ARCHIVED - Guide for Non-Residents and Deemed Residents of Canada - 2000
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ARCHIVED - General Income Tax and Benefit Guide for Non-Residents and Deemed Residents of Canada 2000
Before you start
Do you have to file a return?
You have to file a return for 2000 if any of the following applies:
- You have to pay tax for 2000.
- We sent you a request to file a return.
- You were a deemed resident of Canada at any time in 2000 and you have a taxable capital gain or disposed of capital property (such as real estate or shares) in 2000, or you claimed a capital gains reserve on your 1999 return.
- You were a non-resident of Canada throughout 2000 and you have a taxable capital gain or disposed of taxable Canadian property in 2000.
- You have to pay back any of your Old Age Security or Employment Insurance benefits. See line 235 for details. If you were a non-resident in 2000, you will use the Old Age Security Return of Income to pay back all or part of your Old Age Security.
- You have not repaid all of the amounts you withdrew from your RRSP under the Home Buyers' Plan or the Lifelong Learning Plan. For details, see the guide called Home Buyers' Plan (HBP) or the guide called Lifelong Learning Plan (LLP).
- You have to contribute to the Canada Pension Plan (CPP). This can apply if the total of your net self-employment income for 2000 and pensionable employment income is more than $3,500. See line 310 for details.
- You filed Form NR5, Application by a Non-Resident of Canada for a Reduction in the Amount of Non-Resident Tax Required to Be Withheld, for 2000 and we approved it. If this is your situation, you have to file a return electing under section 217 of the Income Tax Act.
- You filed Form NR6, Undertaking to File an Income Tax Return by a Non-Resident Receiving Rent From Real Property or Receiving a Timber Royalty, for 2000 and we approved it. If this is your situation, you have to file a return electing under section 216 of the Income Tax Act.
Even if none of these requirements applies, you may still want to file a return if any of the following applies:
- You want to claim a refund.
- You want to apply for the goods and services tax/harmonized sales tax (GST/HST) credit (see page 12).
- You or your spouse wants to begin or continue receiving Canada Child Tax Benefit payments (see page 8).
- You want to carry forward the unused portion of your tuition and education amounts (see line 323).
- You received income for which you could contribute to a registered retirement savings plan (RRSP). To keep your RRSP deduction limit (see page 28) up to date, you would have to file a return.
Is this tax and benefit package for you?
Use this package if any of the following applies to you:
- You were a deemed resident of Canada (as defined on page 9) during 2000. For exceptions, see the following section "What if this tax and benefit package is not for you?"
- You were a non-resident for all of 2000 and you are filing
a return to elect under section 217 of the Income Tax Act (as defined on page 9). - You were a non-resident (as defined on page 8) for all of 2000, and you are reporting Canadian-source income other than from employment in Canada or from a business with a permanent establishment in Canada.
What if this tax and benefit package is not for you?
- If you were a deemed resident in 2000 and you are reporting only income from a business with a permanent establishment in a province or territory of Canada, use the package for that province or territory.
- If you were a deemed resident and you returned to Canada to live during 2000, use the package for the province or territory where you lived on December 31, 2000.
- If you were a non-resident for all of 2000 and you are reporting only income from employment in Canada, or from a business with a permanent establishment in Canada, use the package for the province or territory where you earned the income. You should also get the guide called Non-Residents and Income Tax for the special rules that apply.
- If you are also reporting other types of Canadian-source income (such as scholarships, fellowships, bursaries, research grants, or capital gains from disposing of taxable Canadian property), you will need Form T2203, Provincial and Territorial Taxes for 2000 - Multiple Jurisdictions, to calculate your tax payable.
- If you were a non-resident during 2000 and you received Canadian-source rental income or timber royalties, and you are filing a return only to pay tax on this income using an alternative taxing method, use the package called Income Tax Guide for Electing Under Section 216.
- If you lived outside Canada during 2000, but you maintained residential ties (as defined on page 8) in Canada, generally we consider you to be a factual resident of Canada. Use the package for the province or territory where you kept your residential ties. However, this may not apply to a factual resident who became a resident of another county after February 24, 1998. For details, contact the International Tax Services Office.
- If you were a newcomer to Canada in 2000, use the package for the province or territory where you lived on December 31, 2000. You should also get the pamphlet Newcomers to Canada for the special rules that apply.
- If you emigrated from Canada during 2000, use the package for the province or territory where you lived on the day you left Canada. You should also get the pamphlet called Emigrants and Income Tax for the special rules that apply.
Where can you get the tax and benefit package you need?
You should have received the package you need based on our records. However, if after reading the above information, you cannot use this package, you can get the one you need from the International Tax Services Office. You will find the address and telephone numbers of the International Tax Services Office on the back cover of this guide.
Regardless of which tax package you use, send your return to the International Tax Services Office. Use the envelope included in this guide.
Social insurance number (SIN)
You have to give your SIN to anyone who prepares a tax information slip (such as a T3, T4, T5, or T600 slip) for you. If you do not give your SIN, you may have to pay a $100 penalty each time you do not provide it.
Check your information slips carefully. If your SIN is not shown on your slip or is incorrect, please advise the slip preparer. If you do not have a SIN, apply for one at any Human Resources Centre of Canada.
Canada Child Tax Benefit (CCTB)
If you are a deemed resident or if you are the spouse of a deemed resident, and you are responsible for the care of a child who is under 18, you can apply for the CCTB for that child. To do so, submit a completed Form RC66, Canada Child Tax Benefit Application, along with any other schedules and documents required, as soon as possible after the child is born or begins to live with you. This application also is used to apply for payments from related provincial or territorial programs. If you are a landed immigrant or Convention refugee, you should apply as soon as possible after you and your child arrive in Canada.
The CCTB is based on the net income (line 236) shown on your return and your spouse's (if applicable, see page 11) return. Therefore, to qualify for the benefit, you both have to file a return every year, even if there is no income to report.
However, if you are the non-resident spouse of a deemed resident, you will have to file Form CTB9, Canada Child Tax Benefit - Statement of Income, instead of filing a return for purposes of the Canada Child Tax Benefit.
Once you have applied for the CCTB, you have to advise us immediately of any of the following changes (as well as the date it happened or will happen):
- the child is no longer in your care, stops living with you, or dies;
- you move (or your payments may be interrupted, whether you receive them by direct deposit (see page 55) or by cheque);
- your marital status changes;
- you have your payments deposited directly into your account at a financial institution in Canada and your banking information changes; or
- your or your spouse's immigration or residency status changes.
For more information about the CCTB, get the pamphlet called Your Canada Child Tax Benefit, or call us at 1-800-387-1193.
- Date modified:
- 2002-11-30