Completing your return: Steps 1 and 2
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2023 Income Tax and Benefit Guide for Non-Residents and Deemed Residents of Canada – Completing your return: Steps 1 and 2
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- Completing your return
- Step 1 – Identification and other information
- Step 2 – Total income
- Amounts that are not reported or taxed
- Report foreigning income and other foreign amounts
- Line 10100 – Employment income
- Line 10400 – Other employment income
- Line 11300 – Old age security (OAS) pension
- Line 11400 – CPP or QPP benefits
- Line 11500 – Other pensions and superannuation
- Line 11600 – Elected split-pension amount
- Line 11900 – Employment insurance and other benefits
- Line 11905 – Employment insurance maternity and parental benefits and provincial parental insurance plan benefits
- Lines 12000 and 12010 – Taxable amount of dividends from taxable Canadian corporations
- Line 12100 – Interest and other investment income
- Line 12200 – Net partnership income (limited or non-active partners only)
- Line 12500 – Registered disability savings plan (RDSP) income
- Line 12700 – Taxable capital gains
- Line 12900 – Registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) income
- Line 12905 – Taxable first home savings account (FHSA) income
- Line 12906 – Taxable FHSA income – other
- Line 13000 – Other income
- Line 13010 – Taxable scholarships, fellowships, bursaries, and artists' project grants
- Lines 13499 to 14300 – Self-employment income
- Line 14500 – Social assistance payments
- Other amounts you have to report on your return
Completing your return
To complete your return:
- Determine if, in 2023, you were a deemed resident of Canada, non-resident of Canada or non-resident of Canada electing under section 217 or section 216.1 of the Income Tax Act (see Determining your residency status)
- Follow the symbols that correspond to your situation. If your symbol appears beside a line in this guide, the information for that line may apply to you
⬤
Deemed residents of Canada
▮
Non-residents of Canada
▲
Non-residents of Canada electing under sections 217 or 216.1 of the Income Tax Act
- Attach your supporting documents to your return (see Supporting documents)
Notes
To calculate your tax for Quebec, you must file a Revenu Québec Income Tax Return.
Complete Form T2203, Provincial and Territorial Taxes for Multiple Jurisdictions, to calculate your provincial and territorial taxes, if applicable.
Step 1 – Identification and other information
Use the instructions on your return to complete Step 1.
If you are a non-resident electing under section 217 or section 216.1, see “Completing your section 217 return” or “Completing your section 216.1 return”.
Email address
Enter your email address on your return if you would like to receive email notifications from the CRA and you agree to the terms of use for email notifications below. You can also register for email notifications by signing in to My Account for Individuals and selecting the "Notification preferences" service.
Terms of use for email notifications
- The CRA will use the email address provided to notify you about any CRA mail available in My Account, when certain changes are made to your account information, and other important account information
- Any mail that is eligible for electronic delivery will no longer be printed and mailed
- The notifications that are eligible for this service may change. You may not always be notified when new types of notifications are added or removed from this service
- To view CRA mail online, you must be registered for My Account or your representative must be registered for Represent a Client and be authorized on your account
- All CRA mail available in My Account is presumed to have been received on the date that the email notification is sent
- It is your responsibility to make sure that the email address provided to the CRA is up to date
- CRA email notifications are subject to the terms of any agreement with your mobile carrier or Internet service provider. You are responsible for any fees imposed by them
- Email notifications are sent unencrypted and unsecured. They could be lost, intercepted, viewed, or altered by others who have access to your email account. You accept this risk and acknowledge that the CRA will not be liable if you are unable to access or receive the email notifications, nor for any delay or inability to deliver notifications
- These terms of use may change from time to time. The CRA will provide advance notice of the effective date of any new terms. You agree that the CRA may notify you of these changes by emailing the new terms, or notice of where to find them, to the email address that you provided. You agree that your use of the service after the effective date of any change to these terms constitutes your agreement to the new terms. If you do not agree to the new terms, you must remove your email address from My Account and no longer use the service
Social insurance number (SIN)
For more information about the SIN, including how to apply for one, go to Social Insurance Number – Overview.
If you are outside Canada and the U.S., you can write to:
Service Canada
Social Insurance Registration Office
P.O. Box 7000
Bathurst NB E2A 4T1, CANADA
You can also call 506-548-7961.
If you are not eligible for a SIN, complete Form T1261, Application for a Canada Revenue Agency Individual Tax Number (ITN) for Non-Residents, and send it to the CRA as soon as possible.
Note
Do not complete Form T1261 if you already have a SIN, individual tax number (ITN), or temporary tax number (TTN).
Marital Status
Tick the box on your return that applies to your marital status on December 31, 2023.
Married means that you have a spouse. This term only applies to a person you are legally married to.
Living common-law means that you are living in a conjugal relationship with a person who is not your married spouse, and at least one of the following conditions applies:
- This person has been living with you in a conjugal relationship for at least 12 continuous months
Note
In this definition, 12 continuous months includes any period you were separated for less than 90 days because of a breakdown in the relationship.
- This person is the parent of your child by birth or adoption
- This person has custody and control of your child (or had custody and control immediately before the child turned 19 years of age) and your child is wholly dependent on them for support
Separated means that you have been living apart from your spouse or common-law partner because of a breakdown in the relationship for a period of at least 90 days.
Note
You are still considered to have a spouse or common-law partner if you were separated involuntarily and not because of a breakdown in your relationship. An involuntary separation could happen when one spouse or common-law partner is living away for work, school, or health reasons, or is incarcerated.
