The Expert Fiscaliste portal is designed to securely and simplify the sharing of documents between Expert Fiscaliste and our clients. Clients can easily upload relevant documents, without the need to bring documents to our office. No longer are clients required to schedule an appointment to sign tax returns. Clients are now able to access the tax returns and other documents at their leisure, sign them, upload back to the Expert Fiscaliste Portal, without the need to come to our office.
We will send you a email invitation to join our portal, click the link to the login page and either register (to activate) or login (existing account). If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to Call 514-954-9031 or visit our page Contact Tax Experts
Here are YouTube videos (English or French to help you access the Expert Fiscaliste Portal
TRAINING ON HOW TO USE THE PORTAL
ENGLISH: Client’s Video Guide to Expert Fiscaliste CCH iFirm Portal
Expert Fiscaliste Portal and File Sharing increases productivity, eliminates the need to copy and print mounds of paperwork. It’s easier on our clients and improves your services to you our client. Please consider these services to improve the services that you our client receive, and best of all it saves time and it a free service to all our valued clients.
If this service is good for you, sent us a email to will@expert-fiscaliste.ca and we will send you the link to get you started.
The Expert Fiscaliste portal is designed to securely and simplify the sharing of documents between Expert Fiscaliste and our clients. Expert Fiscaliste provides income tax preparation and consulting services to individuals and businesses.
File Your 2024 Tax returns Now at Expert Fiscaliste the Netfile and Refile systems for CRA and Revenu Quebec are now open. Call 514-954-9031.
Let Us Prepare Your 2024 Personal Taxes
Let us Prepare your Tax Return
We offer convenient, accurate, and affordable preparation for all types of tax returns. We’re equipped to handle any tax situation, including personal returns, rental properties, estate/trust, U.S returns, corporations, and more. We’ll make sure that you get the maximum refund possible, and we will provide you with tax support after the tax returns are filed. Download our three simple steps to complete your tax return here.
Individual Tax Returns – Document Checklist -2024
See the documentation that Expert Fiscaliste requires to be able to complete your tax return professionally and accurately. Download our checklist here.
NETFILE service for 2024 returns
File Your 2024 Tax returns Now
The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) and Revenu Québec has announced that its NETFILE service for the online filing of individual income tax returns for the 2024 tax year will be available beginning Monday, February 24, 2025.
The NETFILE and ReFILE services are now closed for the electronic filing of your initial and amended T1 personal income tax and benefit return. NETFILE and ReFILE services will re-open on Monday, February 24, 2025.
About Expert Fiscaliste
Call 514-954-9031
File Your 2024 Tax returns Now at Expert Fiscaliste the Netfile and Refile systems for CRA and Revenu Quebec are now open. Call 514-954-9031. Expert Fiscaliste provides income tax preparation and consulting services to individuals and businesses.
Each new tax year brings with it a schedule Due Dates and limits for the 2025 . Some of the more significant dates and changes for individual taxpayers for 2025 are listed below:
Registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) deduction limit and contribution deadline
The RRSP current year contribution limit for the 2024 tax year is $31,560. In order to make the maximum current year contribution for 2024 (for which the contribution deadline will be Monday March 3, 2025).
The TFSA current year contribution limit for 2025 remains at $7,000. The actual amount which can be contributed by a particular individual in 2025 includes both the current year contribution limit and any carryover of uncontributed or re-contribution amounts from previous taxation years.
Taxpayers can find out their individual 2025 TFSA contribution limit by calling the Canada Revenue Agency’s automated Tax Information Phone Service (TIPS) at 1-800-267-6999, where that information will be available from mid-February to the end of December. Taxpayers who have registered for the CRA’s online tax service My Account can obtain that information by logging into My Account.
A TFSA contribution can be made at any time during the taxation year.
Lifelong Learning Plan (LLP)
The student must have received a written offer to enroll before March of the year after you withdraw funds from your RRSPs.
