What Is CPP2?
CPP2 (the Second Additional Canada Pension Plan) is a second earnings tier added to the CPP starting in 2024. It extends CPP contributions above the regular Year’s Maximum Pensionable Earnings (YMPE) up to a new ceiling called the Year’s Additional Maximum Pensionable Earnings (YAMPE).
CPP2 is distinct from the CPP Enhancement (Phase 1, 2019–2023), which increased the benefit rate on YMPE-range earnings. CPP2 covers a new earnings band that didn’t previously attract CPP contributions at all.
2026 Earnings Thresholds
| Threshold | 2026 Amount | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Basic Exemption | $3,500 | First $3,500 of earnings exempt from all CPP |
| YMPE (CPP1 ceiling) | $71,300 | Upper limit for regular CPP contributions |
| YAMPE (CPP2 ceiling) | $81,200 | Upper limit for CPP2 contributions |
| CPP2 earnings band | $9,900 | $81,200 − $71,300 |
CPP2 applies only to earnings between $71,300 and $81,200.
Contribution Rates and Maximum Amounts (2026)
| Contributor | Rate | Max Annual Contribution |
|---|---|---|
| Employee | 4.0% on CPP2 earnings band | $396 |
| Employer | 4.0% on CPP2 earnings band | $396 (matching) |
| Self-employed | 8.0% on CPP2 earnings band | $792 |
The CPP2 rate (4%) is lower than the CPP1 rate (4.95%) because CPP2 is fully funded by current contributions — there was no legacy unfunded liability to address.
Combined CPP Contributions for an Employee Earning $81,200+ in 2026
| Tier | Earnings Band | Employee Rate | Max Employee Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| CPP1 | $3,500–$71,300 | 4.95% | $3,346.05 |
| CPP2 | $71,300–$81,200 | 4.00% | $396.00 |
| Total | $3,742.05 |
The employer contributes an equal $3,742.05. Total CPP contributions from both sides: $7,484.10 for a maximum-earning employee.
How CPP2 Appears on Your Pay Stub and T4
CPP2 contributions are reported separately from CPP1:
- T4 Box 16: Regular CPP1 employee contributions (unchanged)
- T4 Box 16A: CPP2 employee contributions (new box introduced 2024)
On your pay stub, your employer may show CPP1 and CPP2 as separate line items, or may combine them. Check with your payroll software if you see unexpected deductions above the standard CPP amount.
CPP2 Tax Deduction vs Credit
There is an important asymmetry in how CPP1 and CPP2 are treated for tax:
| CPP Component | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Employee CPP1 contributions | Federal non-refundable tax credit (Line 30800) — reduces federal tax owed |
| Employee CPP2 contributions | Federal deduction (Line 22215) — reduces taxable income |
| Employer CPP1 match | Employer’s business expense deduction |
| Employer CPP2 match | Employer’s business expense deduction |
| Self-employed CPP1 (employer half) | Personal deduction on T1 |
| Self-employed CPP2 (employer half) | Personal deduction on T1 |
CPP2 as a deduction is generally more valuable than a tax credit for higher-income earners, because a deduction reduces income taxed at your top marginal rate, while a credit reduces tax at the lowest federal rate (15%).
What CPP2 Benefit Will You Earn?
CPP2 contributions build a separate defined benefit pension that works similarly to CPP1 but with some differences:
- The CPP2 benefit accrual rate is higher per dollar contributed (approximately 8.33% of the CPP2 earnings band per year, compared to 25% over a 40-year career for CPP1)
- The CPP2 benefit is also indexed to CPI and includes survivor and death benefit components
- It is paid alongside your main CPP when you start retirement
Projection: Annual CPP2 Benefit at Age 65
| Years Contributing at Maximum | Estimated Annual CPP2 Benefit |
|---|---|
| 5 years (2024–2028) | ~$500–$650/year |
| 10 years (2024–2033) | ~$1,000–$1,300/year |
| 20 years (2024–2043) | ~$2,000–$2,600/year |
| Full career (40 years) | ~$4,000–$5,200/year |
These are approximate estimates based on the CPP2 formula at 2026 parameters. The actual government actuarial target is that CPP2 will replace approximately 2% of income earned in the CPP2 earnings band over a full career.
CPP2 for the Self-Employed
Self-employed individuals began paying CPP2 beginning in 2025 (one year later than employees). Key facts:
- Rate: 8% on earnings between YMPE and YAMPE (both halves)
- 2026 max: $792 total ($396 employer-equivalent deductible, $396 as credit/deduction)
- Report on Schedule 8 (CPP Contributions on Self-Employment Income) of T1
- The employer-equivalent portion (4% = $396 maximum) is deductible on Line 22200
CPP1 vs CPP2 vs CPP Enhancement: Quick Reference
| CPP1 (Base) | CPP Enhancement (Phase 1) | CPP2 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| When introduced | 1966 | 2019–2023 | 2024+ |
| Earnings covered | Up to YMPE | Up to YMPE | YMPE to YAMPE |
| Benefit target | 25% of covered earnings | Additional ~8.33% of covered earnings | ~2% of CPP2 band |
| 2026 employee rate | 4.95% | Included in CPP1 rate | 4.00% |