Once you have been separated for 90 days because of a breakdown in the relationship, the effective date of your separated status is the day you started living apart.
If you file your return before your 90 day separation period is over and that period includes December 31, enter your marital status as married or living common-law, as applicable. If, after filing your return, you continue to live separate and apart from your spouse or common-law partner and you have been living this way for at least 90 days, you have to change your marital status to "separated" using the first day of the 90 days period as your date of separation. See Digital services for individuals for ways to change your marital status online, or complete and send Form RC65, Marital Status Change, to the CRA.
Note
You will have to file an amended return to adjust your entitlement for any credits claimed or to apply for credits that you may not have been entitled to when you were married or living common-law.
Widowed means that you had a spouse or common-law partner who is now deceased.
Divorced means that you are legally divorced from your former spouse.
Single means that none of the other marital statuses applies to you.
Residence information
Your province or territory of residence on December 31, 2023
"Other" has already been entered for you as your province or territory of residence on December 31, 2023.
Your country of residence on December 31, 2023
Enter your country of residence on December 31, 2023.
Province or territory where your business had a permanent establishment
If you were self-employed in 2023, enter the province or territory where you had a permanent business establishment. If you did not have a permanent business establishment in Canada, enter "Other."
Your spouse's or common-law partner's information
You must provide the following information for your spouse or common-law partner, if applicable:
- their first name
- their Canadian social insurance number, temporary tax number, or individual tax number
- their net world income
Notes
If your spouse or common-law partner was a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, their net world income is the amount from line 23600 of their return or the amount it would be if they filed a return. Enter this amount even if it is zero.
If your spouse or common-law partner was a non-resident of Canada in 2023, their net world income is their net income for 2023 from all sources both inside and outside Canada. Enter this amount even if it is zero.
Your spouse or common-law partner may still have to file a 2023 return even if you enter their amounts on page 1 of your return. See Who has to file a return.
If you became separated or widowed in the year, enter on page 1 of your return the following information about your former or deceased spouse or common-law partner to claim certain credits:
- their first name
- their social insurance number
- their net income before the separation or before they died
Elections Canada
Ticking yes in the "Elections Canada" section of your return is an easy way to keep your voter registration up to date, if you are qualified to vote. As well, Canadian youth aged 14 to 17 have the opportunity to add their names to the Register of Future Electors.
Elections Canada will use the information you provide to update the National Register of Electors (the database of Canadian citizens qualified to vote in federal elections, by-elections, and referendums) or, if you are 14 to 17 years of age, to update the Register of Future Electors. The Register of Future Electors allows young Canadian citizens aged 14 to 17 to register with Elections Canada before turning 18. Once they turn 18 and their eligibility to vote is confirmed, they are added to the National Register of Electors.
Elections Canada uses the information in the National Register of Electors to prepare lists of electors for federal elections, by-elections, and referendums and to communicate with voters. Other uses of the information permitted under the Canada Elections Act include providing voter information to provincial and territorial electoral agencies for uses permitted under their respective legislation, and providing voter information (not including birth dates) to members of Parliament, registered and eligible political parties, and candidates at election time.
Information in the Register of Future Electors cannot be shared with members of Parliament, registered or eligible political parties, or candidates. However, it can be shared with the provincial and territorial electoral agencies that are allowed to collect future elector information under their respective legislation. It can also be used by Elections Canada to provide youth with educational information about the electoral process.
Only persons 18 years of age or older who have Canadian citizenship are qualified to vote. Generally, you are a Canadian citizen either by birth or if you have obtained Canadian citizenship through the formal process of becoming a Canadian citizen (naturalization). If you are unsure about your Canadian citizenship status, refer to the Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada website at See if you may be a citizen.
Questions A and B are optional. If you are a Canadian citizen 18 years of age or older, you will not lose your right to vote regardless of whether you answer the questions or leave them blank. The CRA does not use this information for the purpose of processing your return.
If you have Canadian citizenship and authorize the CRA to share your name, address, date of birth, and Canadian citizenship confirmation with Elections Canada, tick yes to both questions. If you do not authorize the CRA to share your information with Elections Canada, tick no to question B.
If you do not have Canadian citizenship, tick no to question A and leave question B blank.
If during the year you change your mind about the CRA sharing your information with Elections Canada, call the CRA at 1-800-959-8281 to remove your authorization. To be removed from either Register, contact Elections Canada.
If you tick no to question B:
- The CRA will not give any of your information to Elections Canada
- Elections Canada will not remove your information from either Register if your name is already there, or from federal lists of electors if you are a Canadian citizen
18 years of age or older - You will have to register before you vote if there is a federal election, by-election, or referendum and you are a Canadian citizen 18 years of age or older who is not already registered with Elections Canada
- You will have to take steps to register with Elections Canada in order to vote when you turn 18 years of age
Deceased persons
If you are completing a return for a deceased person who consented to provide information to Elections Canada on their last return, the CRA will notify Elections Canada to have the deceased person's name removed from the relevant Register.
For more information, visit Elections Canada or call 1-800-463-6868. Teletypewriter (TTY) users can call 1-800-361-8935.
Information about your residency status
Tick the box that best describes your residency status as of December 31, 2023. For more information, see Determining your residency status.
Foreign property
If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, use the following information to answer the question on page 2 of your return.
