For various reasons, I just pay mileage at CRA max rate. Simplifies documentation. I do it clean but there are ways to juice the program to increase money transferred to you tax-free from a business. For instance with a multi-vehicle household, one of the vehicles may be used only for work purposes and therefore all mileage would be reimbursed.Anyone know what possibilities to write off a car are there for people who use their vehicle for work. Car payments/lease payments/fuel etc?
@Mad Mike ?
Be very careful with mortgage interest. Explicitly not allowed as part of the office expense claim. Which is a shame as it would dominate the numbers.@Evoex whenever we had an investment property I’d give the number of kms at the start of the year, end of the year, and made less than 50% for work so it doesn’t raise eyebrows. Accountant said up to 55% use for work doesn’t do anything to perk up CRA. We haven’t had a problem in 15+ years but they’re legit claims.
Wife same thing.
Currently deciding if (big if) I buy a newer car / Maverick whether to claim somehow against the small business I restarted.
Need to sit down with accountant.
As per car, same goes for a % of your home used for the business. For me it’s a small basement room that takes 5-10% of mortgage interest, utilities, bills, etc that gets written off.
So to be eligible for 2023:
"Your employer required you to work from home
This requirement does not have to be part of your employment contract, however, it should be a written or verbal agreement.
For 2023, if an employee has voluntarily entered into a formal telework arrangement with their employer, the employee is considered to have been required to work from home."
I worked from home 100% during the pandemic. For 2023 they no longer REQUIRED me to work from home, but allowed me to continue working from home full time. Does this constitute a formal telework arrangement?
I think the last few years it’s been a simple C days in office versus Y days at home…Yes. Verbal is fine! The form T2200 only gets sent in if you get audited. Otherwise it’s just your employer signing off on the verbal/contractual agreement and it stays in your personal file or a copy stays with you. Unfortunately the form is a bit more involved than in the pandemic days but not by much.
Edit: make sure you do it, the tax benefits are pretty good.
I think the last few years it’s been a simple C days in office versus Y days at home…
This new requirement may be better for those that continue to WFH.
Lot's of chatter in a few threads around tax filings or loop holes etc. Maybe we can try and consolidate.
I'll kick it off;
Anyone know what possibilities to write off a car are there for people who use their vehicle for work. Car payments/lease payments/fuel etc?
@Mad Mike ?
For various reasons, I just pay mileage at CRA max rate. Simplifies documentation. I do it clean but there are ways to juice the program to increase money transferred to you tax-free from a business. For instance with a multi-vehicle household, one of the vehicles may be used only for work purposes and therefore all mileage would be reimbursed.
If you are a contractor or don't have control of the business reimbursing, that strategy may not work for you. At a past employer, my wife was required to use her vehicle to go to different client sites daily. Work reimbursed mileage (crap rate) and most of her co-workers also wrote off fuel/maintenance/insurance/etc. Yikes. If CRA caught onto one employee, they would burn them all down and it wouldn't be pretty. I kept my wifes filings clean as I don't want to fight CRA.
A former employer chose to provide themselves a monthly car allowance as opposed to paying out specific expenses. That was on the advice of their accountant.
If you are claiming the expenses on your personal income tax, the employer should give you a completed T2200 to legitimize the deduction. T777 is the form you fill out to calculate the deduction.
Employment Expenses 2023 - Canada.ca
Use this guide if you are an employee and your employer requires you to pay expenses to earn your employment income.www.canada.ca
@Evoex whenever we had an investment property I’d give the number of kms at the start of the year, end of the year, and made less than 50% for work so it doesn’t raise eyebrows. Accountant said up to 55% use for work doesn’t do anything to perk up CRA. We haven’t had a problem in 15+ years but they’re legit claims.
Wife same thing.
Currently deciding if (big if) I buy a newer car / Maverick whether to claim somehow against the small business I restarted.
Need to sit down with accountant.
As per car, same goes for a % of your home used for the business. For me it’s a small basement room that takes 5-10% of mortgage interest, utilities, bills, etc that gets written off.
Correct. I was referring to my instructing job where I'm hired as an outside contractor.I guess I should weigh in as your friendly neighbourhood taxman...
Are you an employee (receives a T4 and taxed deducted at source by the employer) or are you self-employed? I thought posties are employees of CP. Employee and self-employed individuals are two very different cans of worms vis-a-vis expenses.
More details are needed if you want a more nuanced answer (and no I'm not here to entrap anyone). Feel free to DM me also.
Logbooks are still required (except for flat-rate allowances).
The main difference between per-km rate (btw the rate is set by the Treasury Board, the Agency is just applying/enforcing it) and a flat-rate allowance is that the per-km rate is NOT TAXABLE to the employee, and a flat-rate is TAXABLE. That is because there's no requirement for record keeping for a flat-rate, and the % of use for business therefore doesn't matter.
Not exactly true, you're fortunate you've flown under the radar so far, but as usual YMMV when you try to see how far to bend the rules.
Having an investment property is also not necessarily the same as having a "real" business under the Income Tax Act. There are a slew of expenses that are not allowed if you only have an investment property (passive vs active income question).
Assuming you have an active business, and you want to claim expenses related to your vehicle, you must to maintain a logbook to demonstrate the business vs personal split of the use of your vehicle. If you can't produce proof of the claimed usage %, the Agency can (and do) deny your claimed amount in full for up to 6 years back at any given year, you'll owe penalty and interest on top (which will normally be in excess of the principal amount re-assessed).
There are also variables when it come to business-use-of-home expenses, like whether you have a dedicated home office or not.
Start a logbook, or you can re-create one using your previous year's instructing schedule. You'll need to track date, start location, end location, and mileage for each business trip. You'll also need the total mileage driven each calendar year for whichever vehicle you wish to claim. Once you have that, then you can work out the % of business use for your vehicle, and you may apply that % across all of the current expenses (fuel, insurance, licensing, routine maintenance, interest cost, leasing cost) incurred by that vehicle.Correct. I was referring to my instructing job where I'm hired as an outside contractor.
I don’t mind sharing what I do, but I always advise people who believe they have unused deductions to see an accountant or tax specialist.Lot's of chatter in a few threads around tax filings or loop holes etc. Maybe we can try and consolidate.
I'll kick it off;
Anyone know what possibilities to write off a car are there for people who use their vehicle for work. Car payments/lease payments/fuel etc?
@Mad Mike ?
I am in similar situation as MP, trying to get home put into my name from parents. No money changing hands. According to my customer yesterday he was extremely confident no taxes need to be paid! woohoo. I questioned it but he is a realtor of 36 years and claimed to be an expert on the subject. Did so with his daughter. Sometimes it's easier just to agree than try and poke holes in their logic. I said we already talked to an accountant who explained the best course of action. He told me if you don't get the answer you want, find another accountant.