Generally, your cancellation payments for the LLP are due by December 31 of the year after the year you received the funds. For more information, refer to Cancelling a Lifelong Learning Plan withdrawal.
First home savings account (FHSA) contribution limit for 2024
You can open an FHSA starting April 1st, 2023.
Your maximum participation period begins when you open your first FHSA and ends on December 31 of the year in which the earliest of the following events occur:
The 15th anniversary of opening your first FHSA
You turn 71 years of age
The year following your first qualifying withdrawal from your FHSA
If you opened an FHSA in 2024, you can claim up to $8,000 in FHSA contributions you made by December 31, 2024, as an FHSA deduction on your 2024 income tax and benefit return.
The deadline for opening an RDSP, making contributions and applying for the matching Grant and the income-tested Bond for the 2024 contribution year is December 31, 2024.
Individual Tax Due dates for tax instalment deadlines for 2025
Individual taxpayers may be requested to pay income tax by quarterly instalments, which are due on the 15th days of March, June, September, and December 2025. Where the 15th of the month falls on a weekend or a statutory holiday, the instalment payment deadline is extended to the next business day.
The actual tax instalment due dates for 2025 are as follows:
Monday March 17, 2025
Monday June 16, 2025
Monday September 15, 2025
Monday December 15, 2025
Old Age Security income clawback threshold
For 2025, the income level above which Old Age Security (OAS) benefits are clawed back is $93,454.
Individual tax payment and filing deadlines in 2025
For all individual taxpayers, including those who are self-employed, and Non-residents the deadline for final payment of any balance of 2024 taxes owed is Wednesday April 30, 2025. Payments made after this date will be subject to interest and penalties. Generally, the CRA does not charge a difference of $2 or less. Do not mail cash or include cash with your return.
Self-employed taxpayers, their spouses, and non-residents must file an income tax return for 2024 on or before Monday June 16, 2025
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Tax Due Dates and limits for the 2025 tax year. Expert Fiscaliste provides income tax preparation and consulting services to individuals and businesses.
2024 Capital Gains Changes: What You Need to Know. Please find the 2024 Q3 Personal Newsletter on the potential Capital Gains Changes for individuals.
IN THIS ISSUE
Does the Increase Affect Me? The $250,000 Threshold
2024 Inclusion Rate Increase — Capital Gains Distributions
2024 Inclusion Rate Increase — Transitional Rules
What Is Not Changing
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2024 Capital Gains Changes: What You Need to Know. Expert Fiscaliste provides income tax preparation and consulting services to individuals and businesses.
Tax planning steps to take before December 31 (December 2024)
December 31 , 2024 marks not just the end of the calendar year, but the end of the 2024 tax year for every individual Canadian taxpayer. And while the thoughts of most Canadians during the holiday season are focused on anything but their 2024 income taxes, the reality is that December 31 can be a critical date when it comes to determining how much income tax one will pay for 2024.
In some cases, steps need to be taken by December 31 in order to obtain administrative relief from interest or penalty charges which have been imposed by the Canada Revenue Agency. In other cases, not taking certain actions prior to the end of the calendar year will mean losing out on deductions and credits which might otherwise have been claimed on the 2024 return, and which would have reduced tax payable for the year. And, in all cases, a failure to meet that December 31 deadline cannot be remedied: only actions taken prior to the end of the calendar year (with the exception of RRSP contributions) can reduce the tax bill for 2024.
While the remaining time frame in which most tax planning and tax saving strategies for 2024 can be implemented is only a few weeks, the good news is that the most readily available of those strategies don’t involve a lot of planning or complicated financial structures – in many cases, it’s just a question of considering the timing of steps which would have been taken in any event. What follows is a listing of some of the steps which should be considered by most Canadian taxpayers as the calendar and tax year-end approaches.
Taxpayer requests for penalty or interest relief
Taxpayers are entitled to request relief from the Canada Revenue Agency for interest or penalty charges which the Agency has levied, and those who want to do so must send their request within ten years from the end of the calendar year or fiscal period concerned.