Specified foreign property includes all of the following:
- funds or intangible or incorporeal property (patents, copyrights, etc.) situated, deposited, or held outside Canada
- tangible or corporeal property situated outside Canada
- a share of the capital stock of a non-resident corporation held by the taxpayer or by an agent on behalf of the taxpayer other than a share of the capital stock of a non-resident corporation that is a foreign affiliate for which you are required to file Form T1134, Information Return Relating to Controlled and Non-Controlled Foreign Affiliates
- an interest in a non-resident trust that was acquired for consideration, other than an interest in a non-resident trust that is a foreign affiliate
- shares of corporations that are residents of Canada held by you or for you outside Canada
- an interest in a partnership that holds a specified foreign property unless the partnership is required to file Form T1135, Foreign Income Verification Statement
- an interest in, or right with respect to, an entity that is a non-resident
- a property that is convertible into, exchangeable for, or confers a right to acquire a property that is specified foreign property
- a debt owed by a non-resident, including government and corporate bonds, debentures, mortgages and notes receivable
- precious metals, gold certificates and futures contracts held outside Canada
Specified foreign property does not include any of the following:
- an interest in your registered retirement savings plan (RRSP), pooled registered pension plan (PRPP), registered retirement income fund (RRIF), registered pension plan (RPP), or tax-free savings account (TFSA)
- foreign investments held in Canadian mutual funds
- property used or held exclusively in the course of carrying on your active business
- your personal-use property
Note
You must file Form T1135 for 2023 no later than April 30, 2024, (June 15, 2024, if you or your cohabiting spouse or common-law partner carried on a business in 2023, other than a business whose expenditures are primarily made in the course of a tax shelter investment). For more information, see Form T1135, Foreign Income Verification Statement.
Step 2 – Total income
If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, you must report your income from all sources both inside and outside Canada.
Note
Amounts that are not reported or taxed
You do not have to report certain non-taxable amounts as income, including the following:
- lottery winnings of any amount, unless the prize can be considered income from employment, a business or property, or a prize for achievement
- most gifts and inheritances
- amounts paid by Canada or an allied country (if the amount is not taxable in that country) for disability or death of a war veteran due to war service
- GST/HST credit, and the CCB (including related provincial and territorial credits and benefits)
- family allowance payments and the supplement for handicapped children paid by the province of Quebec
- compensation received from a province or territory if you were a victim of a criminal act or a motor vehicle accident
- most amounts received from a life insurance policy following someone's death
- most types of strike pay you received from your union, even if you performed picketing duties as a requirement of membership
Note
Income earned on any of the above amounts (such as interest you earn when you invest lottery winnings) is taxable.
- amounts that are exempt from tax under the Indian Act
Note
Complete Form T90, Income Exempt from Tax under the Indian Act, to help the CRA calculate your CWB, Canada training credit limit and provincial or territorial benefits, if applicable to you.
- most amounts received from a TFSA
Reporting foreign income and other foreign amounts
Report in Canadian dollars, your foreign income and other foreign currency amounts (such as expenses and foreign taxes paid). In general, the foreign currency amount should be converted using the Bank of Canada exchange rate in effect on the day it arises. The CRA also generally accepts an exchange rate from another source if it meets all of the following conditions.
The source is:
- widely available
- verifiable
- published by an independent provider on an ongoing basis
- recognized by the market
- used in accordance with well-accepted business principles
- used to prepare financial statements (if any)
- used regularly from year to year
⬤▲ Line 10100 – Employment income
If you are a former resident of Canada, you must report employment income received from a Canadian resident for services performed outside Canada if, under a tax treaty or another agreement or convention between Canada and that country, the income is exempt from tax in your new country of residence.
Emergency services volunteers
You may have received a payment from an eligible employer, such as a government, a municipality, or another public authority for your work as:
- a volunteer ambulance technician
- a volunteer firefighter
- a search and rescue volunteer
- another type of emergency worker
The T4 slips issued by this authority will generally show only the taxable part of the payment in box 14 of your T4 slip, which is the part that is more than $1,000.
The exempt part of a payment is shown in box 87 of your T4 slips. If you provided volunteer emergency services for more than one employer, you can claim the $1,000 exemption for each of your eligible employers.
As an emergency services volunteer, you may qualify to claim the $3,000 volunteer firefighters' amount (VFA) or the search and rescue volunteers' amount (SRVA).
If you are eligible for the $1,000 exemption on line 10100 of your return and either the VFA or SRVA (lines 31220 and 31240 of your return), you must choose which one you would like to claim.
If you choose to claim the $1,000 exemption, report only the amounts from box 14 of your T4 slips on line 10100 of your return and do not claim an amount on line 31220 or line 31240 of your return. Report the exempt part of the payment from box 87 of your T4 slips on line 10105 of your return.
If the authority employed you (other than as a volunteer) for the same or similar duties, or if you choose to claim the VFA or SRVA, the full payment is taxable. Add the amounts from boxes 87 and 14 of your T4 slips and report the total on line 10100 of your return.
Security options benefits
Report taxable benefits you received in 2023 (or carried forward to 2023) on certain security options you exercised. For more information, see Guide T4037, Capital Gains.
Wage-loss replacement plan income
If you received payments from a wage-loss replacement plan (WLRP) shown in box 14 of your T4 slips, you may not have to report the full amount on your return. Report the amount you received minus the contributions you made to the plan if you did not use them on a previous year's return.
Report, on line 10130 of your return, your total contributions to your WLRP shown in the supporting documents from your employer or insurance company. For more information, see archived Interpretation Bulletin IT428, Wage Loss Replacement Plans.
Member of the clergy
If you received a housing allowance or an amount for eligible utilities as a member of the clergy and the amount is shown in box 14 of your T4 slips, subtract the amount in box 30 of your T4 slips from the amount in box 14 and include the difference on line 10100 of your return. Report the amount from box 30 of your T4 slips on line 10400 of your return.
