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First Time Self-Employed Taxes in Canada 2026 | Complete Guide

Updated

Going self-employed — whether as a freelancer, contractor, consultant, or small business — comes with real tax obligations that most people are not prepared for. This guide explains what you owe, when you owe it, and how to minimize your bill legally.

How Self-Employment Income Is Taxed

Unlike an employee, no one withholds tax for you. You are responsible for paying:

Tax Rate Notes
Federal income tax 15%–33% Progressive on net income
Provincial income tax 5%–25% Varies by province
CPP contributions 11.9% (self-employed both shares) On net self-employment income over $3,500
EI Optional If you opt in: 1.66% × 1.4 premium

Total effective tax rate for most self-employed: 30–45% depending on province and income level.

Self-Employed CPP: The Big Surprise

As an employee, your employer pays half of CPP. Self-employed, you pay both shares:

Income CPP (employed, employee share) CPP (self-employed, both shares)
$40,000 ~$2,200 ~$4,400
$60,000 ~$3,500 ~$7,000 (up to the ceiling)
$73,200+ ~$3,867 ~$7,735 (max)

This is often the biggest shock for first-year self-employed people.

How Much to Set Aside

The safest approach: put 25–35% of every payment into a dedicated tax savings account.

Annual Net Income Approximate Tax Rate Set Aside
$30,000 ~22% $7,000–$8,000
$50,000 ~30% $15,000
$75,000 ~35% $26,000
$100,000 ~40% $40,000

Includes federal + provincial income tax + CPP combined. Rates shown are for Ontario. Varies by province.

Open a separate tax savings account — HISA at EQ Bank or Wealthsimple. Transfer your set-aside % immediately when invoices are paid.

Your Self-Employment Tax Return: T2125

Self-employed income is reported via the T2125 (Statement of Business or Professional Activities) form, filed with your T1 personal return.

Section What You Report
Gross income All revenue before expenses
Business expenses Deductible expenses
Net income Gross minus expenses — what is taxed
Business use of home Home office deduction
Vehicle expenses Business portion of vehicle costs

Most tax software (Wealthsimple Tax, TurboTax) guides you through T2125 step by step.

Business Deductions: What You Can Claim

This is where self-employment pays off — you can deduct legitimate business expenses.

Common Self-Employment Deductions

Expense Deductible Notes
Home office Portion of rent/utilities Based on % of home used for work
Cell phone Business % Split personal vs business use
Internet Business % Split personal vs business use
Computer/equipment 100% or CCA Immediately or amortized
Software subscriptions 100% Must be for business
Professional fees (CPA, lawyer) 100% Business-related only
Professional membership dues 100% Industry associations
Business insurance 100% Separate from personal
Marketing and advertising 100% Website, ads, printing
Vehicle expenses Business % Keep a mileage log
Meals and entertainment 50% With client, business purpose
Training and education 100% If related to current work
Tools and supplies 100% For the business
Bank and transaction fees 100% Business account fees
Health insurance premiums Deductible Via extended health plan

Home Office Deduction

Calculate the percentage of your home used exclusively for work:

Method Formula Example (1 room in 10-room home)
Room method Work rooms ÷ total rooms 1/10 = 10%
Square footage Work area ÷ total area 150 sqft / 1,500 sqft = 10%

Apply that percentage to: rent, mortgage interest, utilities, property taxes, maintenance.

Example: 10% × $1,800/month rent × 12 = $2,160 home office deduction

🔴 Important: Home office must be used primarily for work. Shared living spaces (dining room, kitchen) generally do not qualify.

Vehicle Expense Deduction

If you use a vehicle for business, track your mileage:

Record What to Track
Mileage log Date, destination, purpose, km driven
Total annual km Odometer at start + end of year
Business km From mileage log
Business use % Business km ÷ total km

Apply the business use % to: gas, insurance, parking, maintenance, lease/loan interest, depreciation (CCA).

GST/HST: Registration and Collection

When to Register

Threshold Action
Revenue over $30,000 in 12 months Must register for GST/HST
Revenue under $30,000 May register voluntarily (to claim ITCs)

Once registered, you collect GST/HST from clients and remit it to the CRA — it is not your money.

GST/HST Rates

Province Rate
Ontario, BC, NS, NL, NB, PEI 13–15% HST
Alberta, QC (QST separate), SK, MB 5% GST + provincial

How to Register

Register online at My Business Account or call CRA Business Registration at 1-800-959-5525.

Input Tax Credits (ITCs)

Once registered, you recover GST/HST paid on business expenses:

Example:

  • You collect $5,000 GST from clients
  • You paid $800 GST on business expenses
  • Net remittance to CRA: $4,200

Filing Frequency

Annual Revenue Filing Frequency
Under $1.5M Annual
$1.5M–$6M Quarterly
Over $6M Monthly

Tax Instalments

If you expect to owe more than $3,000 in federal tax ($1,800 in QC), the CRA will require quarterly tax instalments:

Due Date Payment
March 15 Q1 instalment
June 15 Q2 instalment
September 15 Q3 instalment
December 15 Q4 instalment

Failing to pay instalments results in interest charges. In your first year of self-employment, instalments are not required — but they may be required in your second year based on year one income.

Record Keeping Requirements

The CRA requires you to keep business records for 6 years from the end of the tax year.

Records to Keep How Long
All receipts and invoices 6 years
Mileage logs 6 years
Bank statements 6 years
T2125 and supporting worksheets 6 years
Contracts with clients 6+ years

Tools for record-keeping:

  • Wave Accounting (free)
  • QuickBooks Self-Employed ($20/month)
  • FreshBooks ($20+/month)
  • Google Sheets (manual)

Should I Incorporate?

Incorporation is worth considering when:

Signal When to Think About It
Net income over $100,000+ consistently Tax deferral savings become significant
Multiple clients / growing Liability protection matters
Plan to hire employees Corporate structure needed
Want to invest inside corporation Deferral on investment income

Incorporation has costs: ~$1,500–$3,000 to set up, $1,500–$4,000/year for corporate tax return. Worth it once income exceeds ~$100K.

See our guide: Should I Incorporate My Side Hustle?

Filing Deadline for Self-Employed

Filing Type Deadline
T1 return (self-employed) June 15
Taxes owing April 30 (even though filing deadline is June 15)

If you owe money and wait until June 15 to pay, interest accrues from May 1.