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Koroll & Company Blog

Understanding The CRA’s Post-Assessment Review Process

[fa icon="calendar'] Aug 24, 2017 10:22:00 AM / by Allen Koroll posted in CRA

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While Canadians typically think of taxes only in the spring when the annual return must be filed, taxes are a year-round business for the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). The CRA is busy processing and issuing Notices of Assessment for individual tax returns during the February to June filing season.

To date, in 2017, the CRA has received and processed just under 28 million individual income tax returns. That volume of returns and the CRA’s self-imposed processing turnaround goals (two to six weeks, depending on the filing method) mean that the CRA cannot possibly do an in-depth review of each return filed prior to issuing the Notice of Assessment.

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Understanding the CPP Post-Retirement Benefit

[fa icon="calendar'] Aug 18, 2017 1:18:00 PM / by Allen Koroll posted in Pension Plans, CRA

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The traditional idea of retirement – working full-time until age 65 and then leaving the workforce completely to live on government-sponsored and private sources of retirement income – has undergone a lot of changes over the past couple of decades, and Canada’s government-sponsored retirement income system has evolved in response.

Generally, the changes to the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) and Old Age Security (OAS) programs have increased the flexibility of those programs and, in particular, have given individuals a greater range of choices with respect to, especially, the timing of their receipt of CPP and OAS.

The downside of that increased flexibility has been to make the system — and therefore the choices available to Canadians — more complex. One aspect of that complexity is the (relatively) new CPP post-retirement benefit, or PRB.

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Responding to A First Installment Reminder From The CRA

[fa icon="calendar'] Aug 14, 2017 4:44:35 PM / by Allen Koroll posted in CRA

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Sometime around the middle of August, millions of Canadians will receive unexpected mail from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA), and that mail will contain unfamiliar and unwelcome news. Specifically, the enclosed form will advise the recipient that, in the view of the CRA, he or she should make instalment payments of income tax on September 15 and December 15th of this year – and will helpfully identify the amounts which should be paid on each date.

No one particularly likes receiving unexpected mail from the tax authorities, and correspondence which suggests that the recipient should be making payments of tax to the CRA during the year (instead of when he or she files the return for the year next April) is likely to be both perplexing and somewhat alarming. It’s fair to say that most Canadians aren’t familiar with the payment of income tax by instalments, and are therefore at a loss to know how to proceed the first time they receive an Instalment Reminder.

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Deciding Whether to Dispute your Tax Assessment

[fa icon="calendar'] Jul 31, 2017 2:28:44 PM / by Allen Koroll posted in CRA

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The variety of amounts and kinds of income, deductions taken, and credits claimed on individual income tax returns filed by Canadians each spring is almost limitless. However, each of those returns has one thing in common, and that is that each will be assessed by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA), and each will result in a Notice of Assessment summarizing the Agency’s conclusions with respect to the information filed by the taxpayer.

Most important, from the taxpayer’s point of view, the CRA will communicate the amount of federal and provincial tax it believes the taxpayer is required to pay for the tax year just passed.

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Protecting Yourself from Tax Scams

[fa icon="calendar'] Jul 11, 2017 11:20:00 AM / by Allen Koroll posted in CRA

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As the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) notes on its website, new tax scams are devised every single day of the week. And, despite the cautionary tales which appear frequently in the media and the warnings posted by the CRA on its website, Canadians continue, with regularity, to fall victim to each new (and old) tax scam and tax fraud.

While Canadians are contacted every day by would-be fraud artists, there seems to be something about a communication from the tax authorities, whether real or fake, that makes people especially vulnerable. Perhaps it is the fact that most Canadians are unfamiliar with the workings of a system. Most of us only interact with the CRA once a year.

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What To Expect After You Have Filed Your Income Tax Return

[fa icon="calendar'] Jun 30, 2017 1:01:00 PM / by Allen Koroll posted in CRA

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Once they’ve completed and filed their 2016 tax return, most Canadians give a sigh of relief that the dreaded annual chore is done, and that income taxes will be out of sight and out of mind until the next filing deadline rolls around.

If all goes as planned, that is how events will unfold. In the best case scenario, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) will issue a Notice of Assessment which indicates that the Agency agrees with the taxpayer’s summary of his or her income, deductions, credits, and taxes payable for the past year, and that it has no further questions or concerns. And, for the vast majority of Canadians, that is exactly how things will unfold. For many others, however, there will be a few more questions to be answered or steps to be taken before the tax filing and assessment process for the year is finally completed.

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What to Consider When Claiming the CRA Principal Residence Deduction for a Farm

[fa icon="calendar'] Jun 26, 2017 12:18:00 PM / by Allen Koroll posted in CRA, Small Business

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The principal residence exemption provides Canadian taxpayers with substantial tax relief.

When you sell property, you realize either a capital gain or a capital loss. A capital gain will occur if you sell your property for more than you paid to acquire it and make improvements, known as capital costs. The opposite is true for a capital loss.

While it would seem like good news to find out you made a profit on the sale of the property, the existence of a capital gain means that you have an additional tax liability. 

If, however, the property was your principal residence for all or part of the time you owned it, you may be able to avoid all or some of the liability.

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Using The CRA’s Mobile Apps | CRA Online Services

[fa icon="calendar'] Jun 8, 2017 12:24:00 PM / by Allen Koroll posted in Tax Deductions, CRA

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For several years, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has been encouraging taxpayers to manage their taxes and benefits online, through the CRA website, and has been largely successful in that effort. More recently, the Agency has taken the next step, by creating mobile apps which taxpayers can use to obtain most of the same information, and carry out many of the same tasks, as can already be done online.

For individuals, there are currently two such apps – MyCRA and MyBenefits CRA. The former gives users access to a range of information about their own tax affairs, as well as more general information about the CRA’s services, as follows:

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