The 2024 deadline applies to taxpayer relief requests for:
the 2014 tax year;
any reporting period that ended during the 2014 calendar year; and
any interest and penalties that accrued during the 2014 calendar year for any tax year or reporting period.
Most Canadians are aware that an RRSP contribution can be made anytime up to 60 days after the end of the calendar/tax year, and claimed as a deduction on the return for that calendar/tax year. There is, however, an important exception to that rule, of which most Canadians are likely unaware.
Every Canadian who has an RRSP must collapse that plan by the end of the year in which they turn 71 years of age – usually by converting the RRSP into a registered retirement income fund (RRIF) or by purchasing an annuity. An individual who turns 71 during the year is still entitled to make a final RRSP contribution for that year, assuming that they have sufficient contribution room. However, in such cases, the 60-day window for making a contribution after December 31 is not available. Any RRSP contribution to be made by a person who turns 71 during 2024 must be made by December 31, 2024. Once that deadline has passed, no further RRSP contributions are possible.
Reviewing tax instalments for 2024
Millions of Canadian taxpayers (particularly self-employed and retired Canadians) pay income taxes by quarterly instalments, with the amount of those instalments representing an estimate of the taxpayer’s total liability for the year.
The final quarterly instalment for this year will be due on December 15, 2024 (as that date falls on a Sunday this year, the actual due date for the instalment payment is Monday December 16). By mid-December, almost everyone will have a reasonably accurate idea of what their income and deductions will be for 2024 and so will be in a position to estimate what the final tax bill for the year will be, taking into account any tax planning strategies already put in place, as well as any RRSP contributions which will be made on or before March 1, 2025. While the tax return forms to be used for the 2024 year haven’t yet been released by the Canada Revenue Agency, it’s possible to arrive at an estimate by using the 2023 form. Increases in tax credit amounts and tax brackets from 2023 to 2024 will mean that using the 2023 form will likely result in a slight over-estimate of tax liability for 2024.
Once one’s tax bill for 2024 has been calculated, that figure should be compared to the total of tax instalments already made during 2024 (that figure can be obtained by checking one’s online tax account on the Canada Revenue Agency website, or by calling the CRA’s Individual Income Tax Enquiries line at 1-800-959-8281). Depending on the result, it may then be possible to reduce the amount of the tax instalment to be paid on December 15 – and thereby free up some additional funds for the inevitable holiday spending!
Medical expenses
The federal and all provincial and territorial governments provide a non-refundable tax credit for eligible medical expenses incurred. Most Canadians will incur such expenses: while we benefit from a publicly-funded health care system, there is nonetheless a long list of medical and para-medical expenses which must be paid for out-of-pocket.
Individual taxpayers are entitled to claim the medical expense tax credit for all qualifying medical expenses incurred during any 12-month period which ends during the taxation year. In other words, the taxpayer can choose the 12-month period for which medical expenses incurred create the highest tax credit amount. However, as with other such credits, any expense, in order to be claimed on the 2024 tax return, must be incurred before the end of 2024.
There is an additional criterion for claims for the medical expense tax credit: only medical expenses which exceed the lesser of $2,759 or 3% of the taxpayer’s net income for 2024 can be claimed. Put in more practical terms, the rule for 2024 is that any taxpayer whose net income for the year is $91,967 or less will be entitled to claim eligible medical expenses that are greater than 3% of his or her net income for the year. Those having income of more than $91,967 will be limited to claiming qualifying expenses which exceed the $2,759 threshold.
Finally, it’s possible to combine medical expenses incurred by both spouses and by their minor children, and to make that combined claim on a single return. In most cases, the best tax result can be obtained where that claim is made on the return of the lower-income spouse, as long as that spouse has tax payable of at least as much as the medical expense tax credit to be claimed.
