Search - 报销 发票日期 消费日期不一致
Results 451 - 460 of 20503 for 报销 发票日期 消费日期不一致
Current CRA website
Line 45700 – Employee and partner GST/HST rebate
Line 45700 – Employee and partner GST/HST rebate If you deducted expenses from your income as an employee (line 21200 or line 22900) or as a partner (lines 13499 to 14300), you may be eligible for a rebate of the GST/HST you paid on those expenses. ... Forms and publications Income Tax Package Guide T4044, Employment Expenses Form GST370, Employee and Partner GST/HST Rebate Application Related topics Line 10400 – Other employment income Lines 13499 to 14300 – Self-employment income Line 21200 – Annual union, professional, or like dues Line 22900 – Other employment expenses Page details Date modified: 2025-01-21 ...
Old website (cra-arc.gc.ca)
Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) summary – Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) Incentive Program (Enhanced Expenditures Claim Form T661) - Scientific Research and Experimental Development Directorate, Compliance Programs Branch
Definitions (5.3) The following definitions apply in this subsection and subsections (5.1) and (5.2): "SR&ED form" / « formulaire de RS&DE » "SR&ED form" means a prescribed form required to be filed under subsection 37(11). ... "claim preparer information" / « renseignements relatifs au préparateur » "claim preparer information" means prescribed information regarding (a) the identity of the claim preparer, if any, of an SR&ED form, and (b) the arrangement under which the claim preparer agrees to accept consideration in respect of the preparation of the form. ... Summary of the project / initiative / change Budget 2013 introduced measures to provide the CRA with administrative tools to enable better risk assessment. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - General Guide for Non-Residents – 2013: Deductions (Net income and Taxable income)
Net income Line 205 – Pooled registered pension plan (PRPP) employer contributions Line 206 – Pension adjustment Line 207 – Registered pension plan (RPP) deduction Line 208 – RRSP/PRPP deduction Line 210 – Deduction for elected split-pension amount Line 212 – Annual union, professional, or like dues Line 213 – Universal child care benefit repayment Line 214 – Child care expenses Line 215 – Disability supports deduction Line 217 – Business investment loss Line 219 – Moving expenses Line 220 – Support payments made Line 221 – Carrying charges and interest expenses Line 222 – Deduction for CPP or QPP contributions on self-employment and other earnings Line 223 – Deduction for provincial parental insurance plan (PPIP) premiums on self-employment income Line 224 – Exploration and development expenses Line 229 – Other employment expenses Line 231 – Clergy residence deduction Line 232 – Other deductions Line 235 – Social benefits repayment Line 236 – Net income Taxable income (lines 244 to 260) Line 244 – Canadian Forces personnel and police deduction Line 248 – Employee home relocation loan deduction Line 249 – Security options deductions Line 250 – Other payments deduction Line 251 – Limited partnership losses of other years Line 252 – Non-capital losses of other years Line 253 – Net capital losses of other years Line 254 – Capital gains deduction Line 255 – Northern residents deductions Line 256 – Additional deductions Net income Line 205 – Pooled registered pension plan (PRPP) employer contributions Enter on line 205 the total of all amounts shown in the designated “employer contribution amount” box of your PRPP receipts. ... Lines 18 to 21 – 2013 withdrawals under the HBP and the LLP Deemed residents – Enter on line 18 the total of your HBP withdrawals for 2013 from box 27 of your T4RSP slips. ... Previous page | Table of contents | Next page Date modified: 2014-01-03 ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - General Guide for Non-Residents – 2013: Deductions (Net income and Taxable income)
Net income Line 205 – Pooled registered pension plan (PRPP) employer contributions Line 206 – Pension adjustment Line 207 – Registered pension plan (RPP) deduction Line 208 – RRSP/PRPP deduction Line 210 – Deduction for elected split-pension amount Line 212 – Annual union, professional, or like dues Line 213 – Universal child care benefit repayment Line 214 – Child care expenses Line 215 – Disability supports deduction Line 217 – Business investment loss Line 219 – Moving expenses Line 220 – Support payments made Line 221 – Carrying charges and interest expenses Line 222 – Deduction for CPP or QPP contributions on self-employment and other earnings Line 223 – Deduction for provincial parental insurance plan (PPIP) premiums on self-employment income Line 224 – Exploration and development expenses Line 229 – Other