1 – πŸ’Ό Employment Income, Deductions & Related Tax Credits (Canada)

A Quick Guide for New Tax Preparers

When preparing Canadian tax returns, employment income is usually the foundation of the entire return. Understanding how it is reported, what slips are used, and which deductions or credits apply will help you prepare accurate returns and avoid CRA reassessments.

This guide summarizes the essential concepts every tax preparer should know.


1️⃣ 🧾 Introduction to Employment Income & Employment Expenses

Employment income refers to money or benefits received from working for an employer. It is one of the most common types of income reported on Canadian tax returns.

πŸ’° What Counts as Employment Income

Typical examples include:

  • Salary or wages
  • Bonuses and commissions
  • Overtime pay
  • Vacation pay
  • Tips or gratuities
  • Taxable benefits from employers

πŸ“„ Most of this income is reported on a T4 slip (Statement of Remuneration Paid).

πŸ’Έ What Are Employment Expenses?

Certain employees may deduct work-related expenses paid out of pocket, such as:

  • Vehicle expenses for work
  • Work supplies or tools
  • Home office expenses
  • Work-related phone or internet
  • Meals or lodging (specific professions)

⚠️ Important rule:

You can only claim employment expenses if your employer signs Form T2200 – Declaration of Conditions of Employment.

πŸ”Ž CRA Review Risk

Because employment expenses are often misused:

  • CRA may request receipts
  • Claims can be audited
  • Incorrect claims may lead to reassessment

βœ… Best practice: keep receipts, logs, and supporting documents.


2️⃣ πŸ’Ό Employment Income – What Is Included

Employment income includes all money and benefits received because of employment.

Common Types of Employment Income

TypeExamples
Regular PaySalary, wages, commissions
Extra PayOvertime, bonuses
Leave PayVacation pay
Exit PaymentsSeverance or retiring allowances
Employer BenefitsCompany car, insurance premiums
Employer ContributionsRRSP contributions, stock options

πŸ’‘ Good to know:

Employers calculate taxable benefits and include them on the T4 slip, so preparers normally do not calculate them manually.


3️⃣ πŸ“ Recording Employment Income on the T4 & T1

The T4 slip acts as a map for entering employment income into the T1 personal tax return.

Important T4 Boxes

T4 BoxMeaningT1 Line
Box 14Employment incomeLine 10100
Box 16CPP contributionsTax credit
Box 18EI premiumsTax credit
Box 24EI insurable earningsInfo only
Box 26CPP pensionable earningsInfo only
Box 40Taxable benefitsIncluded in Box 14
Union duesPayroll deductionLine 21200

Key Tips for Preparers

βœ” Enter each T4 slip separately
βœ” Verify every box on the slip
βœ” Some boxes affect deductions or credits

⚠️ Mistakes in T4 entries can trigger CRA reassessments.


4️⃣ ⚠️ Common T4 Errors to Watch For

Even experienced preparers sometimes miss important details on a T4.

Most Common Mistakes

❌ Only entering Box 14
❌ Missing deductions in lower sections
❌ Forgetting union dues or donations
❌ Ignoring health plan premiums
❌ Assuming everything is included in Box 14

Boxes That Often Get Missed

BoxItemImpact
67Severance / retiring allowanceLine 13000
85Health plan premiumsMedical credit
Union duesPayroll deductionLine 21200
Payroll donationsCharitable creditSchedule 9

βœ… Pro Tip

Always review every box on the T4 β€” not just the top section.


5️⃣ πŸ“„ Employment Amounts on T4A and T4PS Slips

Besides the T4, some employment-related income appears on other slips.

🟒 T4A Slip – Other Employment Income

Common items:

  • Research grants
  • Wage-loss replacement benefits
  • Medical benefits for former employees
  • Other special employment payments

πŸ“ Usually reported on Line 10400 – Other Employment Income


🟒 T4PS Slip – Profit Sharing

Used when employees receive dividends from company profit-sharing plans.

Important facts:

  • Treated as dividend income
  • Reported on dividend lines of the T1
  • Dividends are grossed up before calculating taxable income

6️⃣ πŸ’Ό Casual Labour, Tips & Odd Jobs (No Slip)

Sometimes clients earn income without receiving a tax slip.

Examples:

  • Temporary labour
  • Babysitting
  • Tutoring
  • Cash tips
  • Small contract work

⚠️ CRA rule:

All income must be reported even if no slip was issued.

πŸ“ Typically reported on Line 10400.

Good Practice

Encourage clients to keep:

  • Payment records
  • Logs of work performed
  • Tip tracking records

7️⃣ πŸ’Ό Reporting Tips & Casual Income on the T1

🍽 Tips and Gratuities

Tips are fully taxable, whether:

  • Cash tips
  • Electronic tips
  • Shared tip pools

πŸ“ Report on Line 10400 – Other Employment Income

⚠️ Preparers should never estimate tips β€” use client records only.


πŸ”§ Casual Work & Odd Jobs

SituationHow It Is Reported
Single employerEmployment income (Line 10400)
Multiple clientsBusiness income

If classified as business income, the client may deduct expenses such as:

  • Vehicle costs
  • Advertising
  • Phone expenses

8️⃣ πŸ’Ό Wage-Loss Replacement Plan Income

Wage-loss replacement plans provide income when employees cannot work due to illness or injury.

Examples include:

  • Disability benefits
  • Workplace injury insurance
  • Employer insurance plans

How It Is Reported

SourceSlip
Employer paidT4
Insurance companyT4A

Taxable Amount

Only the portion not funded by employee contributions is taxable.

Example:

ItemAmount
Benefit received$24,000
Employee contributions$4,800
Taxable income$19,200

9️⃣ πŸ“Š CPP & EI Premiums and Tax Credits

Most employees contribute to two national programs:

ProgramPurpose
CPPRetirement income
EITemporary unemployment benefits

Where They Appear on T4

BoxContribution
Box 16CPP
Box 18EI

Tax Return Credits

CreditT1 Line
CPPLine 30800
EILine 31200

πŸ’‘ Since 2019, enhanced CPP contributions also create a small deduction (Line 22215).


Maximum Contribution Limits

Each year the government sets limits.

Once earnings exceed the limit:

  • CPP deductions stop
  • EI deductions stop

This means high-income workers still pay the same maximum as others above the threshold.


πŸ”Ÿ Schedule 8 & T2204 – CPP and EI Overpayments

Employees with multiple jobs often overpay CPP or EI.

Why?

Each employer deducts contributions independently.

Example

JobIncomeCPPEI
Job 1$60,000$2,898$856
Job 2$18,700$800$296

Total CPP = $3,698 β†’ Overpayment


How the Refund Works

FormPurpose
Schedule 8Calculates CPP contributions
T2204Calculates EI overpayments

Refund Lines

RefundT1 Line
CPP overpaymentLine 44800
EI overpaymentLine 45000

πŸ’° Overpayments are refunded automatically when the tax return is filed.


βœ… Quick Recap for Tax Preparers

βœ” T4 slips report most employment income
βœ” Other slips include T4A and T4PS
βœ” Tips and cash income must still be reported
βœ” CPP and EI contributions generate tax credits
βœ” Multiple jobs may create refundable overpayments
βœ” Schedule 8 and T2204 handle those refunds


⭐ Final Tip

The best tax preparers don’t just enter numbers β€” they understand where each amount comes from and why it appears on the tax return.

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