Tax return (Canada)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Normally, Canadian Individual tax returns for any specific year must be filed by April 30 of the following year. There is no provision for generally extending this deadine, but some classes of people have extended deadlines.

  • Tax returns for self-employed individuals and their spouses must be filed by June 15 of the following year.
  • Tax returns for deceased individuals must be filed by the normal filing deadline or 6 months after the date of death, whichever comes later. Example: Mary dies on Jan 30, 2004; Her 2003 return is due on July 30, 2004 (six months later) and her 2004 return is due on April 30, 2005 (normal filing deadline.)
  • By virtue of the Interpretation Act the due date of all individual returns is moved ahead to the next business day when the normal due date falls on a Sunday or Holiday. Although ministerial orders are also used to apply this to Saturday due dates, it is not a legal requirement. Also, the Federal Revenue Minister may extend the deadline in cases of emergency situations such as floods, etc.

Canadian federal tax returns are filed with the Canada Revenue Agency.

[edit] Provincial Returns

All provinces have their own Income Tax Acts, but most employ a system of Federal-Provincial agreements whereby the tax is collected by the Federal government. Only the Quebec provincial government collects its own personal income tax. Alberta, Ontario and Quebec all collect their own corporate income tax. Filing deadlines generally match those of the federal government. Quebec tax returns are filed with the Ministère du Revenu du Québec.

[edit] See also