Quick Answer: Taxes for New Immigrants to Canada (2026)
If you became a resident of Canada in 2025, you must file a Canadian income tax return (the T1 General) by April 30, 2026 — even if you earned little or no Canadian income. You become a tax resident on the date you establish significant residential ties (a home — see renting your first apartment) (a home, spouse, or dependants in Canada), and you are taxed on your world income only from that date forward. Filing is what works hand in hand with opening your first Canadian bank account, and unlocks newcomer benefits such as the GST/HST credit and the Canada Child Benefit (CCB), so filing on time — even with zero income — is almost always to your advantage. Most newcomers can file online for free using NETFILE-certified software once they have a Social Insurance Number (SIN).
| Your Situation | What to Do | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Arrived in 2025, employed | File T1 reporting world income from arrival date | April 30, 2026 |
| Arrived in 2025, no Canadian income | File T1 anyway to receive benefits/credits | April 30, 2026 |
| Self-employed newcomer | File T1 + business schedule | June 15, 2026 (tax owing still due Apr 30) |
| Hold foreign assets > CAD $100,000 | File T1 + Form T1135 | April 30, 2026 |
🔑 Key Takeaways
- You become a Canadian tax resident the day you establish significant residential ties — not necessarily the day you land.
- Your first return (T1) covers only the part of the year you were a resident, so several credits are prorated.
- Canada uses a progressive federal system (five brackets in 2026) plus a separate provincial/territorial layer.
- Filing — even with no income — triggers benefits like the GST/HST credit, CCB, and provincial credits.
- Foreign assets over CAD $100,000 require Form T1135; missing it carries steep penalties.
- Tax treaties and the foreign tax credit generally prevent double taxation on the same income.
- Free help exists: CRA CVITP clinics and settlement agencies (which also help with essentials like a newcomer phone plan) file simple returns at no cost.
Introduction: Why Canadian Taxes Matter From Day One
Arriving in a new country brings a long to-do list, and taxes rarely feel urgent in the first weeks. Yet your relationship with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) begins the moment you establish residential ties — and getting it right early protects both your money and your immigration record. Unlike some countries that tax based on citizenship, Canada taxes based on residency. Once you are a resident, Canada wants to know about your worldwide income from that point onward, and in return it offers a generous set of refundable credits and benefits that many newcomers leave unclaimed simply because they did not file.
This guide walks you through the entire process: how residency is determined, what income you must report, the 2026 federal and provincial brackets, the deductions and credits you can claim, how to actually file, and the mistakes that cost newcomers the most. It includes real case studies, a province-by-province snapshot, a complete filing checklist, and more than 20 frequently asked questions. Wherever a rule could change your tax bill, we point you to the official CRA source so you can verify it yourself.
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The Newcomer Tax Timeline: Your First 12 Months With the CRA
Who This Guide Is For
This guide is written for anyone who became a Canadian resident in 2025 and is approaching their first tax season: permanent residents, work-permit and study-permit holders who are resident for tax purposes, protected persons and refugees, and returning Canadians re-establishing ties. Whether you arrived with a job offer in hand or are still settling in, the same core rules apply, and the same opportunities to claim benefits are available. We have organised the guide so you can read it start to finish before filing, or jump to the specific section — residency, brackets, credits, foreign income, or filing steps — that matches the question in front of you today.
Knowing when each step happens removes most of the stress. Here is the typical sequence for someone who lands during the year.
| Time After Arrival | Action | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1–2 | Apply for your SIN at Service Canada | Required to work and to file taxes |
| Month 1 | Open a Canadian bank account; keep arrival records | Needed for direct-deposit refunds and proof of residency date |
| Month 1–2 | Register for CRA My Account | Track benefits, file, and view your Notice of Assessment |
| Within 11 months | Apply for the GST/HST credit and CCB (newcomer forms) | You can claim benefits before your first return |
| By Feb of next year | Collect T4 / T5 slips for the prior year | Employers issue slips for income paid |
| By April 30 | File your first T1 return | Confirms benefits and reports world income from arrival |
1. Understanding Canadian Tax Residency: Your Most Important First Step
Everything in your first Canadian tax year flows from one question: when did you become a tax resident? Canada does not use your landing date automatically; it uses the date you established significant residential ties.