⬤▮▲ Line 10400 – Other employment income
Report the total of the following amounts:
- amounts from your T4, T4A, and T4PS slips as instructed on the back of these slips
- employment income not reported on a T4 slip such as tips and occasional earnings. Fees for services shown in box 048 of your T4A slips must be reported on the applicable self-employment lines (13499 to 14300) of your return
- net research grants – Subtract your expenses from the grant you received and report the net amount on line 10400 of your return. Your expenses cannot be more than the amount of your grant. Attach a list of your expenses relating to research grants to your paper return. For more information, see Guide P105, Students and Income Tax
- clergy's housing allowance or an amount for eligible utilities from box 30 of your T4 slips. You may be able to claim a deduction on line 23100 of your return. If a housing allowance or an amount for eligible utilities is shown in box 14 of your T4 slips, subtract the amount in box 30 of your T4 slips from the amount in box 14 and include the difference on line 10100 of your return
- foreign employment income – If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, report your earnings in Canadian dollars (see Reporting foreign income and other foreign amounts). If the amount on your United States W-2 slip has been reduced by contributions to a 401(k), 457, or 403(b) plan, US Medicare and Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA), you must add these contributions to your foreign employment income on line 10400 of your Canadian return. These contributions may be deductible. See line 20700
- income-maintenance insurance plans (wage-loss replacement plans) from box 107 of your T4A slips. You may not have to report the full amount on your return. Report the amount you received minus contributions you made to the plan after 1967 if you did not use them on a previous year's return. For more information, see archived Interpretation Bulletin IT428, Wage Loss Replacement Plans
- certain goods and services tax/harmonized sales tax (GST/HST) and Quebec sales tax (QST) rebates – If you are an employee who paid and deducted union dues or employment expenses in 2022 or earlier, and you received a GST/HST or QST rebate in 2023 for those dues or expenses, report the rebate you received on line 10400 of your return. However, a rebate on which you can claim capital cost allowance is treated differently. For more information, see Chapter 10 in Guide T4044, Employment Expenses
- royalties – If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, report these amounts on line 10400 of your return if you received them for a work or invention of yours. Report other royalties (other than those included on line 13500 of your return) on line 12100 of your return.
⬤▲ Line 11300 – Old age security (OAS) pension
Enter the amount of taxable pension benefits from your T4A(OAS) or NR4(OAS) slips.
If you have not received a slip, go to Employment and Social Development Canada or call 1-800-277-9914 from Canada and the United States, or 613-957-1954 from outside Canada and the United States.
If at any time in 2023 you were a non-resident of Canada receiving an OAS pension, you may have to complete Form T1136, Old Age Security Return of Income (OASRI). For more information, see Guide T4155, Old Age Security Return of Income (OASRI) Guide for Non-Residents.
You may have to repay OAS benefits. For more information see line 23500 of your return.
⬤▲ Line 11400 – CPP or QPP benefits
Enter the amount of taxable Canada Pension Plan (CPP) or Quebec Pension Plan (QPP) benefits from box 20 of your T4A(P) or NR4 slips.
If you have not received a slip, go to Employment and Social Development Canada or call 1-800-277-9914 from Canada and the United States, or 613-957-1954 from outside Canada and the United States.
Box 16 - Disability benefit
Enter this amount on line 11410 of your return. This amount is already included in box 20. Do not add it to your income on your return.
Box 17 - Child benefit
This amount is already included in box 20.
Report a child benefit only if you received it because you were the child of a deceased or disabled contributor. Any benefit paid for your children is considered their income even if you received the payment.
Box 18 - Death benefit
This amount is already included in box 20.
Do not report this amount if you are filing a return for a deceased person.
If you received this amount as the beneficiary of the deceased person's estate, include it on line 13000 of your return unless a T3 Trust Income Tax and Information Return is being filed for the estate.
For more information, see Guide T4011, Preparing Returns for Deceased Persons, and Guide T4013, T3 Trust Guide.
Lump-sum benefits
If you received a lump-sum CPP or QPP payment in 2023, parts of which were for previous years, report the whole payment amount on line 11400 of your 2023 return.
If you were a deemed resident of Canada for 2023 and the total of the parts that relate to previous years is $300 or more, the CRA will calculate the tax payable on those parts as if you received them in those years only if the result is better for you. The CRA will tell you the result on your notice of assessment or reassessment.
Attach a letter from Service Canada to your paper return showing the amount of the lump-sum benefit payment that relates to the previous years unless these amounts are shown on your T4A(P) slip.
⬤▲ Line 11500 – Other pensions and superannuation
Report any other pensions and superannuation you received as shown on the back of your information slips. For a summary of where retirement income should be reported, see the summary table.
Pension income splitting
You may be able to make a joint election with your spouse or common-law partner to split the payments that you reported on line 11500 of your return if you and your spouse or common-law partner were:
- deemed residents of Canada on December 31, 2023 (or residents of Canada on the date of death)
- not living separate and apart from each other, because of a breakdown in your marriage or common-law relationship, at the end of the year and for a period of 90 days or more beginning in the year
To make this election, you and your spouse or common-law partner must complete Form T1032, Joint Election to Split Pension Income. The transferring spouse or common-law partner must report the full amount of income on line 11500 of their return and claim a deduction for the elected split pension amount on line 21000 of their return.
Pensions from a foreign country
If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, report in Canadian dollars your gross foreign pension income received in the year (see Report foreign income and other foreign amounts).
