Personal and other income tax measures
In addition to the relevant measures dealing with electronic filing, payment, signature and correspondence requirements discussed above, Bill C-47 also includes the following personal and other income tax measures:
- Residential property flipping rule – Expansion of the enacted property flipping rule to cover profits from assignment sales, applicable to transactions occurring on or after 1 January 2023. Profits from the disposition of rights to purchase residential property would also be treated as business income (and would not be eligible for capital gains treatment) if the rights were held for less than 365 consecutive days before disposition, subject to the exceptions for certain life events.
- Reporting requirements for registered retirement savings plans (RRSPs) and registered retirement income funds (RRIFs) – Expansion of the annual reporting required of financial institutions to the CRA to include the fair market value (determined at the end of the calendar year) of property held in each RRSP and RRIF they administer. This measure applies to 2023 and subsequent taxation years.
- Registered education savings plans (RESPs) – Amendments to allow the terms of an RESP to permit educational assistance payment withdrawals of up to $8,000 in respect of the first 13 consecutive weeks of enrollment for beneficiaries enrolled in full-time programs, and up to $4,000 per 13-week period for beneficiaries enrolled in part-time programs. An amendment is also made to enable divorced or separated parents to open joint RESPs for one or more of their children. These changes apply as of 28 March 2023.
- Registered disability savings plans (RDSPs) – Extension, by three years, of the temporary measure that allows a qualifying family member to open an RDSP and be the plan holder for an adult whose capacity to enter into an RDSP contract is in doubt and who does not have a legal representative. As a result, this measure will expire on 31 December 2026 instead of on 31 December 2023. Also, for purposes of this measure, the definition of “qualifying family member” is broadened to include a brother or sister of an adult beneficiary whose capacity to enter into an RDSP contract is in doubt and who does not have a recognized legal representative. These changes apply as of 22 June 2023.
- Deduction for tradesperson’s tools expenses – Doubling of the maximum employment deduction for tradesperson’s tools from $500 to $1,000, effective for 2023 and subsequent taxation years. A consequential amendment is also made to the calculation of the separate deduction for the purchase of tools by eligible apprentice mechanics so that the deduction is equal to the cost of the tools in excess of the greater of $1,000 (increased from $500) plus the Canada employment credit, and 5% of the employee’s total income for the year from being an eligible apprentice mechanic.
- Taxpayer information sharing for the Canadian Dental Care Plan – Amendment to provide legislative authority for the CRA to share taxpayer information with: (i) an official of Employment and Social Development Canada or Health Canada solely for the purposes of the administration or enforcement of the Canadian Dental Care Plan; and (ii) an official of Health Canada solely for the evaluation or formulation of policy for that plan. This amendment applies as of 22 June 2023.
- Indigenous residential school settlement trust income – Amendment to exempt from tax the income of a trust that is established under the Indigenous residential schools settlement agreement entered into by His Majesty in Right of Canada on 18 January 2023.
- Canada workers benefit – Introduction of advance quarterly Canada workers benefit (CWB) payments to individuals who qualified for the CWB in the prior taxation year, for 2023 and subsequent taxation years. This change will begin in July 2023 for the 2023 taxation year.
- Defined benefit pension plans – Amendments that provide more flexibility to administrators of defined benefit pension plans (other than individual pension plans) by replacing the 90-day limit on the terms of a borrowing by a defined benefit pension plan, with a limit based on the assets and actuarial liabilities of the pension. Consequential to these amendments, amendments are also made to allow master trusts to borrow amounts on behalf of beneficiaries that are defined benefit registered pension plans, provided that each time an amount is borrowed, the full amount is apportioned to the beneficiaries in one of two methods provided under Regulation 4802(1.2). These measures apply to amounts borrowed by defined benefit pension plans (other than individual pension plans) on or after 7 April 2022.
- Defined contribution pension plans – Amendments to permit plan administrators of defined contribution pension plans to correct certain under-contribution errors (subject to a dollar limit) and over-contribution errors made in any of the 10 immediately preceding years, applicable in respect of additional contributions made, and amounts of overcontributions refunded, in 2021 and later years. The amendments also contain, among other things, simplified requirements to report these corrections.