1.1 What Makes You a Canadian Tax Resident?
The CRA looks first at primary residential ties: a home in Canada, a spouse or common-law partner who lives in Canada, and dependants in Canada. If you have these, you are almost certainly a resident for tax purposes. Secondary ties — a Canadian driver’s licence, bank accounts, health coverage, memberships, and personal property — support the determination.
1.2 Part-Year Residents
Most people who immigrate during the year are part-year residents. You report world income only for the part of the year after you arrived, and several non-refundable credits (including the basic personal amount) are prorated based on the number of days you were a resident.
1.3 Deemed Residents and Deemed Non-Residents
If you spend 183 days or more in Canada in a year but do not establish residential ties, you may be a deemed resident, taxed on world income but subject to different provincial rules. Deemed non-residents typically apply where a tax treaty makes you a resident of another country. When your situation is unusual, confirm it directly with the CRA before filing.
1.3b Why Your Exact Arrival Date Matters So Much
Because your basic personal amount and several credits are prorated by the number of days you were a resident, your arrival date is not a formality — it directly changes your refund. A newcomer who arrives on March 1 has roughly ten months of residency, while one who arrives on November 1 has only two, and their prorated credits differ accordingly. Keep documentary proof of your arrival (your passport stamp, COPR, or landing record), because the CRA may ask you to substantiate the date that anchors your entire first return. If you established ties before physically arriving — for example, a spouse already living in Canada — your residency date may be earlier than your own landing, which is exactly the kind of nuance worth confirming with the CRA.
1.4 Tax Residency Decision Tree
Use this quick logic to identify your likely status (always confirm edge cases with the CRA):
| Question | If Yes | If No |
|---|---|---|
| Do you have a home, spouse, or dependants in Canada? | → Likely resident from the date ties began | Go to next question |
| Did you spend 183+ days in Canada this year? | → Likely deemed resident | Go to next question |
| Do you have significant secondary ties (licence, bank, health card)? | → Possible factual resident — confirm with CRA | → Likely non-resident for the period |
| Does a tax treaty make you resident elsewhere? | → Possible deemed non-resident | → Status stands as above |
2. Getting Your SIN and CRA My Account
2.1 How to Get Your SIN
Your Social Insurance Number (SIN) is a nine-digit number you need to work and to file taxes. Apply free at any Service Canada office (often same-day) or by mail, bringing your passport and immigration document (PR card/COPR, work permit, or study permit). Temporary residents receive a SIN that may begin with the digit 9 and carries an expiry date matching the permit.
2.2 Registering for CRA My Account
CRA My Account is your central hub: track benefit payments, see your Notice of Assessment, check RRSP/TFSA room, and file or adjust returns. Register at the CRA website using your SIN and a recent tax detail; first-time newcomers may need to file once before full access opens. Setting up direct deposit here ensures refunds and benefits arrive quickly.
3. What Income Must You Report?
As a resident, you report your world income — Canadian and foreign — earned from your residency start date. This includes employment income, self-employment, investment income, rental income, and most foreign pensions. Income earned before you became a resident is generally not taxed in Canada, though it may affect the proration of certain credits.
3.1 Foreign Income Reporting
Foreign income earned after arrival is taxable in Canada, but the foreign tax credit usually offsets tax you already paid abroad on the same income, preventing double taxation. Separately, if you owned specified foreign property costing more than CAD $100,000 at any point in the year, you must file Form T1135 — this is an information form, not an extra tax, but the penalties for skipping it are severe.
3.2 The T1161 List of Properties
If you later cease to be a resident, Form T1161 reports properties you owned when you left. Newcomers rarely need it in year one, but it is worth knowing it exists if your plans change.
4. The Canadian Tax System: Federal and Provincial Brackets 2026
Canada layers two income taxes: a federal tax that applies everywhere, plus a provincial or territorial tax that varies by where you live on December 31. Both are progressive — only the income within each bracket is taxed at that bracket’s rate.
