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forumSection: Working in Canada, subForumSection: Canadian Finance and Taxation
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forumSection: Working in Canada, subForumSection: Canadian Finance and Taxation
I am a UK resident.
I have not yet filed for PR.
I have been in Canada for over 183 days in the last 12 months.
My company is based in the and UK, I do not earn any income from Canada.
I have a bank account in Canada.
Now my questions:
Am I considered non resident from a tax point of view?
My wife has been asked to provide full details about any income that I have from anywhere in the world, is it a valid request?
I have no intent to avoid giving the CRA information, but maybe we are being asked to provide something that we do not have to - I am sure not all the CRA staff understand immigration / visitor status.
It seems odd that immigration tell me most certainly that I am not a resident, but the tax people seem to think differently.
The more ties you have with Canada, the more likely CRA is to deem you a taxpayer. There is a host of ties -- such as a home in Canada, a spouse in Canada, personal property in Canada, bank accounts, a driver's licence, etc
You may be a non resident for immigration purposes but a tax resident for tax purposes. I think you need a lawyer.
The more ties you have with Canada, the more likely CRA is to deem you a taxpayer. There is a host of ties -- such as a home in Canada, a spouse in Canada, personal property in Canada, bank accounts, a driver's licence, etc
You may be a non resident for immigration purposes but a tax resident for tax purposes. I think you need a lawyer.
Thanks for the info', I finally finished reading a big section of the CRA web site.
I think the key point here is that the UK and Canada have a tax treaty, so I cannot "in theory" be taxed twice.
I doubt that I need a lawyer, I will just send the information to CRA, it will cost less.
As I said I have no wish to avoid tax, if I am going to make a life in I Canada should expect to pay into the system.
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