2026 Rates · Employee & Self-Employed

CPP & EI Calculator 2026

Calculate your exact 2026 CPP contributions (including CPP2), EI premiums, and employer matches. Works for both employees and self-employed Canadians.

5.95%
CPP Rate 2026
1.66%
EI Rate 2026
4%
CPP2 Rate
🏛Your Employment Details

Self-employed individuals pay both employee and employer CPP shares. EI is optional.

$

Enter your gross employment income for 2026

Your Payroll Deductions

CPP Contributions
CPP1 — your share
CPP1 — employer match
CPP2 — your share
CPP2 — employer match
EI Premiums
EI — your share
EI — employer match
Total from your paycheque

2026 CPP & EI Limits

CPP1 — Maximum Contribution (Employee)
$3,867.50
CPP2 — Maximum Contribution (Employee)
$188.00
EI — Maximum Premium (Employee)
$1,049.12

Once you hit the ceiling, CPP/EI stops being deducted from remaining paycheques in the year.

Total Cost to Employer

Employer's total CPP + EI cost

This is the additional payroll cost employers pay on top of your salary. Employer EI rate is 1.4× the employee rate (2.324%).

CPP & EI 2026 — FAQ

What is the CPP contribution limit for 2026?

The 2026 CPP1 maximum contribution is $3,867.50 per employee (5.95% on earnings from $3,500 to $68,500). CPP2 adds up to $188 more (4% on earnings from $68,500 to $73,200). If you're self-employed, you pay both sides: up to $7,735 for CPP1 and $376 for CPP2.

What is CPP2 and who pays it?

CPP2 is the second tier of the Canada Pension Plan enhancement, introduced January 1, 2026. It applies a 4% rate on earnings between the Year's Maximum Pensionable Earnings ($68,500) and the Year's Additional Maximum Pensionable Earnings ($73,200). Employees earning over $68,500 contribute CPP2 along with employer matching contributions.

What is the 2026 EI premium and max insurable earnings?

The 2026 EI employee premium rate is 1.66% on insurable earnings up to the Maximum Insurable Earnings of $63,200, for a maximum employee premium of $1,049.12. Employers pay 1.4 times the employee rate (2.324%), for a maximum employer premium of $1,468.77 per employee.

Do self-employed people have to pay CPP?

Yes. Self-employed Canadians pay both the employee and employer CPP shares. For CPP1 in 2026, the self-employed rate is 11.9%, for a maximum of $7,735. This is deductible: half (the employer share) is deducted as a business expense, and the employee share generates a tax credit.

Can I get EI if I'm self-employed?

Not automatically. Self-employed Canadians can opt into the EI program voluntarily to access special benefits (maternity/parental, sickness, compassionate care, critically ill children). If you opt in, you pay only the employee rate (1.66%) — not the employer match. There is a 12-month waiting period before you can claim.