It's 'tax freedom day': now start working for yourself - Action News
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It's 'tax freedom day': now start working for yourself

June 7 is the day when the average Canadian family has finally paid its tax burden for the year, according to calculations by the Fraser Institute.

Fraser Institute says June 7 is the day, but it varies, depending on where you live

The average Canadian family had to work until June 6 of this year before earning any money for themselves after taxes are paid, according to the Fraser Institute. (Shutterstock)

Canadians feeling taxed to the max can at least take comfort in this being tax freedom day.

The Fraser Institute picked June 7 this year as the day the average Canadian family has worked longenough to pay its total tax bill.

It's a hypothetical day, meaning if you had to pay all your taxes up front to different levels ofgovernment, you would now be in the clear to keep the rest of your earnings until a new year begins.

In 2016, the average Canadian family (with two or more people) earning $105,236, will pay $45,167 in total taxes. That's 42.9 per cent of its annual income.

On the calendar, those numbers represent more than five months of income from Jan. 1 to June 6. Therefore, it's only on June 7 when families start working for themselves, not the government.

The Vancouver-based think-tankcalculates the tax burden to include income taxes, payroll taxes, taxes on health and property, as well as what is levied on sales and fuel.

Earlier than 2015

While tax freedom day comes two days earlier than in 2015, "it's not because of any major tax reductions," the institute says. It notes that2016is a leap year, which helped the day arrive sooner.

And because the day is calculated based on federal and provincial tax revenue forecasts, overly conservative revenue estimates by governments moved the date earlier up the calendar.

When governments provide actual revenue estimates at the end of the year, tax freedom day calculations are revised.

Before all Canadians mark theday, however, the FraserInstitute says theyneed to rememberthere are different tax freedom days,depending on where you live.

Albertans would have seen their tax burden lifted by May 17, whiletaxpayers in Newfoundland and Labrador won't havetheir day of tax freedom untilJune 14.

Provincial tax freedom days (earliest to latest)

Alberta May 17
Saskatchewan June 1
Prince Edward Island June 1
British Columbia June 5
Ontario June 5
Manitoba June 7
Nova Scotia June 9
New Brunswick June 11
Quebec June 13
Newfoundland and Labrador June 14

More than three decades ago, in 1981, tax freedom day fell on May 30. In 2000, it was June 25.

In the U.K., June 3 was declared tax freedom day by the Adam Smith Society, a group of economists and business school leaders and other academics.

"We work longer for the government than medievalserfs had to work for their lords," the society said.