4.1 Federal Tax Brackets 2026 (illustrative)
| Taxable Income (CAD) | Federal Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to ~$55,900 | 15% |
| ~$55,900 – ~$111,700 | 20.5% |
| ~$111,700 – ~$173,200 | 26% |
| ~$173,200 – ~$246,800 | 29% |
| Over ~$246,800 | 33% |
Brackets are indexed annually for inflation. Confirm the exact 2026 thresholds on the CRA website before filing.
4.2 Provincial Tax Rates Comparison 2026 (lowest bracket, illustrative)
| Province / Territory | Lowest Provincial Rate (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Ontario | 5.05% |
| British Columbia | 5.06% |
| Alberta | 10% (flat-ish low brackets) |
| Quebec | 14% (files a separate provincial return) |
| Manitoba | 10.8% |
| Nova Scotia | 8.79% |
Note for Quebec residents: Quebec administers its own income tax, so you file a federal return and a separate Revenu Québec return.
5. Key Deductions and Credits for New Immigrants
Deductions lower the income you are taxed on; credits lower the tax itself. As a part-year resident, many of these are prorated for your days of residency.
5.1 Basic Personal Amount (BPA)
Every resident can earn a baseline amount tax-free (around CAD $15,000+ federally in 2026). For part-year residents this is generally prorated by days of residency unless 90%+ of your world income for the non-resident part of the year was Canadian-sourced.
5.2 Moving Expenses
Moving costs from abroad to Canada are usually not deductible. However, if you later move within Canada at least 40 km closer to a new job or school, those costs may qualify.
5.3 RRSP Contributions
RRSP room is based on your prior-year Canadian earned income, so most newcomers have little or no room in year one. It builds quickly after your first full year of Canadian income.
5.4 Childcare Expenses
Eligible childcare costs that let you work or study can be deducted, typically by the lower-income spouse.
5.5 Canada Employment Amount, Union & Professional Dues, medical expenses (premiums you pay for private health insurance may qualify)
Employees can claim the Canada Employment Amount; union/professional dues are deductible; and medical expenses above a threshold generate a credit. Keep every receipt from your arrival date forward.
6. Benefits Available to New Immigrants
These refundable benefits pay cash even if you owe no tax — but you generally must file (and often submit a newcomer application form) to receive them.
6.1 GST/HST Credit
A quarterly, tax-free payment for low- and modest-income residents. Newcomers can apply using the CRA’s newcomer benefit form on arrival.
6.2 Canada Child Benefit (CCB)
A tax-free monthly payment for families with children under 18. Apply with the newcomer form; amounts depend on family income and number of children.
6.3 Provincial Credits (e.g., Ontario Trillium Benefit)
Provinces add their own credits — Ontario’s Trillium Benefit bundles energy, property-tax, and sales-tax credits, for example. Filing your return is what activates them.
6.4 Canada Workers Benefit (CWB)
A refundable credit topping up the income of lower-paid workers; claimed on your return.
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7. Step-by-Step: Filing Your First Tax Return
Step 1 — Gather your documents. SIN, arrival date, T4/T5 slips, foreign income records, receipts, and dependants’ details.
Step 2 — Choose your filing method. NETFILE-certified software (many free options), a tax professional, or a free CVITP clinic for simple returns.
Step 3 — Complete Form T1 General. Enter your residency date so credits prorate correctly.
Step 4 — Report world income from your arrival date and claim any foreign tax credit for tax paid abroad.
Step 5 — Submit via NETFILE or mail. NETFILE is fastest and confirms receipt instantly.
Step 6 — Review your Notice of Assessment (NOA). The CRA’s official summary of your return; it shows your refund or balance and your RRSP room.
7.1 Key Tax Forms for Newcomers
| Form | Purpose | Who Needs It |
|---|---|---|
| T1 General | Main income tax return | All residents |
| T1135 | Foreign income verification | Foreign property > CAD $100k |
| RC151 | GST/HST credit application (no children) | Newcomers |
| RC66 | Canada Child Benefit application | Newcomers with children |
| Schedule A | Statement of world income | Part-year residents |
8. Important Deadlines and Penalties
| Item | Date 2026 |
|---|---|
| Filing deadline (employees) | April 30, 2026 |
| Balance owing due (everyone) | April 30, 2026 |
| Self-employed filing deadline | June 15, 2026 |
| RRSP contribution deadline (for 2025) | March 2, 2026 |
Late penalties: the CRA charges 5% of the balance owing plus 1% per month late (higher for repeat offenders), plus compound daily interest. Filing on time even when you cannot pay in full avoids the larger filing penalty.