employment expenses Line 231 – Clergy residence deduction Line 232 – Other deductions Line 235 – Social benefits repayment Line 236 – Net income Taxable income (lines 244 to 260) Line 244 – Canadian Forces personnel and police deduction Line 248 – Employee home relocation loan deduction Line 249 – Security options deductions Line 250 – Other payments deduction Line 251 – Limited partnership losses of other years Line 252 – Non-capital losses of other years Line 253 – Net capital losses of other years Line 254 – Capital gains deduction Line 255 – Northern residents deductions Line 256 – Additional deductions Net income Line 205 – Pooled registered pension plan (PRPP) employer contributions Enter on line 205 the total of all amounts shown in the designated “employer contribution amount” box of your PRPP receipts. ... Lines 18 to 21 – 2013 withdrawals under the HBP and the LLP Deemed residents – Enter on line 18 the total of your HBP withdrawals for 2013 from box 27 of your T4RSP slips. ... Previous page | Table of contents | Next page Report a problem or mistake on this page Thank you for your help! ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - General Guide for Non-Residents – 2013: Deductions (Net income and Taxable income)
Net income Line 205 – Pooled registered pension plan (PRPP) employer contributions Line 206 – Pension adjustment Line 207 – Registered pension plan (RPP) deduction Line 208 – RRSP/PRPP deduction Line 210 – Deduction for elected split-pension amount Line 212 – Annual union, professional, or like dues Line 213 – Universal child care benefit repayment Line 214 – Child care expenses Line 215 – Disability supports deduction Line 217 – Business investment loss Line 219 – Moving expenses Line 220 – Support payments made Line 221 – Carrying charges and interest expenses Line 222 – Deduction for CPP or QPP contributions on self-employment and other earnings Line 223 – Deduction for provincial parental insurance plan (PPIP) premiums on self-employment income Line 224 – Exploration and development expenses Line 229 – Other employment expenses Line 231 – Clergy residence deduction Line 232 – Other deductions Line 235 – Social benefits repayment Line 236 – Net income Taxable income (lines 244 to 260) Line 244 – Canadian Forces personnel and police deduction Line 248 – Employee home relocation loan deduction Line 249 – Security options deductions Line 250 – Other payments deduction Line 251 – Limited partnership losses of other years Line 252 – Non-capital losses of other years Line 253 – Net capital losses of other years Line 254 – Capital gains deduction Line 255 – Northern residents deductions Line 256 – Additional deductions Net income ⬤▮▲Line 205 – Pooled registered pension plan (PRPP) employer contributions Enter on line 205 the total of all amounts shown in the designated “employer contribution amount” box of your PRPP receipts. ... Lines 18 to 21 – 2013 withdrawals under the HBP and the LLP Deemed residents – Enter on line 18 the total of your HBP withdrawals for 2013 from box 27 of your T4RSP slips. ... Previous page | Table of contents | Next page Page details Date modified: 2014-01-03 ...
Current CRA website
Calculate input tax credits – ITC eligibility percentage
If all other conditions for claiming an ITC are met and you use a fair and reasonable allocation method to determine that 70% of the utility bill relates to the store and 30% to the apartment, you can claim an ITC for 70% of the HST you pay on your utility bill: $80 (HST) × 70% = $56 (ITC) See example – Apportion of commercial activities and non-commercial activities Example – Apportion of commercial activities and non-commercial activities You own a building in Nova Scotia where you operate your retail store (a commercial activity), and you rent an apartment on the upper floor to a residential tenant on a long-term basis (an exempt activity). ... Examples – Club memberships Examples Then A GST/HST registrant purchases memberships to a tennis club for $10,000 plus $500 GST. ... ITC eligibility on the capital real property Percentage of use in commercial activities ITC eligibility for individuals, c orporations and partnerships ITC eligibility for p ublic service bodies Footnote 3B (including charities that have elected not to use the net tax calculation) ITC eligibility for Financial institutions Footnote 3C 90% or more 100% 100% % of use More than 50% and less than 90% % of use 100% % of use More than 10% and less than 50% % of use Footnote 3A No ITCs % of use 10% or less No ITCs No ITCs % of use Footnote 3a Return to footnote3a Referrer Individuals cannot claim an ITC if the property is used more than 50% for their personal use or that of a related individual, either individually or in combination. ...
