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Tax Calculator Saskatchewan

Calculate your combined federal + Saskatchewan provincial income tax with deductions and basic personal amount. Updated for 2026 CRA brackets.

Saskatchewan province tax applied. Saskatchewan has 3 simple brackets, with a generous basic personal amount of $18,491 — one of the highest in Canada. Top combined federal + SK rate is 47.5%.

Deductions you can claim

Total tax owed
$19,953
Effective rate 22.17% · Marginal 20.5%
Taxable income
$74,295
Take-home
$70,047

Federal + Saskatchewan combined

Federal: $12,075 · Saskatchewan: $7,879

Full breakdown

Step-by-step from gross income to total tax owed.

Gross income$90,000
Standard deduction$15,705
Taxable income$74,295
Federal income tax$12,075
Saskatchewan province tax$7,879
Total tax$19,953
Take-home (post-tax only)$70,047

Saskatchewan tax at a glance

Saskatchewan has 3 simple brackets, with a generous basic personal amount of $18,491 — one of the highest in Canada. Top combined federal + SK rate is 47.5%.

Saskatchewan provincial brackets (2026)

Taxable incomeProvincial rate
$0 $53,00010.50%
$53,000 $153,00012.50%
$153,000 above14.50%

Basic personal amount: $18,491.

Compare with other provinces

Related Canada calculators

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the top combined tax rate in Saskatchewan?
Saskatchewan's top provincial marginal rate is 14.50%. Combined with the 33% federal top rate, top earners face roughly 47.5% on income above $253k. Saskatchewan has 3 simple brackets, with a generous basic personal amount of $18,491 — one of the highest in Canada. Top combined federal + SK rate is 47.5%.
How is Saskatchewan tax different from federal?
In Canada, federal and provincial taxes are calculated separately and stacked on the same income. Most provinces (except Quebec) have the CRA collect both via a single return. Your tax slip shows federal + provincial deductions, and CRA distributes provincial revenue back to your home province.
What is the Basic Personal Amount?
The Basic Personal Amount (BPA) is a non-refundable tax credit that effectively makes the first portion of your income tax-free. The federal BPA in 2026 is ~$15,705 (reduced for very high earners). Saskatchewan's provincial BPA is $18,491. Combined, most Saskatchewan residents pay no tax on the first ~$25–30k of income.
Should I contribute to RRSP if I'm in Saskatchewan?
RRSP contributions reduce both federal AND Saskatchewan provincial income tax — which makes them more valuable in higher-tax provinces. A $10,000 RRSP contribution saves roughly 3,500 (at 41% marginal in Saskatchewan) — meaningful in mid-tax provinces. Use our Retirement Calculator to project the long-term impact.
What if I move to/from Saskatchewan during the year?
You file as a resident of whichever province you were resident in on December 31 of that tax year. All income for the year is taxed at that province's rate, even income earned elsewhere. Quebec is the major exception with its own rules. Moving in late December to a low-tax province (like Alberta) can yield significant savings, but be aware of residency tests and provincial credits.
Is provincial tax progressive in Saskatchewan?
Yes — Saskatchewan has 3 progressive brackets ranging from 10.50% to 14.50%. Each dollar earned is only taxed at the rate for its bracket, not at a single overall rate — see the bracket table above for details.