The marginal tax rate focuses on additional taxable income. It is not necessarily the rate applied to all income already earned. The Marginal Tax Rate Calculator can help test one additional amount against a selected province or territory. Canada uses a progressive tax system. Different portions of taxable income may be taxed at different rates as income moves through tax brackets. Moving into a higher bracket does not usually mean all income is taxed at the higher rate. In a bracket system, only the income that falls into the higher bracket is affected by that bracket rate.

An average tax rate is different from a marginal tax rate. The average rate compares total tax with total income or taxable income. The marginal rate focuses on the next dollar. For a fuller tax estimate, the Canadian Tax Calculator can estimate simplified tax payable, while the Tax by Income Type Calculator compares ordinary income, capital gains, and dividends under the same basic inputs. Federal and provincial or territorial tax both matter. For most provinces and territories, the CRA tax package generally follows the taxpayer's province or territory of residence on December 31 of the tax year. Quebec administers its own provincial income tax system. Deductions and credits affect tax differently. A deduction may reduce taxable income. A credit may reduce tax payable, subject to the rules for that credit.

Marginal tax rates matter for RRSP deductions, RRSP and RRIF withdrawals, pension income, CPP/QPP, OAS recovery tax, and retirement income planning because the next dollar of income or deduction may have a different effect than the average dollar. A marginal tax rate is only one planning input. Benefit recovery, income splitting, liquidity, age, province, account type, and long-term objectives can all affect the analysis.