Premiums under provincial hospitalization, medical care insurance, and certain Government of Canada plans
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Premiums under provincial hospitalization, medical care insurance, and certain Government of Canada plans
You may be paying premiums or contributing to a provincial or territorial hospital or medical care insurance plan for an employee. The amount you pay is considered a taxable benefit for the employee. Report this benefit in box 14, "Employment income," and in the "Other information," area under code 40 at the bottom of the employee's T4 slip. If you have to make payments to such a plan for amounts other than premiums or contributions for the employee, they are not considered a taxable benefit for the employee.
If you are the former employer of an employee who has retired, any amount you pay as a contribution to a provincial or territorial health services insurance plan for the retired employee is a taxable benefit.
Report this benefit under code 118, "Medical premium benefits," in the "Other information" area at the bottom of the T4A slip.
Any amount that the federal government pays for premiums under a hospital or medical care insurance plan for its employees and their dependants serving outside Canada is a taxable benefit. This also applies to dependants of members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Canadian Forces serving outside Canada.
Do not include GST/HST in the value of this benefit.
Payroll deductions
If the benefit is taxable, it is also pensionable. Deduct income tax and CPP contributions. If the taxable benefit is paid in cash, it is insurable. Deduct EI premiums. If it is a non-cash benefit, it is not insurable. Do not deduct EI premiums.
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- Date modified:
- 2017-12-15