Short Answer
A TD1 is the form that tells your employer how much income tax to withhold from your pay. It lists the personal amounts and credits you expect to claim — and directly determines your take-home pay. Complete both the federal TD1 and your province’s TD1 when starting a new job, and update them when your personal situation changes.
TD1 Personal Tax Credit Lines (Federal 2025)
| Line | Credit | 2025 Amount |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Basic personal amount | $16,129 (reduced above $173,205) |
| 2 | Canada caregiver amount for infirm children under 18 | $2,616/child |
| 3 | Age amount (65+, if income < $44,325) | $8,790 |
| 4 | Pension income amount | Up to $2,000 |
| 5 | Tuition (full-time/part-time carry-forward amounts claimed) | Varies |
| 6 | Disability amount | $10,522 |
| 7 | Spouse/common-law partner amount | Up to $16,129 |
| 8 | Amount for eligible dependant | Up to $16,129 |
| 9 | Canada caregiver amount for eligible dependant (age 18+) | Up to $8,375 |
| 10 | Canada caregiver amount for dependant(s) age 18+ | Up to $8,375/person |
| 11 | Amounts transferred from spouse/common-law partner | Their unused amounts |
| 12 | Amounts transferred from a dependent | Tuition, disability, etc. |
| Total | Total claim amount | Drives withholding calculation |
Provincial Basic Personal Amounts (2025)
| Province/Territory | Basic personal amount |
|---|---|
| Ontario | $11,865 |
| British Columbia | $11,981 |
| Alberta | $21,003 |
| Quebec | $17,183 (on TP-1015.3-V) |
| Saskatchewan | $17,661 |
| Manitoba | $15,780 |
| New Brunswick | $12,458 |
| Nova Scotia | $8,481 |
| PEI | $12,000 |
| Newfoundland | $10,818 |
| Northwest Territories | $16,593 |
| Yukon | $16,129 |
| Nunavut | $17,925 |
Alberta’s significantly higher basic personal amount means less provincial tax is withheld from each paycheque compared to other provinces.
Multiple Jobs: What to Do
| Scenario | TD1 instruction |
|---|---|
| Only one job | Claim full credits on the TD1 |
| Two simultaneous jobs | Claim full credits at primary employer only |
| Secondary/part-time job | Check the “more than one employer” box → withhold at maximum rate |
| Seasonal second job | Same — claim $0 at the seasonal employer |
| New job replacing old job | Claim full credits at the new employer |
Claiming credits at two concurrent employers simultaneously causes under-withholding. CRA still collects the tax owing — just as a lump sum at filing time, plus potential arrears interest if installments were required.
Common Situations That Should Trigger a TD1 Update
| Life change | TD1 update action |
|---|---|
| Got married or entered common-law | Add spousal amount (Line 7) if partner has low/no income |
| Separated or divorced | Remove spousal amount |
| New child | Consider eligible dependant amount (Line 8) if single parent |
| Disability Tax Credit approved | Add disability amount (Line 6) |
| Turned 65 | Add age amount (Line 3) |
| Started receiving a pension | Add pension income amount (Line 4) |
| Tuition carry-forward from a prior year | Add carried forward tuition on Line 5 |
| Second job ended | Update secondary employer’s TD1 if credits were suppressed |
Additional Tax Withholding
The TD1 includes a voluntary additional withholding line:
| Why request additional withholding | When it helps |
|---|---|
| Side income (freelance, rental) | Covers tax on non-employment income at source |
| Investment income (interest, investments) | Avoids large balance owing |
| Prior year balance owing was large | Smooths out periodic payments vs lump sum at filing |
| Spousal income changed | Recalibrates household withholding |
Enter the additional amount per pay period. Your employer has no obligation to withhold more than is legally required — but most will honour this request.
TD1 vs T1 Return: Key Difference
| Document | Purpose | When submitted |
|---|---|---|
| TD1 | Tells employer how much to withhold from each paycheque | When starting a job or when situation changes |
| T1 Return | Reports actual annual income and calculates final tax | Filed annually by April 30 |
The TD1 is an estimate-based withholding form. Your T1 is the final reckoning. If your TD1 overstates your credits, you’ll owe at tax time. If it understates, you’ll get a refund. Accurate TD1 completion minimizes the refund-or-owe surprise.
Bottom Line
Fill out your TD1 accurately when starting a job and update it whenever your situation changes. If you have two simultaneous jobs, only claim credits at one. Use the additional withholding line if you expect income beyond your employment. A correctly completed TD1 means your projected withholding matches your actual tax liability — no surprise balance owing in April.