Financial Glossary
Gross Salary
Gross salary is the total amount of money an employee earns before any deductions are taken out, including taxes, Social Security, Medicare, retirement contributions, health insurance premiums, and other withholdings. It is typically expressed as an annual figure in employment contracts and is the starting point for calculating take-home pay.
Example
If your employment contract states an annual salary of $75,000, that is your gross salary. After federal income tax ($9,000), state income tax ($3,000), Social Security ($4,650), Medicare ($1,088), and health insurance ($2,400), your net take-home pay would be approximately $54,862 per year.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between gross salary and net salary?
Gross salary is your total earnings before any deductions. Net salary (take-home pay) is what you actually receive after taxes, insurance, retirement contributions, and other withholdings are subtracted. The difference can be 20-40% depending on your tax bracket and benefits.
Why is gross salary important?
Gross salary is the standard figure used for comparing job offers, calculating loan eligibility, determining tax brackets, and computing retirement contributions. Employers and lenders typically reference gross salary rather than net pay.
Related Resources
Official Sources
Canada calculators use data from the following official government agencies:
- Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) — Federal and provincial income tax rates, CPP contributions, and RRSP limits.
- Statistics Canada — Employment data, income statistics, and housing market data.
- Bank of Canada — Interest rates, inflation data, and mortgage rate benchmarks.
Methodology
Our Canadian calculators use federal and provincial tax brackets, CPP/QPP contribution rates, and EI premiums published by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). Economic data is sourced from Statistics Canada. Mortgage calculations use Bank of Canada rates and market averages. All figures are for educational purposes.
Data Sources
All tax brackets, contribution rates, and economic data used in our calculators are sourced from the official government publications listed above. Rates are updated at least annually to reflect the latest tax year and regulatory changes. Users should verify critical figures with official sources or qualified professionals.
Last updated: June 2026. Information may change; always verify with official sources.
Last Updated: June 2026 — Reviewed Against Official Sources