Current CRA website
Ministerial Welcome Package – Book 2
The chart is titled 2019-20 Main Estimate Authorities = 4.5B in bold letters, and is located at the bottom-right of the image. ... Vote 5 – Capital (covering the acquisition or creation of mainly IT assets expected to exceed $10,000). ... Changes in CRA budget levels Voted 2015–16 ($ millions) 2016–17 ($ millions) 2017–18 ($ millions) 2018–18 ($ millions) 2019–20 ($ millions) Vote 1 – Operating 2,898.9 3,032.1 3,173.4 3,448.2 3,448.2 Vote 5 – Capital 80.5 37.1 59.4 70.8 25.9 Budget Implementation (Budget 2019) – – – – 60.9 Total Voted 2,979.4 3,069.2 3,232.7 3,288.1 3,535.0 Statutory 825.4 1,016.5 930.2 916.6 967.4 Total Main Estimates 3,804.8 4,085.7 4,162.9 4,204.7 4,502.4 Departmental forecast – 2019-20 departmental plan Departmental forecast – 2019–20 departmental plan 2019-20 Main Estimates Footnote 4 2019-20 Planned Spending 2020-21 Planned Spending 2021-22 Planned Spending Financial Resource ($ millions) 4,502.4 4,441.6 4,384.6 4,387.3 Human Resources (full-time equivalents) – 41,796 41,195 41,014 Over the 2019-20 to 2021-22 planning period, the CRA’s appropriations show a slight reduction primarily as a result of planned decreases in funding received to implement and administer various measures announced in the federal budgets as well as the federal carbon pollution pricing system and the upgrade of the individual income tax processing system. ...
Old website (cra-arc.gc.ca)
Early / Late Payments (GST 300-7-8)
" Act " means the Excise Tax Act; " consideration " may be money, a thing, a service, forbearance in the exercise of a right or anything else which induces the supplier to make the supply. ... Where the consideration is non-monetary, the fair market value of the consideration at the time the supply was made will be used to calculate the tax; " invoice " includes a statement of account, a bill and any other similar record regardless of its form or characteristics and a cash register slip or receipt; " person " means an individual, partnership, corporation, trust or estate, or a body that is a society, union, club, association, commission or other organization of any kind; " property " means any property, whether real or personal, movable or immovable, tangible or intangible, corporeal or incorporeal, and includes a right or interest of any kind, a share and a chose in action, but does not include money; " recipient ", in respect of a supply, means the person who pays or agrees to pay consideration for the supply or, if no consideration is or is to be paid for the supply, the person to whom the supply is made; " registrant " means a person who is registered, or who is required to apply to be registered, under sections 240 and 241 of the Excise Tax Act; " service " means anything other than: (a) property, (b) money, and (c) anything that is supplied to an employer by a person who is or agrees to become an officer or employee of the employer in the course of or in relation to the office or employment of that person; " supplier " in respect of a supply, means the person making the supply; " supply " means, subject to sections 133 and 134 of the Act, the provision of property or a service in any manner, including sale, transfer, barter, exchange, licence, rental, lease, gift or disposition; " tangible personal property " includes all objects or things that may be touched, felt or possessed, and that are movable at the time the supply is made, other than money and real property; " tax " means the Goods and Services Tax payable under Part IX of the Excise Tax Act; " taxable supply " means a supply that is made in the course of a commercial activity, but does not include an exempt supply. ... Additional information on price adjustments may be found in GST MEMORANDUM 300-7-19, " PRICE REDUCTIONS AND CREDIT NOTES ". ...
Old website (cra-arc.gc.ca)
Prince Edward Island HST Rate Increase – Information for Non-registrant Builders
For further details, refer to GST/HST Info Sheet GI-194, Prince Edward Island HST Rate Increase – Sales and Rentals of New Housing. ... The grandparenting rules are explained in GST/HST Info Sheet GI-194, Prince Edward Island HST Rate Increase – Sales and Rentals of New Housing. ... For sales or self-supplies of new housing that were previously purchased on a grandparented basis for purposes of the Prince Edward Island HST rate increase only (that is, the original purchase by the non-registrant builder was subject to the HST at 14%) the non-registrant builder should identify the number of these housing units sold or self-supplied, and the total of the purchase prices paid by the non-registrant builder for those units using the heading “ Total Original Purchases – Prince Edward Island 1% ” in its letter. ...
Current CRA website
Prince Edward Island HST Rate Increase – Information for Non-registrant Builders
For further details, refer to GST/HST Info Sheet GI-194, Prince Edward Island HST Rate Increase – Sales and Rentals of New Housing. ... The grandparenting rules are explained in GST/HST Info Sheet GI-194, Prince Edward Island HST Rate Increase – Sales and Rentals of New Housing. ... For sales or self-supplies of new housing that were previously purchased on a grandparented basis for purposes of the Prince Edward Island HST rate increase only (that is, the original purchase by the non-registrant builder was subject to the HST at 14%) the non-registrant builder should identify the number of these housing units sold or self-supplied, and the total of the purchase prices paid by the non-registrant builder for those units using the heading “ Total Original Purchases – Prince Edward Island 1% ” in its letter. ...