It is unfortunate that, given the number of Canadians who are in a position to claim the medical expense tax credit, the computation of that credit can be confusing. More information on how to calculate and claim the medical expense tax credit for 2024 can be found on the Canada Revenue Agency website at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/publications/rc4065.html. While the most current version of the publication currently available on the CRA site is for the 2023 tax year, the same rules will apply for 2024, with the exception of the applicable net income threshold, as outlined above.
Make sure to file your 2023 tax return by year-end
While making sure that one’s tax returns are filed on time is always a good idea (and delaying filing is, in all cases, a bad one), there are additional reasons this year to ensure that one’s tax returns for all years up to and including 2023 are filed by December 31, 2024.
On November 21, the federal government announced a “Working Canadians Rebate” – a tax-free rebate of $250 which will be sent to eligible Canadians in the spring of 2025. The basic requirements for eligibility for the rebate are that the individual have net income of $150,000 or less in 2023 and have earned income from employment or self-employment that year. In addition, an individual must have filed an income tax return for the 2023 tax year by the end of 2024. Canadians who are otherwise eligible but who do not file their income tax return for 2023 on or before December 31, 2024 will not receive the rebate.
The need to file a 2023 return by the end of this year is particularly important for residents of Ontario. In October of this year, the Ontario government announced that eligible residents of the province would receive a tax-free rebate of $200 early in 2025. In order to receive the Ontario rebate, an individual must have been 18 years of age or older and a resident of the province at the end of 2023, and must have filed an income tax return for the 2023 tax year onor before December 31, 2024.
The information presented is only of a general nature, may omit many details and special rules, is current only as of its published date, and accordingly cannot be regarded as legal or tax advice. Please contact our office for more information on this subject and how it pertains to your specific tax or financial situation
Canada Pension Plan benefits to increase by 2.6% for 2025
Benefits received under the Canada Pension Plan are indexed annually to increases in the Consumer Price Index. Based on that indexing formula, CPP benefits payable will increase by 2.6%, effective as of January 1, 2025.
Personal income tax brackets to increase by 2.7% in 2025
Federal personal income tax brackets and tax credit amounts are indexed, with such indexing based on year-over-year changes in the overall Consumer Price Index. The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) recently announced the indexing percentage which will apply to personal income tax brackets and tax credit amounts for the 2025 income tax year.
During CRA Business Audit, the CRA closely examines the books and records of a taxpayer to confirm whether they are fulfilling their tax obligations, following tax laws correctly, and receiving the benefits and refunds to which they are entitled.
Provide us with a copy of your notice assessment, and a supporting information form the CRA auditor
We will manage the process for you if possible.
Normally, an on-site audit takes place at your residence, your place of business, or at your representative’s office. The auditor will present you with a valid identification card upon arrival, and then start the audit. An on-site audit often allows questions to be addressed quickly and can minimize delays in completing the audit.
Expert Fiscaliste can assist in managing a CRA Business Audit. Expert Fiscaliste provides income tax preparation and consulting services to individuals and businesses.
If you’ve filed your return and then determine that you need to make a change to your tax return, either because you have received another T-slip, or because you didn’t claim an expense and later learned it was deductible, you can request an adjustment to your tax return.
The time limit for filing most adjustments to your tax returns by mail is ten (10) years. For a late or amended pension splitting election the time limit is three (3) year.
You can request the change for your most recent return, or your returns for the previous 9 tax years, either online or by mail. For example in 2025, you can request a change for the 2015 or later taxation years.
Provide us with a copy of your notice assessment, and a supporting information for the adjustment
We will prepare the adjustment request, and will require your signature
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Call 514-954-9031
Expert Fiscaliste can assist in changing-your-tax-return to maximize your tax refund when you’ve already filed. Expert Fiscaliste provides income tax preparation and consulting services to individuals and businesses.
Businesses can appoint Expert Fiscaliste as their Authorized Business Representative with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) and we work on behalf of the business and not CRA. Authorized Business Representatives have online access to the tax information about the business.
