I understand the points you are making, in fact those are the reasons why I am exploring Canada Immigration. However, I would like to make an informed decision after evaluating all pros and cons, so that there are "minimum" surprises
Appreciate your reply, thank you.
Keep doing your research and let us know what you come up with, please
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I did some calculations for my own scenario and the take-home salary for a $100,000 basic salary in Toronto was around 70% of the actual salary, not 75%. (Of course, I went beyond the federal and provincial income tax deductions and also considered Canadian Pension Plan contributions, the Ontario Health Premium (rolled up into income tax I think), and the Employment Insurance Premium.) And, if you're an Investment professional, I suspect you'll have other sources of income outside of a basic salary that will have different taxation rates as well.
My research has shown that I'm probably going to be in a
less advantageous financial position (compared to the one I'm in now) when I move to Toronto, but I'm not actually moving for economic reasons. Yes, I want to be financially comfortable, but I have other motivations for wanting to migrate to Canada (lifestyle, environment (safety, cleanliness, organization, modernity), culture, political environment, population diversity, access to persons with values more closely aligned with mine, more choices and opportunities, etc.). You can't put a price on some things
It's heartening to see someone else taking the time to research and make an informed decision. So many of my friends here who are trying to migrate to Canada now keep overlooking that crucial step, and focusing on the fact that they can make "4x in Canada what they're earning now" (really, it's only about 2x more, MAYBE 3x more, if they're lucky) without considering how much of that they'll actually get to take home, as well as the significant difference in cost of living.