Attach a note identifying the type of pension that you received from a foreign country and the country that it came from.
In some cases, amounts that you receive may not be considered pension income and may have to be reported elsewhere on your return.
United States individual retirement arrangement (IRA)
If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, and you received amounts from an IRA or converted an IRA to a "Roth" IRA during the year, call the CRA.
Note
You can claim a deduction on line 25600 of your return for the part of your foreign pension income that is tax-free in Canada because of a tax treaty.
United States Social Security
If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, report the full amount in Canadian dollars of your U.S. Social Security benefits and any U.S. Medicare premiums paid on your behalf.
You can claim a deduction for part of this income. See line 25600.
⬤ Line 11600 – Elected split-pension amount
Report the amount of pension income transferred to you by your spouse or common-law partner if you both made a joint election to split pension income by completing Form T1032, Joint Election to Split Pension Income.
For more information, see line 11500.
Income reported on line 11600 may be eligible for the pension income amount on line 31400 of your return. See Part 4 of your Form T1032 to calculate the amount you can claim.
⬤▲ Line 11900 – Employment insurance and other benefits
See the back of your T4E slip to find out how and where to report these amounts.
If you have received employment insurance (EI) maternity and parental benefits or provincial parental insurance plan (PPIP) benefits, see line 11905 for additional instructions on reporting these amounts.
If you already repaid the excess benefits that you received directly to the payer, you may be able to claim a deduction. See line 23200.
⬤▲ Line 11905 – Employment insurance maternity and parental benefits and provincial parental insurance plan benefits
Report the total of the following amounts:
- EI maternity and parental benefits from box 37 of your T4E slip
- PPIP benefits from box 36 of your T4E slip
These amounts are already included on line 11900 of your return so do not add them again when you calculate your total income on line 15000 of your return.
⬤ Lines 12000 and 12010 – Taxable amount of dividends from taxable Canadian corporations
Complete the chart for lines 12000 and 12010 using your Federal Worksheet.
⬤ Line 12100 – Interest and other investment income
Complete the chart for line 12100 using your Federal Worksheet and enter the result on line 12100 of your return.
Generally, you report your share of interest from a joint investment based on how much you contributed to it.
Notes
Special rules apply for income from property (including money) that one family member lends or transfers to another. For more information, see Other amounts you have to report on your return.
Generally, when you invest your money in your child's name, you have to report the income from those investments on your return. However, if you deposited Canada child benefit payments into a bank account or trust in your child's name, the interest earned on those payments must be included in your child's income.
Foreign income
If you received foreign interest or dividend income, report it in Canadian dollars. See Reporting foreign income and other foreign amounts.
If, as a shareholder in a foreign corporation, you received certain shares in another foreign corporation, you may not have to report any amount as income for receiving those shares.
Bank accounts
Report interest paid or credited to you in 2023 even if you did not receive an information slip. You may not receive a T5 slip for amounts under $50.
Term deposits, guaranteed investment certificates, and other similar investments
The income you report is based on the interest you earned during each complete investment year. For example, if you made a long term investment on July 1, 2022, report the interest that accumulated up until the end of June 2023 on your 2023 return even if you do not receive a T5 slip. Report the interest from July 2023 to June 2024 on your 2024 return.
Treasury bills
If you disposed of a treasury bill when it matured in 2023, you have to report the difference between the price you paid and the proceeds of disposition shown on your T5008 slips or account statement as interest.
If you disposed of a treasury bill before it matured in 2023, you may also have to report a capital gain (or loss). For more information, see Guide T4037, Capital Gains.
Earnings on life insurance policies
Report the earnings that have accumulated on certain life insurance policies, the same way you do for other investments, from the T5 slip that your insurance company sends you. For policies bought before 1990, you can choose to report accumulated earnings every year by telling your insurer in writing.
⬤▮▲ Line 12200 – Net partnership income (limited or non-active partners only)
Report, on line 12200 of your return, your share of the net income (or loss) from a partnership (other than from rental or farming operations) if you were one of the following:
- a limited partner
- a partner who was not actively involved in the partnership and not otherwise involved in a business or profession similar to that carried on by the partnership
If these two conditions do not apply to you, report your share of the partnership's net income (or loss) on the applicable self-employment line (13500, 13700, 13900, 14100 and 14300) of your return.
Attach a copy of the partnership’s financial statement if you did not receive a T5013 slip.
Note
If the partnership has a loss, the amount you can claim may be limited.
If you have a tax shelter, see Other amounts you have to report on your return.
If all or part of the income was earned in a province or territory other than your province or territory of residence, or if it was earned outside Canada, complete Form T2203, Provincial and Territorial Taxes for Multiple Jurisdictions.
Non-residents
This section applies to you only if you had Canadian-source partnership income in 2023 and the partnership did not have a permanent establishment in Canada. If the partnership had a permanent establishment in Canada, use another tax package (see Which tax package is for you). If you are filing to report rental income, you must file Form T1159, Income Tax Return for Electing under Section 216.
Note
You may have to make Canada Pension Plan contributions on the net income reported on line 12200 of your return. See line 22200.
⬤ Line 12500 – Registered disability savings plan (RDSP) income
If you received income from an RDSP in 2023, report the amount from box 131 of your T4A slips and box 16 and/or 26 of your NR4 slips (if box 14 and/or 24 shows income code 63). For more information, go to Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP) or see Guide RC4460, Registered Disability Savings Plan.