An Authorized Business Representative is an important advantage for business owners and their dealings with the CRA avoiding costing errors, adds professional tax skills, improves communications with CRA, and better manages the tax process overall.
Let Expert Fiscaliste become our Authorized Business Representative with CRA and RQ so that we work on behalf of you. Expert Fiscaliste provides income tax preparation and consulting services to individuals and businesses.
2024 January Tax News. Expert Fiscaliste provides income tax preparation and consulting services to individuals and businesses.
Table of Contents
NETFILE service for 2023 tax returns available February 19
February 2, 2024
The Canada Revenue Agency has announced that its services for the online filing of individual income tax returns for the 2023 tax year will be available in mid-February. Both NETFILE and ReFILE services will re-open on Monday, February 19, 2024, at 6:00 a.m. (Eastern Time).
More information on NETFILE and ReFILE services, including eligibility requirements and a listing of certified software which can be used for filing of returns for 2023, can be found on the CRA website at File your taxes online: Understand NETFILE(CRA) – Canada.ca.
Online filing of prior year tax returns available until January 26
January 19, 2024
Canadian taxpayers can still file individual income tax returns for the 2017 to 2022 tax years using the Canada Revenue Agency’s online tax filing service NETFILE.
The NETFILE filing service provided for prior year returns will be available until Friday January 26,2024. After that date, the NETFILE service will be offline and unavailable until it re-opens (around the middle of February) for the filing of individual income tax returns for the 2023 tax year.
During the pandemic, the federal government provided loan financing to eligible Canadian businesses through the Canada Emergency Business Assistance (CEBA) program. Such loan amounts provided are partially forgivable where required repayments are made by a specified deadline. That deadline is January 18, 2024 for eligible CEBA loan holders in good standing.
The federal government has not announced any further extension of the repayment deadline: consequently, if a loan remains outstanding on January 19, 2024, it will convert to a term loan with full principal repayment due on December 31, 2026.
Each new tax year brings with it a schedule of tax payment and filing deadlines, as well as some changes with respect to tax saving and planning opportunities. Some of the more significant dates and changes for individual taxpayers for 2024 are listed below.
Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) deduction limit and contribution deadline
The RRSP current year contribution limit for the 2023 tax year is $30,780. In order to make the maximum current year contribution for 2023 (for which the contribution deadline will be Thursday February 29, 2024), it will be necessary to have earned income of $171,000 for the 2022 taxation year.
The TFSA contribution limit for 2024 is increased to $7,000. The actual amount which can be contributed by a particular individual includes both the current year limit and any carryover of uncontributed or re-contribution amounts from previous taxation years.
Taxpayers can find out their personal 2024 TFSA contribution limit by calling the Canada Revenue Agency’s Individual Income Tax Enquiries line at 1-800-959-8281. Those who have registered for the CRA’s online tax service My Account can obtain that information by logging into My Account.
A TFSA contribution can be made at any time during the taxation year.
First Home Savings Account (FHSA) contribution limit for 2024
The FHSA current year contribution limit for 2024 is $8,000. The actual amount which can be contributed by a particular individual includes both the current year contribution limit and any carryover of uncontributed amounts from 2023.
There is a lifetime per individual limit of $40,000 in contributions to an FHSA, and an FHSA contribution can be made at any time during the taxation year.
Individual tax instalment deadlines for 2024
Millions of individual taxpayers pay income tax by quarterly instalments, which are due on the 15th day of March, June, September, and December 2024. Where the 15th of the month falls on a weekend or a statutory holiday, the instalment payment deadline is extended to the next business day.
The actual tax instalment due dates for 2024 are as follows:
Friday March 15, 2024
Monday June 17, 2024
Monday September 16, 2024
Monday December 16, 2024
Old Age Security income clawback threshold
For 2024, the income level above which Old Age Security (OAS) benefits are clawed back is $90,997.
Individual tax filing and payment deadlines in 2024
For all individual taxpayers, including those who are self-employed, the deadline for payment of any balance of 2023 taxes owed is Tuesday April 30, 2024.