- Veterans’ and active service members’ benefits – Exclusion from the computation of income of certain benefits for Canadian Forces members, veterans, their spouses or common-law partners or surviving spouses or common-law partners. These changes are deemed to come into force on 1 January 2018, except for benefits provided by the Department of National Defence as education expense reimbursements for ill and injured members, which are deemed to come into force on 1 January 2021.
- Various 9 August 2022 technical amendments – Various technical amendments to the Act and Income Tax Regulations. As indicated above, many of the technical amendments respond to issues raised by taxpayers and their representatives, or are part of an ongoing effort by the Department of Finance to improve the certainty and integrity of the tax system. These amendments include various minor technical amendments, as well as a number of more significant technical amendments and new rules (as amended, where applicable, since their initial release on 9 August 2022), including those relating to the following:
- Automobile standby charge and operating expense benefit (to ensure that an automobile standby charge and operating expense benefit are included in an employee’s income when a person who does not deal at arm's length with the employee receives a benefit and to make other clarification amendments, applicable to taxation years that begin after 2022)
- Employee life and health trusts (ELHTs) (to clarify the application of the condition in paragraph 144.1(2)(f) of the Act for a trust to qualify as an ELHT, effective as of 27 February 2018)
- Home buyers’ plan (to clarify that the special rule that deems an individual to have acquired a condominium unit on the day the individual is entitled to immediate vacant possession of it does not apply to restrict the 30-day withdrawal requirements or relax the residency requirements under the definitions of “regular eligible amount” and “supplemental eligible amount” in subsection 146.01(1) of the Act, effective as of 9 August 2022)
- Pooled registered pension plans (PRPPs) (to permit a qualifying survivor of a deceased PRPP member to surrender benefits to the extent permitted under PRPP legislation or similar provincial law, and to extend joint and several liability rules in respect of benefits paid out of an RRSP to benefits paid out of a PRPP, effective as of 9 August 2022)
- Principal residence of a personal trust (to add a fourth category of trusts that are eligible to designate a property as a principal residence, effective for taxation years beginning after 2016)
- RDSPs (to prohibit an RDSP trust from deducting income payable to a beneficiary in the year, when computing the trust’s tax on income earned from carrying on a business or in respect of a non-qualified investment, effective as of 9 August 2022)
- Registered pension plan (RPP) permissible benefits (to ensure lump-sum payments under a variable payment life annuity are permissible benefits under a money purchase provision of an RPP, effective as of 1 January 2020)
- RRIFs (to extend the requirement for the carrier of a RRIF to retain sufficient property to ensure that the minimum amount for the year is paid to the RRIF annuitant to situations involving transfers of RRIF property to an account under a PRPP, a money purchase provision of a specified pension plan, or a licensed annuities provider to acquire an advanced life deferred annuity, effective as of 9 August 2022)
- Tax-free savings accounts (TFSAs) (to permit an indebtedness of a holder of a TFSA deposit that is owed to the issuer of the TFSA or a person related to the issuer to be set off against the holder’s interest in the TFSA, provided certain conditions are met, effective as of 9 August 2022; and to permit the late filing of an election to register an arrangement as a TFSA at “such later date as is acceptable” to the Minister of National Revenue, effective for 2009 and subsequent taxation years)
- Tax on advantages in respect of registered plans (to exempt from the Part XI.01 advantage tax rules a loan or an indebtedness for which the conditions for a right of set-off against a TFSA deposit are met, effective as of 9 August 2022, and paragraph 20(1)(bb) investment counselling and administration fees in respect of a registered plan that are paid directly by the controlling individual of the plan, effective for 2018 and subsequent taxation years; and to include capital dividends in income earned on non-qualified investments held by registered plans, effective for dividends received on or after 9 August 2022)
- Tax on excess employees profit sharing plan (EPSP) amounts (to update the calculation of the portion of the tax rate that approximates provincial tax on excess EPSP amounts of a nonresident specified employee, effective for 2022 and subsequent taxation years)
- Undeducted RRSP premiums (to reduce an individual’s balance of undeducted RRSP premiums (included in the calculation of an individual’s cumulative excess amount for Part X.1 tax on over-contributions) by the amount that is not received in the year but is still included in the individual's income for the year under the home buyers’ plan or lifelong learning plan rules, effective for 2018 and later taxation years)
- Charity registration revocation or suspension (to change the requirement for a charity to file a return in respect of a revocation tax for a taxation year from when the charity is liable for the revocation tax to when the charity has had its registration revoked, applicable for taxation years ending after 9 August 2022; to extend the application of certain administrative provisions to a notice issued by the minister to suspend a registered entity’s tax-receipting privileges and to allow the minister to share publicly the effective date of any suspension of an entity’s registration, effective as of 9 August 2022; and to allow the minister to share whether or not a public information return has been filed by the filing deadline, effective for taxation years that end after 9 August 2022)
For more information on the 9 August 2022 package of technical amendments, see EY Tax Alert 2022 Issue No. 40, Finance releases draft income tax technical amendments.
