Understand what total income means on a Canadian tax return before deductions are applied.
Total income is the amount of income you report from all included sources before deductions such as an RRSP deduction are applied.
Total income is the starting point for the personal tax calculation. If you do not understand what belongs in total income, it becomes much harder to understand net income, taxable income, and many CRA benefit calculations.
On a Canadian T1 return, total income generally pulls together employment income, pension income, self-employment income, investment income, and the taxable portions of other amounts that must be reported. It is an early-stage figure in the return, not the final amount on which tax is actually charged.
That distinction matters because Canada’s tax calculation usually moves in stages:
If someone has employment income from a T4, interest income from a T5, and a small taxable capital gain from selling investments, all of those amounts can contribute to total income before deductions are taken.
Total income is not the same as take-home pay.
Total income is also not the same as taxable income. Deductions may reduce income after the total-income stage, which is why taxable income can be lower.
Does total income come before or after deductions such as an RRSP deduction? Answer: It comes before. Deductions are part of the later step that can reduce income after the total-income stage.
Can investment income affect total income? Answer: Yes. Interest, dividends, and taxable capital gains can all feed into total income when they must be reported.
Which amounts are included, partly included, or excluded can depend on the type of income and the tax year, so high-stakes filing questions should always be checked against current CRA guidance.