Taxpayers (other than the self-employed and their spouses) must file an income tax return for 2023 on or before Tuesday April 30, 2024.
Self-employed taxpayers and their spouses must file an income tax return for 2023 on or before Monday June 17, 2024.
Federal individual tax rates and brackets for 2024
January 9, 2024
The indexing factor for federal tax credits and brackets for 2024 is 4.7%. The following federal tax rates and brackets will be in effect for individuals for the 2024 tax year.
Income level Federal tax rate
$15,705 – $55,867 15.0%
$55,868 – $111,733 20.5%
$111,734 – $173,205 26.0%
$173,206 – $246,752 29.0%
Over $246,752 33.0%
Federal individual tax credits for 2024
January 9, 2024
Dollar amounts on which individual non-refundable federal tax credits for 2024 are based, and the actual tax credit claimable, will be as follows:
Credit amount Tax credit
Basic personal amount* $15,705 $2,356
Spouse or common law partner amount* $15,705 $2,356
Eligible dependant amount* $15,705 $2,356
Age amount $8,790 $1,319
Net income threshold for erosion of age credit $44,325
Canada employment amount $1,433 $215
Disability amount $9,872 $1,481
Adoption expenses credit $19,066 $2,860
Medical expense tax credit income threshold amount $2,759
*For taxpayers having net income for the year of more than $173,205, amounts claimable for the basic personal amount, the spousal amount and the eligible dependant amount for 2024 may differ.
Canada Pension Plan Contributions for 2024
January 9, 2024
Changes made to the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) beginning in the 2024 calendar year will create a two-tier contribution structure.
First-tier contributions for 2024 are set at 5.95% of pensionable earnings between $3,500 and $68,500.
Second-tier contributions for 2024 are set at 4.0% of pensionable earnings between $68,500 and $73,200.
The maximum CPP contribution in 2024 for individuals making only first-tier contributions (those with pensionable earnings of $68,500 or less) will be $3,867.50. Individuals making second tier contributions will be required to contribute up to an additional $188.00 in contributions for the year.
Québec Pension Plan contributions for 2024
January 9, 2024
Changes made to the Québec Pension Plan (QPP) beginning in the 2024 calendar year will create a two-tier contribution structure.
First-tier contributions for 2024 are set at 6.4% of pensionable earnings between $3,500 and $68,500.
Second-tier contributions for 2024 are set at 4.0% of pensionable earnings between $68,500 and $73,200.
The maximum QPP contribution in 2024 for individuals making only first-tier contributions (those with pensionable earnings of $68,500 or less) will be $4,160. Individuals making second tier contributions will be required to contribute up to an additional $188.00 in contributions for the year.
Employment Insurance Premiums for 2024
January 9, 2024
The Employment Insurance (EI) premium rate for 2024 is set at 1.66%.
Yearly maximum insurable earnings are set at $63,200, making the maximum employee premium $1,049.12.
As in previous years, employer premiums are 1.4 times the employee premium. The maximum employer premium for 2024 is therefore $1,468.77.
Canada Pension Plan benefits to increase by 4.4% in 2024
January 5, 2024
Benefits paid under the Canada Pension Plan are indexed annually, based on changes to the Consumer Price Index.
The federal government has announced that CPP benefits paid during the 2024 calendar year will increase by 4.4%. The maximum retirement benefit payable during 2024 for individuals who begin receiving that retirement benefit at age 65 will therefore be $1364.60.
Changes to the Canada Pension Plan starting January 1, 2024 (December 2023)
December 20, 2023
Everyone in Canada who earns a salary or wages is familiar with the deduction taken from each paycheque for contributions to the Canada Pension Plan (CPP). The CPP is one of the two major government-sponsored retirement income programs in Canada – the other being the Old Age Security program.
