The new 2025 CRA numbers: tax brackets, CPP, RRSP and TFSA limits, and more

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A sign outside the Canada Revenue Agency is seen Monday May 10, 2021 in Ottawa. (Credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld)

Last week, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) released the new tax numbers for 2025. Here’s what you need to know for next year.

Inflation adjustment factor

Each year, most income tax and benefit amounts are indexed to inflation. The CRA announced that the inflation rate that will be used to index the 2025 tax brackets and amounts will be 2.7 per cent. (Last year, that number was 4.7 per cent, as inflation was much higher). Increases to the tax bracket thresholds and various amounts relating to non-refundable credits take effect on Jan. 1, 2025, while increases in amounts for certain benefits, such as the GST/HST credit and Canada Child Benefit, only take effect on July 1, 2025, coinciding with the beginning of the program year for these benefit payments.

Tax brackets for 2025

For 2025, all five federal income tax brackets have been indexed to inflation using the 2.7 per cent rate. The new 2025 federal brackets are: zero to $57,375 of income (15 per cent); above $57,375 to $114,750 (20.5 per cent); above $114,750 to $177,882 (26 per cent); above $177,882 to $253,414 (29 per cent), with anything above that taxed at 33 per cent. Each province also has its own set of provincial tax brackets, most of which will also be indexed to inflation, but using their respective provincial indexation factors.

Basic personal amount

The basic personal amount (BPA) is the amount of income you can earn without paying any federal tax. Back in 2019, the government announced an increase of the BPA annually until it reached $15,000 in 2023, after which it was to be indexed to inflation.

As a result, for 2025, the increased BPA will be $16,129 meaning an individual can earn up to this amount in 2025, before paying any federal income tax. For taxpayers earning above this amount, the value of the federal credit is calculated by applying the lowest federal personal income tax rate (15 per cent) to the BPA, making it worth $2,419. (Because the credit is “non-refundable,” it’s only worth the maximum amount if you otherwise would have paid that much tax in the year.)

But higher-income earners don’t get the full, increased BPA, as there is an income test. The enhancement to the BPA is gradually reduced, on a straight-line basis, for taxpayers with net incomes above $177,882 (the bottom of the fourth tax bracket for 2025) until it has been fully phased out once a taxpayer’s income is over $253,414 (the threshold for the top tax bracket in 2025). Taxpayers in that top bracket, therefore, who lose the enhancement, will still get the “old” BPA, indexed to inflation, which is $14,538 for 2025.