9. Common Tax Mistakes New Immigrants Make
- Not filing because they had no income — this forfeits the GST/HST credit, CCB, and provincial credits.
- Forgetting foreign income or the T1135 — penalties for the unfiled T1135 can reach thousands of dollars.
- Claiming full credits instead of prorated amounts as a part-year resident, triggering a reassessment.
- Missing the deadline and losing benefits plus paying penalties and interest.
- Ignoring provincial tax or Quebec’s separate return.
- Not keeping receipts from the arrival date, making credits hard to substantiate.
10. Real Newcomer Case Studies
Case Study 1: Priya — IT Professional from India, Arrived March 15, 2025
Priya landed as a permanent resident and started a Toronto job in April. She files a part-year return reporting her Canadian salary from her arrival date and prorates her basic personal amount for ~292 days of residency. Because she paid Indian tax on January–March income earned before arriving, that pre-residency income is not taxed in Canada. She registers for CRA My Account and receives the GST/HST credit after filing.
Case Study 2: Mohammed — Refugee, Arrived October 1, 2025, Two Children
Mohammed has no Canadian income in 2025 but files anyway. Filing unlocks the GST/HST credit and the Canada Child Benefit for his two children — several hundred dollars a month — and provincial credits. For him, filing a “nil” return is one of the most financially important things he does in his first year.
Case Study 3: Chen — Investor from Hong Kong, Arrived June 1, 2025, Significant Foreign Assets
Chen owns overseas investments worth over CAD $400,000. He must file the T1 plus Form T1135 because his specified foreign property exceeds CAD $100,000. He reports investment income earned after June 1 and uses the foreign tax credit for tax withheld abroad. He hires a cross-border accountant to handle treaty positions correctly.
Case Study 4: Maria — International Student to PR, Mexico
Maria studied in Canada, then transitioned to permanent residence. As a student she was already filing to claim the GST/HST credit and tuition amounts; once she began full-time work, her filing simply continued, and her accumulated tuition credits reduced her first big tax bill.
What These Cases Teach Newcomers
Across all four scenarios, the same lessons recur. First, the arrival date drives everything — it determines how much income is reportable and how credits prorate. Second, filing pays, most dramatically for Mohammed, whose nil return unlocked thousands in annual benefits. Third, complexity scales with foreign assets: Priya’s salaried return is straightforward, while Chen’s foreign holdings demand the T1135 and professional help. Finally, continuity matters — Maria’s habit of filing as a student carried valuable tuition credits into her working years. Wherever you fall on this spectrum, the safe default is to file early, claim everything you are entitled to, and keep meticulous records from your first day as a resident.
11. Foreign Income, Tax Treaties & Avoiding Double Taxation
Canada has tax treaties with most major countries (including India, the UK, the US, China, the Philippines, and many others). These treaties decide which country taxes a given type of income and provide relief from double taxation, usually through the foreign tax credit: you report the foreign income, then credit the foreign tax already paid against your Canadian tax on that income. Pension and government-benefit income often has special treaty treatment, so check the specific treaty for your country.
11.1 Comparative Analysis: How Canada Compares for Newcomer Taxation
| Feature | Canada | United States | United Kingdom |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tax basis | Residency | Citizenship + residency | Residency + domicile |
| World income taxed? | Yes, from residency date | Yes, for citizens/residents worldwide | Yes (with remittance options) |
| Refundable newcomer benefits | Generous (GST/HST, CCB) | Limited | Moderate |
| Foreign asset reporting | T1135 (>CAD $100k) | FBAR / FATCA | Varies |
12. Self-Employed Newcomers: Additional Obligations
If you freelance or run a business, you report business income on your T1 with the relevant business statement, get until June 15 to file (though any tax owing is still due April 30), and must register for GST/HST once revenue exceeds CAD $30,000 over four consecutive quarters. Keep clean books and set aside money for tax, since nothing is withheld for you.
