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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A Canada VS COUNTRY B Japan

Side-by-side analysis of income tax, effective rates, and take-home pay for Canada and Japan in 2026.

OVERVIEW
Canada and Japan have remarkably similar total tax burdens across most income levels — a comparison that surprises many people given how different the two systems appear on the surface. Japan's top national income tax rate of 45% (plus 2.1% reconstruction surtax) and 10% residence tax produces a headline combined rate of ~55%, but the employment income deduction (capped at JPY 1,950,000 per year), the basic deduction (JPY 480,000), and social security caps substantially reduce the effective burden. Canada's federal system combines with provincial taxes — using Ontario as the most populous province, the combined top rate reaches approximately 53.5% (33% federal + 13.16% Ontario) — but the Ontario surtax (an additional 20%–36% levy on Ontario income tax above set thresholds) makes Canada surprisingly expensive at high incomes. At €30,000, Canada is marginally cheaper due to its generous basic personal amount (CAD 16,129 federal) and lower SS at low incomes. The comparison crosses at approximately €60,000, above which Japan's employment income deduction and SS caps give it a slight edge. At €90,000 and above, Japan produces marginally lower total deductions. The difference at most income levels is modest — typically under €3,000 per year — making this a comparison where lifestyle, career opportunity, and services quality matter more than the tax difference alone.
Section 01

The Big Picture

Top-line rates and effective take-home for a typical earner — including income tax, social contributions, and applicable surcharges.
🇨🇦
COUNTRY A
Canada
TAX RATE
~53.5%
Top Combined Rate
Federal 33% + Ontario 13.16% combined top; plus CPP and EI contributions
🇯🇵
COUNTRY B
Japan
TAX RATE
~55%
Top Combined Rate
45% national + 2.1% surtax + 10% residence tax; effective rates lower due to employment income deduction and SS caps
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from JapanCanada at €90,000
€1,500
That's €125/month back in your pocket
Section 02

Tax Savings by Income Level

Net take-home after all income tax, social contributions, and surcharges — for a single employee with no dependents.
GROSS INCOME
🇨🇦 CA TAX
🇯🇵 JP TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
€30,000
€7,300
€8,200
€900 cheaper in CA
€9,000
€60,000
€18,900
€18,700
Roughly equal (€200 cheaper in JP)
€2,000
€90,000
€32,500
€31,000
€1,500 cheaper in JP
€15,000
€150,000
€65,600
€63,100
€2,500 cheaper in JP
€25,000
💡

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Canada Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Lower tax burden at €30,000: Canada's basic personal amount (CAD 16,129 federal + provincial equivalent) creates a meaningful tax-free threshold; CPP and EI contributions are lower at incomes below €50,000 than Japan's employee SS at the same level
  • Universal healthcare: all provinces provide publicly funded healthcare (provincial health insurance) — no direct patient billing for medically necessary care, unlike Japan's cost-share system (30% co-pay for most services)
  • EI (Employment Insurance): provides 55% of average weekly insurable earnings for up to 45 weeks on job loss — Japan's employment insurance provides 50%–80% for 90–330 days depending on age and tenure
  • Capital gains discount: 50% of capital gains included in income for most assets (from 2024 Budget: 2/3 inclusion rate for gains above CAD 250,000/year for individuals) — Japan's 20.315% flat capital gains rate may be more favourable for investment-heavy earners
− CONS
  • Ontario surtax: Ontario applies a secondary surtax of 20% on Ontario income tax above CAD 5,315 and 36% on Ontario income tax above CAD 6,802 — these significantly increase the effective Ontario rate for mid-to-high earners and are not intuitive
  • Provincial rate variation: Canada has 13 provinces and territories with different rates — Ontario and Nova Scotia have the highest combined top rates (~53.5%); Alberta is lowest (~48%). Province of residence significantly impacts total burden
  • Complex CPP structure: the two-tier CPP (CPP1 at 5.95% up to CAD 68,500 earnings ceiling; CPP2 at 4% on CAD 68,500–73,200) increases complexity. EI (1.66%) adds a further separate contribution
  • High-income earners face Ontario surtax compounding: at €150,000+, the Ontario surtax on top of the 13.16% provincial rate can push the effective Ontario marginal rate to ~16%, making the combined federal+Ontario rate one of the highest for employed earners in the developed world
🇯🇵