⬤▮▲ Line 12700 – Taxable capital gains
You may have a capital gain (or loss) when you dispose of property, such as when you sell real estate, which may include your principal residence, or shares (including mutual funds). You may also have a capital gain or capital loss if you are considered to have disposed of property (see the definition of deemed disposition on Schedule 3, Capital Gains (or Losses)).
If you sold your principal residence in the year, complete the “Principal residence” section on page 2 of Schedule 3. For more information, see Guide T4037, Capital Gains.
New Property flipping
Starting January 1, 2023, any gain from the disposition of a housing unit (including a rental property) located in Canada, or a right to acquire a housing unit located in Canada, that you owned or held for less than 365 consecutive days before its disposition is deemed to be business income and not a capital gain, unless the property was already considered inventory or the disposition occurred due to, or in anticipation of, certain life events.
If the property is not considered a flipped property, whether the income from selling the property should be treated as business income or as a capital gain depends on the specific details of the situation. If the disposition is considered:
● a capital gain, complete Schedule 3
● business income, complete Form T2125, Statement of Business or Professional Activities
For more information about flipped property and life-event exceptions, go to Residential property flipping rule or see Schedule 3.
For more information about business income, go to Business income or see Guide T4002, Self-employed Business, Professional, Commission, Farming, and Fishing Income.
Crypto-assets
If you dispose of crypto-assets and other similar properties other than in the course of a business that you operate or an adventure in the nature of trade, the CRA may consider any resulting gain or loss to be a capital gain or capital loss. For more information about crypto-assets, go to Guide for cryptocurrency users and tax professionals.
Non-residents and non-residents electing under section 217
If you were a non-resident of Canada in 2023 or a non-resident of Canada electing under section 217, this line applies only on the disposition of your taxable Canadian property. For more information, see Guide T4037.
Note
The definition of "taxable Canadian property" changed for dispositions occurring after March 4, 2010. For more information about taxable Canadian property, including the definition, go to Disposing of or acquiring certain Canadian property.
If you notified the CRA of the disposition or proposed disposition of taxable Canadian property during 2023, and made a payment or provided acceptable security for the tax, the CRA has sent you a certificate of compliance for the proposed disposition (Form T2064, Certificate – Proposed Disposition of Property by a Non-Resident of Canada), or the actual disposition (Form T2068, Certificate – The Disposition of Property by a Non-Resident of Canada). Attach copy 2 of the certificate of compliance and a completed Schedule 3 to your return.
Do not include any gain or loss from the disposition of taxable Canadian property if, under a tax treaty, any gain from the disposition of this property would be exempt from tax in Canada. If you have to file a return, attach a note stating that you have not included the gain or loss because of a tax treaty.
For more information, see archived Interpretation Bulletin IT420R3, Non-Residents – Income Earned in Canada, and Information Circular IC72-17R6, Procedures Concerning the Disposition of Taxable Canadian Property by Non-Residents of Canada – Section 116.
⬤▲ Line 12900 – Registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) income
See the back of your T4RSP slip and the retirement income summary table to find out how to report the amount.
Regardless of your age, if you received income upon the death of your spouse or common-law partner, as shown on a T4RSP slip, report it on line 12900 of your return even if the amount was transferred to an RRSP, a pooled registered pension plan (PRPP), a specified pension plan (SPP), a registered retirement income fund (RRIF), or an annuity. You may be able to claim a deduction. For more information, see Guide RC4177, Death of an RRSP Annuitant.
RRSPs for spouse or common-law partner
Your spouse or common-law partner may have to report some or all of the RRSP income from boxes 20, 22 and 26 of your T4RSP slips if they contributed to any of your RRSPs in 2021, 2022 or 2023. If so, your T4RSP slips should show yes ticked in box 24 and your spouse's or common-law partner's social insurance number should appear in box 36.
Complete Form T2205, Amounts from a Spousal or Common-Law Partner RRSP, RRIF or SPP to Include in Income, to calculate the amount that you and your spouse or common-law partner must report on line 12900 of your returns.
Note
If you and your spouse or common-law partner were living apart because of a breakdown in the relationship when you withdrew funds from your RRSP, you have to report the whole amount shown on your T4RSP slips.
For more information, see Guide T4040, RRSPs and Other Registered Plans for Retirement.
Repayments under the Home Buyers' Plan (HBP) and the Lifelong Learning Plan (LLP)
Deemed residents
If you withdrew funds from your RRSP under the HBP or the LLP in previous years, you may have to make a repayment to your RRSP, PRPP or SPP for 2023. If you are making a repayment, complete Schedule 7. If you repay less than the minimum amount for the year, you have to report the difference on line 12900 of your return. For more information, see Part B of Schedule 7.
Note
Do not send your repayment to the CRA.
New ⬤Line 12905 – Taxable first home savings account (FHSA) income
Enter the amount from boxes 22 and 26 of all T4FHSA slips. For more information about FHSAs, go to First Home Saving Account.
New ⬤Line 12906 – Taxable FHSA income – other
Enter the amount from boxes 24 and 28 of all T4FHSA slips.
⬤▮▲ Line 13000 – Other income
Report any taxable income that has not been or should not be reported anywhere else on the return. Specify the type of income you are reporting in the space provided on line 13000 of your return.
Attach a note to your paper return if you have more than one type of income. Specify each type of income you are reporting.
Note
Special rules apply for income from property that one family member lends or transfers to another. For more information, see Other amounts you have to report on your return.