13. Cryptocurrency and Digital Assets
The CRA treats crypto as a commodity. Selling, trading, or spending crypto can trigger a capital gain (50% taxable) or business income, depending on activity. Keep records of acquisition cost and disposal value in Canadian dollars from your arrival date.
14. RRSP and TFSA: Your Long-Term Tax Tools
The RRSP defers tax: contributions reduce taxable income now and grow tax-free until withdrawal. Room builds from your Canadian earned income, so it grows after year one. The TFSA grows tax-free with no deduction; TFSA room starts accumulating only once you are a resident (from the year you arrive, not from age 18 if you immigrated later). Used together, they are the backbone of newcomer financial planning.
15. When to Hire a Tax Professional
Do it yourself with NETFILE software if your situation is simple (employment income, basic credits). Consider a professional if you have significant foreign assets, business income, cross-border pensions, rental property abroad, or treaty questions. For low-income simple returns, the free CVITP clinics are an excellent option.
16. Practical Checklist: Newcomer Tax Preparation
- ☐ Apply for and receive your SIN
- ☐ Note your exact residency start date
- ☐ Register for CRA My Account and set up direct deposit
- ☐ Apply for the GST/HST credit (RC151) and CCB (RC66) if eligible
- ☐ Collect all T4/T5 slips and foreign income records
- ☐ Determine if you need Form T1135 (foreign property > CAD $100k)
- ☐ Keep receipts for childcare, medical, dues, and donations
- ☐ Choose NETFILE software, a CVITP clinic, or a professional
- ☐ File and pay any balance by April 30, 2026
- ☐ Review your Notice of Assessment and save it
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How to Choose Your Filing Method: Full Comparison
There are three realistic ways to file your first Canadian return, and the right one depends on the complexity of your situation and your budget. Choosing well in year one sets a pattern you will likely repeat annually.
| Method | Best For | Cost | Speed | Watch-outs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NETFILE software (DIY) | Employment income, basic credits | Free–$30 | Refund in ~2 weeks | You are responsible for accuracy |
| CVITP free clinic | Modest income, simple returns | Free | Seasonal (Feb–Apr) | Income limits apply |
| Tax professional / accountant | Foreign assets, business, treaties | $100–$500+ | Varies | Choose one with cross-border experience |
For most salaried newcomers, NETFILE-certified software is the sweet spot: it walks you through residency questions, prorates credits, and transmits directly to the CRA with instant confirmation. If your situation includes significant foreign property, rental income abroad, business income, or a country with complex treaty rules, the cost of a professional is usually justified by the errors and penalties it prevents.
Understanding NETFILE, Auto-fill, and Your Slips
NETFILE is the CRA’s secure electronic filing service. Many software products also support Auto-fill my return, which pulls your T4, T5, and other slips directly from CRA My Account once they are available — typically by late February. In your very first year, some slips may not yet appear, so keep paper copies. After filing, you receive a confirmation number immediately, and your Notice of Assessment usually follows within two weeks for electronic returns.
Foreign Income, Pensions, and the T1135 in Practice
For many newcomers, the trickiest area is foreign income, because the rules feel counterintuitive: Canada taxes your world income, yet it also relieves double taxation. Here is how it works in practice.
Employment and investment income earned after your residency date is reported in Canadian dollars, converted at the appropriate exchange rate. If a foreign country withheld tax on that income, you claim a foreign tax credit so you are not taxed twice on the same dollars.
Foreign pensions are often taxable in Canada, but tax treaties can change which country gets to tax them and at what rate. Government social-security-type pensions are a common example where the treaty matters, so check your country’s specific agreement.
Form T1135 is an information return required when the total cost of your specified foreign property exceeds CAD $100,000 at any time in the year. This includes foreign bank accounts, shares of foreign companies, and foreign real estate held for investment — but generally not personal-use property or property in a registered plan. The form itself adds no tax, yet failing to file it can trigger penalties of CAD $25 per day up to thousands of dollars, so newcomers with assets abroad should treat it seriously.