While the Old Age Security program is financed out of general federal government revenues, the CPP is self-funded by means of contributions made by employees, together with matching contributions made by their employers. (Self-employed individuals pay both the employee and employer portions of CPP contributions).
Several years ago, it was determined that changes were needed to the CPP, to ensure that CPP retirement benefits replaced a greater percentage of working income than was then the case. Those changes to the CPP began in 2019, when the required annual contribution to the CPP began to increase. It was increased each year thereafter, and now stands at 5.95% of annual earnings.
The basic structure of the CPP provides that everyone who is between 18 and 69 years of age and earns more than $3,500 per year must make CPP contributions equal to 5.95% of their income between $3,500 and a specified income ceiling. That income ceiling is known as the Year’s Maximum Pensionable Earnings (YMPE) and is set at $68,500 for 2024.
Beginning in 2024, however, the CPP will change from a single-tier to a two-tier contribution structure, with higher-income individuals required to make an additional CPP contribution. Specifically, individuals who have annual income of less than the 2024 YMPE of $68,500 will continue to make Tier 1 CPP contributions of 5.95% of earnings between $3,500 and $68,500. However, those whose earnings exceed the $68,500 income ceiling must pay 4% of those additional earnings (Tier 2 contributions) up to a second earnings ceiling. That second earnings ceiling – to be called the Year’s Additional Maximum Pensionable Earnings, or YAMPE – is set at $73,200 for 2024.
The effect of the upcoming changes is that individuals who will have income of more than $68,500 during 2024 must pay both the 5.95% contribution on earnings between $3,500 and $68,500 (Tier 1 contributions) and 4% of earnings between $68,500 and $73,200 (Tier 2 contributions).
There are no tax or financial planning steps to be taken in response to the upcoming changes – having CPP contributions deducted from one’s income and remitted to the federal government by one’s employer is mandatory, and there is no ability to “opt out” of making either Tier 1 or Tier 2 contributions.
Individuals who earn less than $68,500 during 2024 will see no change to the CPP contributions deducted from their paycheques, but those earning more than that amount will see increased deductions made for CPP beginning January 1, 2024. It should be noted as well that 2024 is something of a phase-in year for Tier 2 contributions. Those contribution amounts will increase in future years, as the upper income limit (or YAMPE) for such Tier 2 contributions, which is set at $73,200 for 2024, will increase significantly in 2025 and later years.
No one likes to see additional deductions being taken from their paycheque but those who are affected by the increased contribution requirements at least have the satisfaction of knowing that their higher contributions will eventually be reflected in an increase in CPP retirement benefits to which they will be entitled.
Final individual income tax instalment for 2023 due on December 15
December 16, 2023
Individual taxpayers who pay income tax for the year through instalment payments do so by four prescribed deadlines each year. The fourth and final instalment payment for the 2023 tax year must be made on or before Friday December 15, 2023.
Old Age Security payments to increase by 0.8% for first quarter of 2024
December 16, 2023
Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) has announced that Old Age Security (OAS) payments for the first quarter (January to March) of 2024 will increase by 0.8%. OAS benefit amounts are adjusted quarterly, based on changes to the Consumer Price Index.
The latest change means that the maximum OAS benefit for individuals aged 65 to 74 will increase from $707.68 to $713.34. The maximum OAS benefit for those aged 75 and over will increase from $778.45 to $784.68.
The Canada Revenue Agency has issued a Tax Tip reminding employers and pension plan administrators of a change in T4 and T4A reporting rules, beginning with the 2023 tax year.
All issuers of T4s and T4As must indicate on such information slips for 2023 whether, on December 31, 2023, a payee or any of their family members were eligible to access dental insurance, or dental coverage of any kind through their current or former employment.
CRA announces indexation adjustment for 2024 personal tax amounts
December 2, 2023
Annual changes in personal income tax brackets and tax credit amounts are based on changes in the Consumer Price Index. The Canada Revenue Agency has announced that, for the upcoming 2024 tax year, such personal tax amounts will be increased by 4.7%.