Super leggera sounds like it qualifies.Depends. Bikes or cars would have to some possibly of appreciation. Rare, limited, etc. Your use would have to be limited as well. No daily drivers. maybe 1000kms a year. Honda Civic wont cut it.
Super leggera sounds like it qualifies.Depends. Bikes or cars would have to some possibly of appreciation. Rare, limited, etc. Your use would have to be limited as well. No daily drivers. maybe 1000kms a year. Honda Civic wont cut it.
Not over 65 I will look into adding her to the holdco then it could pay her dividends .Add your wife to your holding company. Thats what I did. If over 65, then income split.
Sure, but only look at it. Riding removes value. Has to be seen as an investment.Super leggera sounds like it qualifies.
Mine was set up that way from the start for just this reason.Not over 65 I will look into adding her to the holdco then it could pay her dividends .
Sent from the future
Mine wasn't as I had to be 100 percent owner to transfer assets from my other company tax free.Mine was set up that way from the start for just this reason.
I have the kids in the trust too. Holdco if needed will be under trust. Also allows me to use their small business cap gain exemption.Mine was set up that way from the start for just this reason.
Not over 65 I will look into adding her to the holdco then it could pay her dividends .
End run is she pays tax at her rate not my 55 percent.The Dividend Tax Credit can only be claimed on Eligible Dividends from a CCPC (Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation) that has paid a high rate of tax into a GRIP (General Rate Income Pool).
Either the corp pays the tax, or the shareholder pays the tax. No end run to be had here.
End run is she pays tax at her rate not my 55 percent.
Sent from the future
I get that but 30 is way better than 55. If I could just give her 1m it would be easy to buy some dividend stocks but I don't see a way to do that.That's not what I meant.
I mean that you cannot have your corp issue dividends eligible for the Dividend Tax Credit if it is not already paying the high rate of tax into a GRIP.
Sounds like you need an advisorI get that but 30 is way better than 55. If I could just give her 1m it would be easy to buy some dividend stocks but I don't see a way to do that.
Sent from the future
Thinking I need more info on this as well.Sounds like you need an advisor
well done but could you do it at today's house prices.?I just paid my mortgage off a couple of weeks ago...did in just 12.5 years!
and rose to over a million before declining.According to statistics published by the Toronto Real Estate Board (TREB) at the time, in January 2010 the average sale price of a home in the Greater Toronto Area was $409,058. In the final month of the decade, December 2019, that average sale price had risen to $837,788 – an incredible 104.8% increase.
Guaranteed living wage is by definition a failure. Poverty is determined by your income relative to others. Whatever guaranteed income was set at, that would the new floor and all prices would rise to adapt. GI could be 100K and those on it still couldn't afford a place to live as everyone would have 100K and rents would go to the moon. I don't have a great alternative but know that in no world can that one ever work. Spending that money on housing that was available for those below median income (pro-rated based on income) seems like a much more effective and efficient option.Guaranteed income , utopia , what a delightful way to allow the disenfranchised to spend even more of their lives off the grid .
The problem with socialism is eventually you’ll run out of other peoples money .
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