Building Your Financial Foundation Alongside Your Tax History
Filing taxes is one pillar of settling in Canada; banking and credit are the others, and they reinforce each other. A Canadian bank account gives the CRA somewhere to direct-deposit your refunds and benefits. Your tax records — especially the Notice of Assessment — are documents lenders and landlords routinely request. And as you build a filing history, you also build the financial track record that makes approvals for credit cards, car loans, and eventually a mortgage far smoother. Treating taxes, banking, and credit as one connected system from day one is what separates newcomers who feel financially settled in year two from those still struggling with paperwork.
Deep Dive: Each Major Newcomer Credit Explained
Refundable credits are where newcomers most often leave money unclaimed. Here is each one in practical detail, with who qualifies and how the money actually arrives.
GST/HST Credit — In Detail
The GST/HST credit is a tax-free quarterly payment designed to offset the sales tax that lower- and modest-income residents pay. As a newcomer, you do not have to wait until your first tax return: you can apply on arrival using Form RC151 (if you have no children). The CRA calculates your entitlement from your family net income, so a single newcomer with little first-year income often qualifies for the maximum. Payments land in January, April, July, and October. If you set up direct deposit in CRA My Account, the money arrives automatically; otherwise it comes by cheque. Many newcomers who skip filing in a no-income year unknowingly forfeit four quarterly payments.
Canada Child Benefit (CCB) — In Detail
The CCB is one of the most generous family benefits in the developed world, paying tax-free monthly amounts per child under 18 based on family income. A lower-income newcomer family with two young children can receive a substantial monthly sum. Apply with Form RC66 plus the RC66SCH newcomer schedule, which asks about your residency and immigration status. Because the benefit is recalculated every July based on the prior year’s return, filing on time each year keeps your payments uninterrupted. Provinces frequently top up the federal CCB with their own child benefits, paid in the same deposit.
Provincial Credits — In Detail
Every province layers its own refundable credits on top of the federal ones. Ontario’s Trillium Benefit combines the Ontario Energy and Property Tax Credit, the Northern Ontario Energy Credit, and the Ontario Sales Tax Credit into one payment. British Columbia, Alberta, and others have their own climate and affordability credits. The common thread: none of them pay out unless you file a return, and most have a residency-date sensitivity in your first year, so accuracy on your arrival date matters.
Canada Workers Benefit (CWB) — In Detail
The CWB tops up the income of lower-paid workers and can be received partly in advance. For a newcomer who starts working mid-year in a modest-paying job, the CWB can add a meaningful refundable amount at tax time. It is claimed on Schedule 6 of your return, and eligibility depends on working income and net income thresholds that vary by province and family situation.
Province-by-Province Snapshot for Newcomers
Where you settle changes both your provincial tax and the credits available to you. This snapshot highlights what newcomers most need to know in the largest destination provinces.
| Province | Separate Return? | Notable Newcomer Credits | Key Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | No | Ontario Trillium Benefit, Ontario Child Benefit | Largest newcomer destination; file to activate Trillium |
| British Columbia | No | BC Family Benefit, Climate Action Tax Credit | High housing costs but strong credits |
| Alberta | No | Alberta Child and Family Benefit | No provincial sales tax; relatively low rates |
| Quebec | Yes | Solidarity Tax Credit, Family Allowance | File a separate Revenu Québec return |
| Manitoba | No | Education Property Tax Credit | Lower cost of living |
Deductions vs. Credits: A Worked Example
Newcomers often confuse deductions and credits. A deduction reduces the income you are taxed on; a credit reduces the tax itself. Consider a newcomer with CAD $45,000 of Canadian income after arriving in May. A $2,000 childcare deduction lowers taxable income to $43,000, saving roughly the deduction multiplied by their marginal rate. A $2,000 non-refundable credit instead reduces tax payable directly at the lowest rate. Knowing the difference helps you prioritise which receipts to keep and which forms to complete first.
