prevent surprises when filing an income tax return.
What Employees Should Do After the July Payroll Update
Workers should compare June and July pay statements to identify any deduction changes.
If differences appear despite identical earnings, reviewing payroll details can help determine whether the adjustments reflect updated CRA withholding formulas or another payroll issue.
Employees working in British Columbia should pay particular attention to their provincial tax deductions, as these are the most likely to change during the second half of 2026.
Final Thoughts
The CRA’s July 1, 2026 payroll deduction update is a routine but important adjustment designed to keep payroll withholding aligned with current federal and provincial tax laws.
For most Canadians, payroll deductions will remain largely unchanged. However, British Columbia employees are expected to notice slightly higher provincial tax withholding because of the province’s retroactive tax rate increase.
Employers should ensure payroll systems are fully updated before processing July wages, while employees should carefully review their first July pay stub to understand any changes in deductions.