Japan Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Employment income deduction: Japan's kyūyo shotoku kōjo (employment income deduction) provides a generous deduction of up to JPY 1,950,000 for employed workers — this substantially reduces taxable income at all levels and is the key reason effective rates are lower than headline rates suggest
  • Social security caps: health insurance (employee ~4.99%) and pension (employee 9.15%) both have monthly remuneration ceilings — above approximately €52,000/year in income, the SS burden as a percentage of income decreases, making Japan competitive at high incomes
  • 20.315% flat capital gains tax on listed shares: Japan's capital gains rate on equities and investment trusts is a flat 20.315% (15% national + 5% residence + 0.315% surtax) — competitive for investors and simpler than Canada's 50%–66.7% income inclusion rate
  • NISA (Nippon Individual Savings Account): tax-free investment wrapper on growth contributions up to JPY 3.6M/year (JPY 1.2M annual growth + JPY 2.4M tsumitate) — powerful tax-efficient investing vehicle unavailable to non-residents
− CONS
  • Residence tax ~10%: Japan's jūminzei (residence tax) is approximately 10% flat on taxable income (prefectural ~4% + municipal ~6%) and is charged the year after income is earned — new arrivals in Japan may face a year-2 tax bill based on year-1 income with no deduction available
  • Reconstruction surtax (2.1%): still applies on national income tax as of 2026 — originally introduced to fund 2011 earthquake reconstruction, now extended indefinitely
  • Health insurance co-payments: Japan's national health insurance (kokumin kenkō hoken) or company health insurance requires a 30% co-payment on most medical treatments (reduced to 10% for children under 3 and seniors). Dental and some specialist care has higher out-of-pocket costs
  • Language and administrative barrier: Japanese tax filing (kakuteishinkoku for self-employed, gensen chōshū for employees) is complex in Japanese; expats often require a tax accountant (zeirishi). Tax treaties with Japan can provide relief but require careful documentation
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Canada or Japan cheaper for income taxes?

It depends on income level. At €30,000, Canada is marginally cheaper (€7,300 vs €8,200) due to its higher basic personal amount and lower SS at low incomes. At €60,000, the two countries are essentially equal. At €90,000 and above, Japan is marginally cheaper — €1,500/year at €90,000 and €2,500/year at €150,000. The difference is small at all levels. What drives Japan's edge at higher incomes: the employment income deduction (capped at JPY 1.95M) reduces Japan's taxable base significantly; Canada's Ontario surtax adds a compounding layer that makes the province surprisingly expensive at high incomes.

What is Japan's residence tax and how does it work?

Japan's residence tax (jūminzei) is approximately 10% of taxable income — typically 4% prefectural and 6% municipal. Unlike national income tax (withheld throughout the year), residence tax is calculated on prior-year income and billed as a lump sum or quarterly payments starting in June. New arrivals in Japan pay no residence tax in year 1 of residency but face a large bill in year 2 based on their year-1 earnings. For someone earning €90,000 equivalent in Japan: residence tax alone is approximately €8,000–€9,000/year — a significant additional cost on top of national income tax. The basic deduction for residence tax is JPY 430,000 (lower than the JPY 480,000 for national income tax).

How does Canada's CPP compare to Japan's pension contributions?

Canada: CPP (Canada Pension Plan) contributions are 5.95% of pensionable earnings between CAD 3,500 and CAD 68,500 (CPP1), plus CPP2 at 4% on earnings between CAD 68,500 and CAD 73,200. Maximum annual CPP1+CPP2 combined employee contribution: approximately CAD 4,250 (~€2,850). Employers match CPP contributions. CPP provides income-related retirement benefits from age 65 (reduced from age 60). Japan: employee pension contribution is 9.15% of standard monthly remuneration, capped at JPY 650,000/month (JPY 7.8M/year). Maximum annual employee pension contribution: approximately JPY 713,700 (~€4,790). Japan's pension (kōsei nenkin) provides income-related benefits. Canada's CPP ceiling is much lower in EUR terms, making it less burdensome as a percentage of salary above the earnings ceiling.

Do tech workers pay the same taxes in Canada and Japan?

Yes, both countries tax employment income the same regardless of industry — there is no tech-specific tax regime in Canada or Japan equivalent to Portugal's IFICI or Netherlands' 30% Ruling. However: Canada has the SR&ED (Scientific Research and Experimental Development) tax incentive credit for companies conducting R&D, which reduces corporate tax and can affect equity compensation value. Japan has no general expat flat-rate regime for employed tech workers. For tech workers on equity compensation: Canada taxes stock options at preferential rates under certain conditions (employee stock option deduction); Japan taxes stock options as employment income at the time of exercise (not grant), at marginal national income tax + residence tax rates. Japan's NISA (tax-free investment wrapper) is valuable for long-term investing but only available to Japan tax residents.

