Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The T2 Corporation Income Tax Return or T2 is the form used in Canada by corporations to file their income tax return. All corporations other than registered charities must file a T2 return for every taxation year, regardless of whether tax is payable. The form has to be filed within six months of the end of each corporation's fiscal year.
The tax season for tax year 2023 has officially started and you were able to file as early as Jan. 29, 2024. Here are some other important dates: Jan. 1, 2024: The unofficial start of tax season.
Tax returns for self-employed individuals and their spouses must be filed by June 15 of the following year. However, any Goods and Services Tax/Harmonized Sales Tax owing for the period is due April 30. Tax returns for deceased individuals must be filed by the normal filing deadline or 6 months after the date of death, whichever comes later.
Although not occurring until next year, Jan. 15, 2025, is an important date for 2024 tax filers. This is the date that your final quarterly estimated tax payment is due for the 2024 tax year if ...
Be sure to mark Apr. 15, 2025, as the tax payment deadline for your 2024 taxes and plan accordingly for both your federal income taxes and state taxes.
In 2020, when Alberta made a deep and rapid corporate tax rate cut, from 12%, which is the average provincial corporate tax rate, to 8%, University of Toronto economist, Michael Smart, cautioned that this could result in "Ontario-based companies booking profits in Alberta to pay lower tax rates—shades of the "Québec shuffle" that occurred in ...
If you fail to file your federal tax return on time, the standard penalty is a whopping 5% of any tax due for every month the return is late, up to 25% of the unpaid balance. If you file a return ...
This income is taxed at the shareholder's personal income tax rate, but a part of the tax is offset by a 10.5217% dividend tax credit (for 2017) [18] to reflect the federal tax paid at the corporate level. There are also provincial dividend tax credits at different rates in different provinces.