Government of Canada Site: https://travel.gc.ca/travelling/living-abroad/taxation
Taxation for Canadians travelling, living or working outside Canada
Canadians travelling extensively, living or working
abroad may still have to pay Canadian and provincial or territorial income
taxes. It is important that you know your residency status and the income tax
rules that apply to you while you are outside Canada.
Your residency status depends on why and how long you are
staying outside Canada, the ties you establish in your new country, how long
and how often you return to Canada and your residential ties to Canada.
This will determine whether you will be considered a
factual resident, deemed resident, a non‑resident, or a deemed non-resident
of Canada for income tax purposes and will assess the amount of Canadian income
tax you will pay.
If you are planning to be outside Canada for an extended
period of time, you must inform the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) before you
leave to determine your residency status.
If you are not sure of your residency status, you can
complete Form NR73, Determination of Residency Status (Leaving Canada)
If you are outside Canada or the United States and need
more information, call the CRA at 613-940-8495. Otherwise, call 1 800 959 8281.
Factual residents
of Canada for income tax purposes
You are a factual resident of Canada if you keep
significant residential ties in Canada while you are living or travelling
outside of the country. You could be a factual resident of Canada if you are:
· working temporarily outside Canada
· teaching or attending school in another country
· commuting (going back and forth daily or weekly)
from Canada to your place of work in the United States, or
· vacationing outside Canada.
· This is also the case if you spend part of the
year in the United States for health reasons or on vacation, and you still
maintain residential ties to Canada.
For more information, see Individuals – Leaving or
entering Canada and non-residents. You will find information about certain
income tax requirements that may affect you.
Deemed residents
of Canada for income tax purposes
Certain people who live outside Canada and who sever
their residential ties with Canada may be may be considered to be deemed
residents of Canada for tax purposes.
You may be a deemed resident of Canada if you are:
· a federal, provincial or territorial government
employee who was a resident of Canada just before being posted abroad or who
received a representation allowance for the year
· a member of the Canadian Forces
· a member of the Canadian Forces overseas school
staff who chooses to file a return as a resident of Canada
· working under a Canada International Development
Agency assistance program if you were a resident of Canada at any time during
the three-month period just before you began your duties abroad
· a dependent child of one of the four persons
described above and your net income for the year was not more than the basic
personal amount (line 300 in the General Income Tax and Benefit Guide) or
· a person who, under an agreement or convention
(including a tax treaty) between Canada and another country, is exempt from tax
in that other country on 90% or more of their income from all sources because
of their relationship to a resident (including a deemed resident) of Canada
For more information, see Individuals – Leaving or entering Canada and non-residents.
You will find information about certain income tax requirements that may affect
you.
Non-residents of
Canada for income tax purposes
Generally, when you leave Canada to live in another
country (emigrate), you become a non‑resident of Canada for income tax
purposes. For more information about the tax rules that apply for the year you
become an emigrant from Canada, see Individuals –
Leaving or entering Canada and non-residents
You are a non-resident of Canada for income tax purposes
if you:
· normally or routinely live in another country
and are not considered a resident of Canada
· do not have significant residential ties to
Canada, and
· live outside Canada throughout the tax year, or
· stay in Canada for less than 183 days in the tax
year
· Non-residents of Canada are required to pay
taxes only on certain income from Canadian sources.
For more information, see Individuals – Leaving or
entering Canada and non-residents. You will find information about certain
income tax requirements that may affect you.
Deemed
non-residents of Canada for income tax purposes
If you are a factual resident or a deemed resident of
Canada and are considered to be a resident of another country that has a tax
treaty with Canada, you may be considered a deemed non‑resident of
Canada for income tax purposes.
· If you are a deemed non-resident, you must
follow the same rules as a non-resident of Canada and declare your income from
Canadian sources.
For more information please visit the Individuals –
Leaving or entering Canada and non-residents. You will find information about
certain income tax requirements that may affect you.
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