| Type | What It Reduces | Examples | Refundable? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deduction | Taxable income | RRSP, childcare, union dues | n/a |
| Non-refundable credit | Tax payable (to zero) | Basic personal amount, tuition, medical | No |
| Refundable credit | Tax payable (can pay cash) | GST/HST credit, CWB, CCB | Yes |
Getting Free Help: CRA Programs and Settlement Agencies
You do not have to navigate this alone. The CRA’s Community Volunteer Income Tax Program (CVITP) runs free tax clinics across the country where trained volunteers prepare simple returns for people with modest income — ideal for many first-year newcomers. Immigrant settlement agencies (funded by IRCC) often host these clinics and can also help you understand benefit applications, translate documents, and register for CRA My Account. Public libraries and community centres frequently advertise clinic dates between February and April. If your return is simple, these services can file it accurately at no cost.
Expert Recommendation: What Most Newcomers Should Do
For the overwhelming majority of newcomers, the right move is simple: get your SIN, register for CRA My Account, apply for benefits on arrival, and file your first T1 on time even if your income was small. The filing itself is what releases hundreds — sometimes thousands — of dollars in refundable benefits, and it starts a clean compliance record. Use free NETFILE software or a CVITP clinic if your return is straightforward, and only pay for a professional if you have foreign assets over CAD $100,000, business income, or treaty complications. The single most expensive mistake is not filing because you assumed you didn’t have to.
Frequently Asked Questions: Taxes for Newcomers in Canada
1. Do I have to file a Canadian tax return if I just arrived and have no Canadian income?
Usually yes — and you should want to. Filing unlocks the GST/HST credit, CCB, and provincial credits even with zero income.
2. I arrived in November. Do I file for the whole year?
No. You file as a part-year resident, reporting world income only from your arrival date, with prorated credits.
3. What is the tax deadline for new immigrants?
April 30, 2026 for employees (June 15 to file if self-employed, though tax owing is still due April 30).
4. Will I be double-taxed on income from my home country?
Generally no. Tax treaties and the foreign tax credit offset tax already paid abroad on the same income.
5. Do I need to report the money I brought with me to Canada?
No. Savings you bring are capital, not income. However, income that capital later earns in Canada is taxable, and foreign property over CAD $100,000 requires Form T1135.
6. Do I need to report my home-country bank accounts?
If your total specified foreign property cost exceeds CAD $100,000 at any time in the year, yes — via Form T1135.
7. How do I apply for the Canada Child Benefit as a newcomer?
Use Form RC66 (and the newcomer schedule). You can apply soon after arrival rather than waiting for your first return.
8. Do I need a Canadian bank account to receive refunds and benefits?
Strongly recommended. Direct deposit through CRA My Account is the fastest way to receive payments.
9. I worked remotely for a foreign employer after arriving. Is that taxable in Canada?
Yes. As a resident, income earned while in Canada is taxable here, even if the employer is abroad.
10. What happens if I miss the filing deadline?
You face a 5% late penalty plus 1% per month and interest, and benefit payments can be delayed or stopped.
11. Can I use RRSP contributions in my first year?
Only up to your available room, which is based on prior-year Canadian earned income — usually little or none in year one.
12. What is a Notice of Assessment (NOA)?
The CRA’s official summary confirming your return, refund/balance, and RRSP room. Keep it; lenders and landlords often request it.
13. Can I file Canadian taxes from outside Canada?
Yes, you can NETFILE or mail from abroad, though some newcomer first-year returns may need to be mailed.
14. What is the difference between RRSP and TFSA?
RRSP gives a deduction now and is taxed on withdrawal; TFSA gives no deduction but grows and withdraws tax-free.
15. Do student-visa holders pay Canadian taxes?
If they are residents for tax purposes, yes — and filing lets them claim the GST/HST credit and tuition amounts.
16. What is the CRA’s CVITP program?
The Community Volunteer Income Tax Program offers free tax-clinic help for people with modest income and simple returns.
17. What if I had Canadian rental income before becoming a resident?
Non-resident rental income has its own withholding and reporting rules (often via Section 216). Confirm the specifics with the CRA.
18. My employer paid me partly in cash. Do I report it?
Yes. All income is reportable regardless of how it was paid.