Indirect and other tax measures
Bill C‑47 also includes the following indirect tax and customs measures, as amended (where applicable) to take into account comments received since their initial release.
- Cryptoasset mining – Measures from the 4 February 2022 draft legislative proposals to specify that cryptoasset mining is generally not considered a supply for GST/HST purposes.
- Pension entity rebate/input tax credit (ITC) – Measures from the 9 August 2022 GST/HST draft legislative proposals to permit a pension entity, in specific circumstances, to claim the pension entity rebate or an ITC, or to make the pension entity rebate election, after the end of the two-year limitation period.
- Payment card clearing services – Measures from the 28 March 2023 federal budget to exclude these services from the definition of “financial service” for GST/HST purposes. For more information about these amendments, see EY Tax Alert 2023 Issue No. 21, Changes to the definition of “financial service” under the Excise Tax Act.
- International transportation of money – Measures from the 9 August 2022 GST/HST draft legislative proposals to provide GST/HST relief for the international transportation of money in the same manner as a service of internationally transporting other kinds of freight.
- Excise duty on alcohol – Measures from the 28 March 2023 federal budget to temporarily cap the inflation adjustment for excise duties on beer, spirits and wine at 2%, for one year only, as of 1 April 2023.
- Air travellers security charge – Measures from the 28 March 2023 federal budget to increase the charge applicable to air travel that includes a chargeable emplanement after April 2024 and for which any payment is made after April 2024.
- Electronic filing, payment and correspondence requirements – Measures from the 9 August 2022 GST/HST draft legislative proposals to amend the Excise Tax Act, the Excise Act, 2001, the Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, the Air Travellers Security Charge Act, and the Electronic Filing and Provision of Information (GST/HST) Regulations to implement changes to the electronic filing, payment and correspondence requirements that are similar to those mentioned above for income tax purposes.
- General preferential tariff and least developed country tariff – Measures from the 28 March 2023 federal budget to extend the expiry date of these two tariff treatments to 31 December 2034 and to create a new general preferential tariff plus tariff treatment that will expire on the same date.
- Most-favoured nation tariff treatment – Measures from the 28 March 2023 federal budget to remove Belarus and Russia from the list of countries entitled to the most-favoured nation tariff treatment.
- Customs measures on arrival – Measures from the 28 March 2023 federal budget to generally allow a person arriving in Canada to present themselves to the Canada Border Services Agency by a means of telecommunication, and to require the operator of a commercial aircraft arriving in Canada ensure that baggage on board the aircraft is transported without delay to the nearest designated international baggage area.
Proposals that remain outstanding
It is important to note that Bill C-47 does not contain a number of outstanding indirect tax proposals that were introduced on 9 August 2022 as part of a package of draft technical amendments. These include GST/HST amendments that would:
- Specify the requirements for revoking an election to treat certain supplies as exempt supplies of financial services, in accordance with subsection 150(1)of the Excise Tax Act;
- Broaden the scope for the election for nil consideration under section 156 of the Excise Tax Act by allowing a specified partnership to be a member of a qualifying group even if some or all of the partnership members are not resident in Canada;
- Set out rules for the application of GST/HST to a Lloyd’s association;
- Make various changes to the Selected Listed Financial Institutions Attribution Method (GST/HST) Regulations, such as new deemed permanent establishment rules for master pension entities;
- Increase the income threshold at which a financial institution is required to file an annual information return from $1 million to $2 million; and
- Expand the joint venture election to include, as a prescribed activity, the operation of a pipeline, rail terminal or truck terminal used to transport oil, natural gas or related or ancillary products.
Learn more
For more information, please contact your EY or EY Law advisor.