Non-residents and non-residents electing under section 217
Report your net gain from the disposition of a Canadian life insurance policy on this line. Do not report it on Schedule 3. Attach to your return a note or document that gives the details of the disposition and copy 2 of your certificate of compliance, Form T2064, Certificate – Proposed Disposition of Property by a Non-Resident of Canada, or Form T2068, Certificate – The Disposition of Property by a Non-Resident of Canada.
Lump-sum payments
Report lump-sum payments from a pension or a deferred profit-sharing plan (DPSP) that you received when you left a plan.
If you received a lump-sum payment in 2023 that included amounts you earned in previous years, you must report the whole payment on your 2023 return.
Generally, these amounts are reported on line 13000 of your return; however, if you are reporting a lump-sum payment from a specified pension plan (SPP) or a money purchase registered pension plan, see the retirement income summary table to find out how to report these amounts.
For information about retroactive lump-sum payments, see Retroactive lump-sum payments.
Death benefits (other than CPP or QPP death benefits)
A death benefit is an amount that you receive on or after an employee's death in recognition of their service in an office or employment. Death benefits (other than those from the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) or Quebec Pension Plan (QPP)) are shown in box 106 of your T4A slips or box 26 of your T3 slips.
You may not have to pay tax on up to $10,000 of the benefit amount that you received. If you are the only one to receive a death benefit, report the amount you receive that is more than $10,000. Even if you do not receive the full death benefit in one year, the total tax-free amount for all years cannot be more than $10,000.
To find out what to report if you and another individual both received a death benefit for the same person, see archived Interpretation Bulletin IT508R, Death Benefits.
CPP or QPP death benefit
If you received a CPP or QPP death benefit as the beneficiary of the deceased person's estate, report the amount on line 13000 of your return unless a T3 Trust Income Tax and Information Return is being filed for the estate. The CPP or QPP death benefit is shown in box 18 of the T4A(P) slip.
Other types of income
Report the following income on line 13000 of your return:
- federal and provincial or territorial COVID-19 benefits (for more information, see the back of your T4A slip)
Note
If you received income that is exempt from tax under the Indian Act, complete
Form T90, Income Exempt from Tax under the Indian Act, even if you received an information slip showing taxable income.
- Apprenticeship Incentive Grant, Apprenticeship Incentive Grant for Women, or Apprenticeship Completion Grant from box 130 of your T4A slips (for more information, go to Funding: Apprenticeship Incentive Grant – What this grant offers, see Guide P105, Students and Income Tax, or call 1-866-742-3644)
- amounts distributed from a retirement compensation arrangement (RCA) from your T4A-RCA and NR4 slips (for more information, see the back of your slips)
- training allowances or any other amount from box 028 of your T4A slips (other than amounts already noted for this line and lines 10400, 11500, and 12500 of the return)
- payments from a trust from box 26 of your T3 slips
- payments from a registered education savings plan (RESP) from box 040 (see line 41800) or box 042 of your T4A slips
- certain annuity payments
- certain payments from a tax-free savings account (TFSA) from box 134 of your T4A slips, and in box 16 and/or 26 of your NR4 slips (if box 14 and/or 24 shows income code 64)
- certain amounts from a registered retirement income fund (RRIF) from your NR4 slips or in box 22 of your T4RIF slips
Note
If you rolled over an amount to a registered disability savings plan (RDSP), see line 23200 for information about the corresponding deduction. For more information about RDSPs, go to Registered disability savings plan or see Guide T4040, RRSPs and Other Registered Plans for Retirement, and Guide RC4460, Registered Disability Savings Plan.
- grant amounts paid to you as a result of taking time away from work to cope with the death or disappearance of your child because of an offence or probable offence under the Criminal Code (from box 136 of your T4A slip)
- PRPP income from box 194 of your T4A slips if you were under 65 years of age and you did not receive this income upon the death of your spouse or common-law partner
- retiring allowances from boxes 66 and 67 of your T4 slips and any retiring allowance from box 26 of your T3 slips
- income from the disposition of Canadian Resource Property or negative balance(s) of the resource pools calculated at the end of the year in Section II on Form T1229, Statement of Resource Expenses and Depletion Allowance
⬤▮▲ Line 13010 – Taxable scholarships, fellowships, bursaries, and artists' project grants
Report amounts that you received as a scholarship, fellowship or bursary, or a prize for achievement in a field of endeavour ordinarily carried on by you (other than a prescribed prize) that were not received in connection with your employment or in the course of business, to the extent that these amounts are more than your scholarship exemption.
If you received a research grant, see line 10400.
Certain scholarships, fellowships, and bursaries are not taxable, such as:
- elementary and secondary school scholarships and bursaries
- post-secondary school scholarships, fellowships, and bursaries received in 2023 if you are considered a qualifying student for 2022, 2023, or 2024
If you received an artists' project grant, you may be able to claim certain exemptions.
For more information, go to Students or see Guide P105, Students and Income Tax, and Income Tax Folio S1-F2-C3, Scholarships, Research Grants and Other Education Assistance, and S4-F14-C1, Artists and Writers.
⬤▮▲ Lines 13499 to 14300 – Self-employment income
Report your gross and net income (or loss) from self-employment income on lines 13499 to 14300 of your return. If you have a loss, show it on the applicable line in brackets.
If you received a government loan, the loan is not taxable but you must include in your business income any portion of the loan that is forgivable in the year received.
If you received a subsidy, you must report it on your return for the tax year that you are considered to have received it in. A subsidy under the Canada Recovery Hiring Program (CRHP), Tourism and Hospitality Recovery Program (THRP), or Hardest-Hit Business Recovery Program (HHBRP) is generally considered to have been received on the last day of the claim period it relates to.
