Canada · Public Sector Salary DisclosureNational edition
Career Guides · 1 min read

Nurse vs. Cop vs. Professor: Who Actually Takes Home More?

Three classic public-sector careers, three very different paycheques. We compare gross pay and real 2025 take-home for a nurse, a police officer and a professor in Ontario.

A public high-school teacher in a classroom
“A public high school teacher in a classroom” by Harrison Keely, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

They are three of the most recognizable public-sector careers in Canada — and three of the most-searched “is it worth it?” jobs. Let’s put a nurse, a police officer and a university professor side by side and follow the money from gross pay to take-home.

The matchup (illustrative Ontario figures, 2025)

RoleGrossTake-homeKept
Registered nurse$85,000$62,13373.1%
Police officer (with overtime)$105,000$75,98672.4%
University professor$135,000$93,70869.4%

(Single employee, Ontario 2025, employment income only. Real pay varies widely by step, seniority, region and overtime.)

The overtime wildcard

Front-line officers and nurses can out-earn salaried professionals through overtime. A nurse pulling heavy overtime or a constable banking court time and extra shifts can vault past their base salary — and onto the Sunshine List — even though their listed role looks lower-paid. Many of the surprising names near $150,000 on police and hospital lists are overtime stories, not base-pay stories.

The progressive-tax reality

Notice the “kept” column shrinks as pay rises: 73% at $85k, 72% at $105k, 69% at $135k. That is Canada’s progressive tax system — every extra dollar is taxed at a higher marginal rate. The professor earns much more gross but keeps a slightly smaller share.

Compare any two salaries’ real take-home with our take-home calculator.

FAQ

Common questions

Can a nurse really be on the Sunshine List?

Yes — with overtime and shift premiums, many registered nurses clear $100,000.

Do police officers earn six figures?

Senior and overtime-heavy officers commonly do, especially in large forces.

Why does the professor keep a smaller percentage?

Higher income means a higher marginal tax rate on the top dollars earned.

Canada Sunshine List
Research Team, Canada Sunshine List

Covering Canada's public-sector salary disclosures and the data behind them.

Search the full record.

Every public-sector salary across Canada — searchable by name, employer, and job title.

Open the ledger