What are the social security contribution differences between Canada and Japan?

Canada: CPP employee rate 5.95% (earnings ceiling CAD 68,500/year + CPP2 to CAD 73,200), plus EI employee rate 1.66% (earnings ceiling CAD 63,200). Combined maximum annual employee SS: approximately CAD 5,300 (~€3,550). Canada has no national health insurance premium for employees — healthcare is funded by provincial taxes and federal transfers. Japan: employee health insurance ~4.99% (varies by insurer and region; based on standard monthly remuneration with an upper limit), pension insurance 9.15% (capped at JPY 650,000/month remuneration), employment insurance 0.6%. Maximum annual employee SS (at capped income levels): approximately €10,000–€11,000. Japan's employee SS burden is substantially higher than Canada's at equivalent income levels, which partially explains why Japan has a higher total burden at lower incomes despite seemingly lower income tax rates.

How do capital gains taxes compare between Canada and Japan?

Canada: Capital gains are included in taxable income — for gains realised before June 25, 2024, 50% of gains are included (effective rate at 53.5% marginal: ~26.8%). For gains realised from June 25, 2024 onwards: individuals include 2/3 of capital gains above CAD 250,000/year (below that threshold, still 50% inclusion). Primary home: exempt (principal residence exemption). No CGT on death for primary residence. Japan: Capital gains on listed shares, ETFs, and investment trusts are taxed at a flat 20.315% (15% national + 5% local + 0.315% reconstruction surtax). NISA accounts: gains are completely tax-free within annual contribution limits. Primary residence: gains on sale of primary home may be exempt up to JPY 30M if conditions met. Japan's flat 20.315% on listed equity is substantially simpler and generally lower than Canada's inclusion-rate system for most income levels.

Is working in Canada or Japan better for a software engineer?

Both are strong destinations for tech workers, but the comparison depends on other factors beyond taxes. On take-home pay alone: at €90,000 total compensation, Japan produces approximately €1,500/year more in take-home than Ontario, Canada. At lower incomes (€60,000), they're essentially equal. Japan additional considerations: Tokyo's cost of living is moderate for a world city; Japan's public healthcare system with low premiums is a genuine advantage; language barrier creates friction for non-Japanese speakers; no visa pathway as simple as Canada's skilled worker route. Canada additional considerations: RRSP tax shelter (up to 18% of prior-year earned income deductible), TFSA (CAD 7,000/year tax-free investing), English-language working environment, immigration pathways to permanent residency under Express Entry. Over a 10-year period at €90,000/year: Japan saves approximately €15,000 in taxes versus Ontario — meaningful but modest compared to salary, stock options, and career trajectory differences between the two markets.

Does the Canada-Japan tax treaty prevent double taxation?

Yes. The Canada-Japan Double Taxation Convention prevents double taxation for individuals and businesses with income in both countries. Key provisions: employment income is taxed where work is physically performed. Dividends: Japan withholds 15% on dividends paid to Canadian residents (or 5% for substantial shareholdings). Pensions: generally taxable only in the country of residence. Canadian residents with Japan-source income can claim a foreign tax credit in Canada to offset Japanese tax paid. Japanese residents with Canada-source income similarly offset Canadian tax paid against Japanese tax. For expats permanently relocating: Canada's departure tax (deemed disposition on most assets) triggers CGT on unrealised gains on departure — obtain valuations before leaving Canada. Japan has no equivalent exit tax for departing residents.

What is the Ontario surtax and why does it matter for the Canada vs Japan comparison?

The Ontario surtax is a secondary tax levied on Ontario income tax, making Ontario one of the highest-taxed provinces in Canada. It applies at 20% on Ontario income tax above CAD 5,315 per year and an additional 36% on Ontario income tax above CAD 6,802 per year. These thresholds are not indexed to inflation, meaning more earners have been drawn into surtax territory over time. For a €90,000 earner in Ontario: the surtax adds approximately CAD 3,000–4,000/year to the Ontario tax bill. This is why Ontario's combined top rate effectively exceeds 53.5% for many earners. By contrast, Alberta has no surtax and a lower provincial top rate (10%), making the combined federal+Alberta rate approximately 48% — noticeably more competitive than Ontario. Comparing Canada vs Japan: the Ontario surtax is the main reason Canada appears more expensive than Japan at mid-to-high incomes. In Alberta, Canada would be cheaper than Japan at all income levels in this comparison.