You must file Form T1139, Reconciliation of 2023 Business Income for Tax Purposes, with your 2023 return to keep a year-end that does not finish on December 31, 2023.
Note
If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, you may have to make Canada Pension Plan contributions on your self-employment earnings. See line 22200.
Guide T4002, Self-employed Business, Professional, Commission, Farming, and Fishing Income, includes information you may need to calculate your self-employment income, including enhanced capital cost allowance (CCA) calculations for certain property (for example, eligible zero-emission vehicles purchased after March 18, 2019).
If you were a limited or non-active partner, report your net income (or loss) from rental operations on line 12600 of your return and your net farming income (or loss) on line 14100 of your return. Report other net income or losses on line 12200 of your return.
If you were an active partner and you received a T5013 slip, report on your return the gross amount from boxes 118, 121, 123, 125, and 127. Report your share of the partnership's net income (or loss) from boxes 101, 103, 116, 120, 122, 124, and 126 on the applicable lines of your return. If you did not receive a T5013 slip, follow the instructions on the applicable self-employment form and report your share of the partnership's net income (or loss) on the applicable self-employment line of your return.
Attach to your paper return a copy of the applicable self employment forms or the partnership’s financial statement showing your income and expenses.
For more information, call the CRA business enquiries line at 1-800-959-5525 (calls within Canada and the United States). If you are outside Canada and the United States, call the CRA.
If you have a tax shelter, see Other amounts you have to report on your return.
Non-residents
This section applies to you only if you had Canadian-source business income in 2023 and the business did not have a permanent establishment in Canada. If the business had a permanent establishment in Canada, use another guide. See Which tax package is for you.
Non-residents and non-residents electing under section 217
Report your income from the disposition of Canadian real or immovable property (other than capital property), Canadian resource property and timber resource property on line 13500. Do not report the income on Schedule 3. Attach a note or a document to your return giving information about the disposition and copy 2 of your certificate of compliance, Form T2068, Certificate – The Disposition of Property by a Non-Resident of Canada, or Form T2064, Certificate – Proposed Disposition of Property by a Non-Resident of Canada.
Do not include a loss from a business carried on in Canada if, under a tax treaty, the income from that business would be exempt from tax in Canada. If you have to file a return, attach a note stating that you have not included the business loss because of a tax treaty.
⬤ Line 14500 – Social assistance payments
If you did not have a spouse or common-law partner, Report the amount from box 11 of your T5007 slip and box A of your Relevé 5 Slip, Benefits and Indemnities (Revenu Québec), if applicable.
If you had a spouse or common-law partner, The spouse or common-law partner with the higher net income on line 23600 of their return (not including these payments or the deductions on line 21400 or line 23500 of their return) must report all of the payments, even if that person's name is not shown on the slip.
If you and your spouse or common-law partner have the same net income, the person named on the T5007 slip (or the "bénéficiaire" on the Relevé 5 slip) must report the payments.
You do not have to report certain social assistance payments that you or your spouse or common-law partner received for being a foster parent or for caring for an adult with a disability who lived with you. However, if the payments are for caring for your spouse or common-law partner, or any person related to either of you, the spouse or common-law partner who has the higher net income must report those payments.
You do not have to report income that you received for social assistance payments under a program of the Government of Canada, the government of a province or territory, or of an Indigenous governing body if the following conditions are met:
- The payments were made for the temporary care and upbringing of a child in need of protection
- The child would be considered your child if you did not receive payments under the program (the child is wholly dependent upon you)
- No special allowances under the Children's Special Allowances Act were payable for the child for the period that the social assistance payment was made
If you repay an amount that was shown on a T5007 slip or a Relevé 5 slip in a previous year, the return for that year may be adjusted based on the amended slip provided.
If you are registered or entitled to be registered under the Indian Act and were living on a reserve, complete Form T90, Income Exempt from Tax under the Indian Act, to report social assistance payments received from a First Nation or band council.
Other amounts you have to report on your return
Retroactive lump-sum payments
If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023 and received a lump-sum payment of eligible income in 2023, parts of which were for previous years after 1977, you must report the whole payment on the appropriate line of your 2023 return. These amounts are shown on a completed Form T1198, Statement of Qualifying Retroactive Lump-Sum Payment, issued by the payer.
You can ask the CRA to tax the parts from previous years as if you received them in those years. The CRA can apply this calculation to the parts that relate to years you were resident in Canada if the total of those parts is $3,000 or more (not including interest) and the result of the calculation is better for you. The CRA will tell you the result on your notice of assessment or reassessment.
Loans and transfers of property
If you were a deemed resident of Canada in 2023, you may have to report income, such as dividends (line 12000 of your return) or interest (line 12100 of your return) from property, including money and any replacement property, that you loaned or transferred to your spouse or common-law partner or a related minor (including a niece or a nephew) under 18 years of age at the end of 2023. This includes loans or transfers to a trust in favour of such a person.
You may also have to report capital gains (line 12700 of your return) from property that you loaned or transferred to your spouse or common-law partner or to a trust for your spouse or common-law partner.
For more information, see archived Interpretation Bulletins IT-510, Transfers and Loans of property made after May 22, 1985 to a related minor, and IT-511R, Interspousal and Certain Other Transfers and Loans of Property, and Guide T4013, T3 Trust Guide.
Tax shelters
To claim deductions, losses, or credits from tax shelter investments, see your T5003 and T5013 slips, and complete Form T5004, Claim for Tax Shelter Loss or Deduction.
Page details
- Date modified:
- 2024-01-23