19. Can I deduct the cost of moving to Canada?
Moving to Canada from abroad is generally not deductible, but later eligible moves within Canada for work/study may be.
20. Can the CRA audit me as a newcomer?
Yes. Keep records and receipts from your arrival date so you can substantiate income and credits if asked.
21. If I leave Canada later, what happens to my taxes?
You may become a non-resident and could face a “departure tax” on certain assets; Form T1161 may apply. Plan ahead with an advisor.
22. How do I know which province’s tax I pay?
Your province of residence on December 31 determines your provincial tax for the year.
EEAT: About This Guide and Author
This guide is maintained by the editorial team at MoneyAbroadGuide, which specializes in financial and settlement information for immigrants to Canada and the USA. Our content is researched against official government sources and reviewed for accuracy each tax year. Tax rules change and individual situations vary — this article is general information, not personalized tax advice. For decisions affecting your specific circumstances, consult the CRA or a qualified tax professional.
Glossary: Canadian Tax Terms Every Newcomer Should Know
Canadian tax has its own vocabulary. Learning these terms early makes software prompts, CRA letters, and accountant conversations far less intimidating.
| Term | What It Means for You |
|---|---|
| Tax resident | Someone taxed on world income because of residential ties to Canada. |
| Part-year resident | A newcomer who was a resident for only part of the tax year; credits are prorated. |
| T1 General | The main personal income tax return you file each year. |
| Notice of Assessment (NOA) | The CRA’s official summary of your filed return, refund/balance, and RRSP room. |
| Marginal rate | The tax rate on your next dollar of income, not your whole income. |
| Refundable credit | A credit that can pay you cash even if you owe no tax (e.g., GST/HST credit). |
| Non-refundable credit | A credit that reduces tax owing to zero but is not paid out as cash. |
| World income | All income from Canadian and foreign sources earned while a resident. |
| Foreign tax credit | Relief for tax already paid abroad on income also taxed in Canada. |
| NETFILE | The CRA’s secure system for filing your return electronically. |
A Realistic First-Year Tax Timeline Recap
To bring everything together, picture a newcomer who lands in spring. Within two weeks they get a SIN. Within a month they open a bank account, register for CRA My Account, and submit the GST/HST and CCB newcomer applications so benefits begin flowing before any return is filed. Through the year they keep every income slip and receipt. The following February their slips appear in Auto-fill; they choose NETFILE software, enter their arrival date so credits prorate, report world income from that date, claim the foreign tax credit for any tax paid abroad, and transmit before April 30. Two weeks later their Notice of Assessment confirms a refund, and their benefit payments continue uninterrupted. That orderly sequence — not any clever loophole — is what a successful first Canadian tax year looks like.
Sources and References
- Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) — Newcomers to Canada (immigrants): Canada Revenue Agency – Newcomers to Canada (immigrants)
- CRA — Determining your residency status: Canada Revenue Agency – Determining your residency status
- CRA — Federal income tax rates and brackets: Canada Revenue Agency – Federal income tax rates and brackets
- CRA — Foreign income verification statement (T1135): Canada Revenue Agency – Form T1135 Foreign Income Verification Statement
- CRA — GST/HST credit and Canada Child Benefit: Canada Revenue Agency – GST/HST credit and Canada Child Benefit
- Service Canada — Social Insurance Number: Service Canada – Social Insurance Number (SIN)
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- Rent Without Credit in Canada 2026
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- First Apartment in Canada for New Immigrants (2026)
- Cost of Living in Canada for New Immigrants (2026)
Conclusion: File Early, Claim Everything, Stay Compliant
Your first Canadian tax return is less about how much you owe and more about what you unlock. By understanding your residency date, reporting world income from that day, claiming every credit you’re entitled to, and filing on time, you turn tax season from a worry into a source of refunds and benefits. Bookmark the official CRA pages above, keep your records from day one, and revisit this guide each January as the new brackets are confirmed.
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Written by Talal Eddaouahiri
Founder & Editor-in-Chief | Former International Banking Executive
Talal is a Moroccan immigrant to the USA with 15+ years of experience in international banking. He founded MoneyAbroadGuide to help newcomers navigate the financial complexities of moving abroad.
