Opinion Polls

Taxation in Canada 2025 – Ipsos poll commissioned by the MEI

The MEI commissioned Ipsos to poll Canadians on their opinions regarding various taxation-related issues.

Related Content

Sondage: le fédéral dépense trop au goût des Québécois (Le Journal de Montréal, July 10, 2025)

Canadians say retaliatory tariffs driving up prices: poll (Sun Media, July 10, 2025)

Voici ce que pensent les Québécois des dépenses du gouvernement Carney (Narcity, July 10, 2025)

Examining reasons why Canadians have lost trust in Ottawa (Sun Media Papers, July 24, 2025)

Interview (in French) with Renaud Brossard (Marc Boilard, QUB Radio, July 10, 2025)

Interview (in French) with Renaud Brossard (L’Estrie aujourd’hui, 107,7 FM, July 10, 2025)

Interview (in French) with Renaud Brossard (Le midi, 98,5 FM, July 10, 2025)

Interview with Samantha Dagres (The Evan Bray Show, CJME-FM, July 23, 2025)

Report (in French) with Renaud Brossard (Noovo Info, July 10, 2025)

 

Media release – MEI-Ipsos poll: Most Canadians say retaliatory tariffs on American goods contribute to raising the price of essential goods at home

  • 77 per cent say Canada’s tariffs on U.S. products increase the price of consumer goods
  • 72 per cent say that their current tax bill hurts their standard of living

Montreal, July 10, 2025 – A new MEI-Ipsos poll published this morning reveals a clear disconnect between Ottawa’s high-tax, high-spending approach and Canadians’ level of satisfaction.

“Canadians are not on board with Ottawa’s fiscal path,” says Samantha Dagres, communications manager at the MEI. “From housing to trade policy, Canadians feel they’re being squeezed by a government that is increasingly an impediment to their standard of living.”

More than half of Canadians (54 per cent) say Ottawa is spending too much, while only six per cent think it is spending too little.

A majority (54 per cent) also do not believe federal dollars are being effectively allocated to address Canada’s most important issues, and a similar proportion (55 per cent) are dissatisfied with the transparency and accountability in the government’s spending practices.

As for their own tax bills, Canadians are equally skeptical. Two-thirds (67 per cent) say they pay too much income tax, and about half say they do not receive good value in return.

Provincial governments fared even worse. A majority of Canadians say they receive poor value for the taxes they pay provincially. In Quebec, nearly two-thirds (64 per cent) of respondents say they are not getting their money’s worth from the provincial government.

Not coincidentally, Quebecers face the highest marginal tax rates in North America.

On the question of Canada’s response to the U.S. trade dispute, nearly eight in 10 Canadians (77 per cent) agree that Ottawa’s retaliatory tariffs on American products are driving up the cost of everyday goods.

“Canadians understand that tariffs are just another form of taxation, and that they are the ones footing the bill for any political posturing,” adds Ms. Dagres. “Ottawa should favour unilateral tariff reduction and increased trade with other nations, as opposed to retaliatory tariffs that heap more costs onto Canadian consumers and businesses.”

On the issue of housing, 74 per cent of respondents believe that taxes on new construction contribute directly to unaffordability.

All of this dissatisfaction culminates in 72 per cent of Canadians saying their overall tax burden is reducing their standard of living.

“Taxpayers are not just ATMs for government – and if they are going to pay such exorbitant taxes, you’d think the least they could expect is good service in return,” says Ms. Dagres. “Canadians are increasingly distrustful of a government that believes every problem can be solved with higher taxes.”

A sample of 1,020 Canadians 18 years of age and older was polled between June 17 and 23, 2025. The results are accurate to within ± 3.8 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

* * *

The MEI is an independent public policy think tank with offices in Montreal, Ottawa, and Calgary. Through its publications, media appearances, and advisory services to policymakers, the MEI stimulates public policy debate and reforms based on sound economics and entrepreneurship.

– 30 –

Interview requests
Samantha Dagres
Manager, Communications
Cell: 438-451-2154

Back to top