Tax return (Canada)

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 deadline, but there are a few exceptions.

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

In addition, the return plays a role in voter registration by including a checkbox asking if the signee if they are willing to have their personal contact information included on a national voter registry which is accessible by Elections Canada and its provincial equivalents.

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.

Who should file a Canadian tax return

Canadians who live abroad can sometimes continue filing a Canadian tax return, even if they are not required to do so. Three primary factors are used to determine a taxpayer’s tax residence: dwelling place (or places), spouse or common-law partner and dependants [1]

Tax return software

There is various commercial software available to file tax returns such as Cantax, Taxnic, Taxprep, Profile, UFile, TurboTax (previously called QuickTax, it was renamed for the 2010 tax year) and Quicken, among others. There is also non-commercial tax preparation software (freeware) available such as UDoTaxes and StudioTax (which also supports Quebec provincial tax returns as of the 2010 version).

Tax returns may be filed online at no charge through a government service run by the CRA called NETFILE.

See also

References

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