Table of Contents
- π 1. Schedule 7 β Understanding Investment vs Active Income
- π 2. Schedule 7 β Why This Separation Matters
- π 3. Schedule 3 β Dividends Received & Paid
- π 4. Schedule 6 β Capital Gains Explained
- π 5. Schedule 53 β GRIP (Eligible Dividend Capacity)
- π 6. Schedule 53 β GRIP and Investment Income Flow
- π 7. T1135 β Foreign Asset Reporting
- π 8. CRA T1135 Resource (Practical Guidance)
- π 9. Schedule 21 β Foreign Tax Credit
- π¦ Final Takeaways
- π Final Insight
π 1. Schedule 7 β Understanding Investment vs Active Income
When a corporation earns money, not all income is treated the same.
π§ Two Types of Corporate Income
| Type | Example | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Active Business Income | Consulting, sales | Lower tax (SBD eligible) |
| Investment Income | Interest, dividends | Higher tax |
π‘ What Schedule 7 Does
- Separates total income into two categories
- Ensures correct tax rates are applied
- Protects Small Business Deduction eligibility
π Example
| Income Source | Amount |
|---|---|
| Business income | $180,000 |
| Interest | $8,000 |
| Dividends | $12,000 |
| Capital gain | $10,000 |
π Result:
- Active income = $180,000
- Investment income = $30,000
π Key Insight
Schedule 7 does not create income. It classifies it correctly.
π 2. Schedule 7 β Why This Separation Matters
π― Big Reason
Different income = different tax rules
β οΈ Important Rule
- Active income β eligible for Small Business Deduction
- Investment income β NOT eligible
π¨ Threshold Rule
| Investment Income | Impact |
|---|---|
| Up to $50,000 | No issue |
| Above $50,000 | SBD reduced |
| Around $150,000 | SBD eliminated |
π‘ Example
Investment income = $55,000
π SBD starts reducing
π 3. Schedule 3 β Dividends Received & Paid
π§Ύ What It Tracks
- Dividends received
- Dividends paid
- Part IV tax
π§ Key Rule
π Most Canadian dividends are deductible
π Example
| Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Eligible dividends | $4,000 |
| Ineligible dividends | $10,000 |
| Total | $14,000 |
π° Part IV Tax
- Rate β 38.33%
- Temporary tax
π $14,000 Γ 38.33% β $5,367
π Important Concept
Pay dividends β recover Part IV tax
π 4. Schedule 6 β Capital Gains Explained
π§ Formula
Capital Gain = Sale Price β Cost β Expenses
π Example
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Sale price | $10,000 |
| Cost | $5,000 |
| Expenses | $400 |
| Gain | $4,600 |
β οΈ Tax Rule
π Only 50% is taxable
Taxable gain = $2,300
π Key Insight
- Capital gains go into investment income
- Not eligible for Small Business Deduction
π 5. Schedule 53 β GRIP (Eligible Dividend Capacity)
π§ What is GRIP
π A pool that determines how much eligible dividend you can pay
π What Adds to GRIP
| Source | Included |
|---|---|
| Eligible dividends received | Yes |
| General rate income | Yes |
| Small business income | No |
π‘ Example
Eligible dividends received = $4,000
π GRIP = $4,000
β οΈ Rule
If GRIP = 0 β cannot pay eligible dividends
π 6. Schedule 53 β GRIP and Investment Income Flow
π How It Works
- Receive eligible dividends
- Add to GRIP
- Pay eligible dividends
π Example
Year 1:
- Receive $4,000
- Pay $4,000
Year 2:
- GRIP = $0
β οΈ Key Rule
π Dividends paid this year affect next yearβs GRIP
π 7. T1135 β Foreign Asset Reporting
π When Required
π If foreign assets > $100,000
β οΈ Important Rules
- Based on cost (not market value)
- Based on total assets
- Based on any time during the year
π Example
| Asset | Cost |
|---|---|
| US stocks | $90,000 |
| US bank | $12,000 |
| Total | $102,000 |
π Filing required
π¨ Key Insight
Even if assets are sold before year-end, filing may still be required
π 8. CRA T1135 Resource (Practical Guidance)
π§ Why It Matters
T1135 is one of the most confusing areas
π What CRA Helps With
- What qualifies as foreign property
- When to file
- Simplified vs detailed reporting
π‘ Pro Tip
π Always check CRA guidance before filing
π 9. Schedule 21 β Foreign Tax Credit
π§ Problem
Foreign income may be taxed twice
π‘ Solution
π Claim foreign tax credit
π Example
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Foreign dividend | $3,000 |
| Foreign tax paid | $300 |
π― Result
π $300 credit reduces Canadian tax
π Workflow
- Report foreign income (Schedule 7)
- Claim credit (Schedule 21)
- Reduce tax payable
π¦ Final Takeaways
π§ What You Must Understand
- Schedule 7 separates income types
- Investment income affects SBD eligibility
- Dividends flow through Schedule 3 and GRIP
- Capital gains are only 50% taxable
- GRIP controls eligible dividends
- Foreign assets trigger T1135 reporting
- Foreign tax credits prevent double taxation
π Final Insight
Corporate tax is not just about calculating numbers
It is about classifying income correctly and understanding how each schedule connects
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